Knit For Peace on March 21

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Become Another Knitter for Peace. 

You're going to knit anyway on March 21, so why not dedicate your work on that day to peace?  Join this grassroots movement. Visit the blog at http://knitforpeace.wordpress.com/ and tell me what you (and your friends) are doing to knit for peace on that day, and I'll post it there.

Knit for Peace Manifesto 

(Please forgive the punctuation oddities-there's a space limit)

Knitting is a peaceful activity. Sheep are archetypically placid. When they cross a road that you are driving down,there is nothing to do but wait. It never crosses your mind to honk the horn or try to drive around-where I live the sheep graze in fields so rocky that you'd pierce your muffler if you tried-you just turn off your engine and admire the ungainly woolly lumps brushing past your front bumper. Knitting starts with the sheep.
I like natural yarns that are full of lanolin. That way I can feel the life of this animal that needn't give its life to yield up this wonderful product that I use to knit. I fondle the yarn and start to rack my brains and my library for inspiration. My knitted things have no borders. I use a Swedish wool to knit mittens using a twisted Eastern stitch. The mittens turn out not to be warm enough so I knit mitten liners out of Chilean alpaca. The hat on my head is of Japanese yarn knitted from a Norwegian pattern. I knit my hat in the round from the top down and once I passed the awkward double point stage and worked onto a circular needle I slipped into the meditative state that arises when I knit stocking stitch in the round. My mind wanders, first to my work day and then to the private part of my day, my family, my friends, the wild thyme that the sheep graze on in the rocky fields up the road. I become part of a world bigger than that enclosed by the ends of the sofa where I sit knitting. My mind wanders through the world that has led to the knitting in my hands and because I am knitting, engaged in this quiet,peaceful activity that starts with the placid sheep, my mind wanders through a peaceful world.
Knitters radiate peace. When I see a stranger moving a pre-natal sock around and around a ring of double points he is engaged in creating warmth for someone he cares about,an expression of peace. When I see a friend with a lap full of grey alpaca lovingly being worked in moss stitch for her new baby, her quiet handiwork sings peace.
I would like to channel this peacefulness. On March 21 every stitch that I knit will be dedicated to peace. I would like to invite everyone who knits to join me on that day. Will it stop people from hurting and threatening and frightening each other, the antithesis of peace? Who knows. When I knit on March 21 I will be saying with each stitch that peace is possible, that human intelligence and compassion can triumph over fear and greed, that terror and war can give way to discussion and peace.

Ways that people knit for peace in 2006 

This is what folks did last year to knit for peace.
  • Gathering in a cathedral and knitting
  • Having a knit café
  • Knitting pink squares to cover a military tank
  • Knitting in La Fayette Park across from the White House
  • Carrying around a piece of knitting all day and asking people to add a stitch for peace.
  • Gathering in a pub to knit.
  • Getting together with the friend who taught me how to knit.
  • Teaching my son how to knit.
  • Sitting with my colleague and teaching eight six-year-olds how to knit.
  • Decorating the Royal Mile outside the Scottish Parliament building with white scarves and other knitted objects.
  • I will be knitting my Seeds of Intention Scarf (a special knitting meditation ritual that produces a tactile prayer) on March 21st and thinking of all the other hands making peace at the same time.

Knit for a good cause 

Here's a list of groups who knit to keep strangers warm. Send info about your project to knitforpeace@yahoo.com
Afghans for Afghans
In war, hardship doesn't care whether you're a soldier or a civilian.
CompassionKnit
Community-based project providing knitted things to homeless people.
Project Linus
Provides security blankets to children going through hard times.
The Hat Box
One Girl Scout's project, providing hats to children with cancer.

Peaceful Links 

Send me your link (knitforpeace@yahoo.com) , together with a description, and I'll post it here.

Knit for Peace is a transpolitical, transreligious grassroots effort, so you might not "agree" with a link that you see here. Please bear in mind our common goal of peace, and the idea that we all work towards peace within our own frames of reference. Thanks.
The Knit for Peace blog
I'm not updating this lens anymore (Feb 2008), come visit the blog
Peace Fleece
An American on-line yarn store with peace as a cornerstone of their business concept.
About Time Knitting Podcast
Whit Larson's lovely knitting podcast. The Knit for Peace manifesto is broadcast on Episode 6.
Lena's Blog
A peaceful knitting blogger in Sweden.
Cast Off Knitting Club
A UK knitting club that is in on the effort.
Countrywool Blog
A peaceful blogger living in the US.
WildFiber
A yarn store in Los Angeles that is in on the effort.
Revolutionary Knitting Circle
A network of knitters who are in on the effort.
Zen Knit Blog
A peaceful knitter and beader in Minnesota.
Yarnarchy in the UK Blog
A radical peacenik in Scotland.
Pointy Sticks Podcast
Christine Selleck's cheerful podcast.
Wren Ross
The knitting, singing, designing philosopher.

by Randy

I'm an American knitter living in Sweden who believes that peace is possible.

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