There never was a good war or a bad peace. ~Ben Franklin
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It looks to me like this is a tradition that started in March 2002, when it was part of something called RiverJam. See this webpage http://www.swot.org/riverjam/riverJam.htm [last accessed March 2011]:
"Spoken Word of Tulsa worked w/ the Tulsa Peace Fellowship, Living Arts, and MANY drumming & dance groups to bring together another wonderful event, “Drumbeats for Peace”. We expected between 30-40 people at this event, and were pleasantly surprised when the venue informed us that they logged 120-140 in attendance. The attendance and enjoyment of this event, again, superceded all expectations.
What brought such a positive reaction was the coming together of young and old, Hispanic, Asian, Native, African-American, Middle Eastern -- people celebrating their culture, and finding a common ground."
Also see this webpage, about the March 2003 Drumbeats for Peace event, held at Living Arts, at its old location. http://www.swot.org/old/drumbeats_peace.htm
And this short entry, about the March 2005 "Drumbeats for Peace" event, again at LivingArts old location:
Drumbeats for Peace: Take a S.T.A.N.D! Someone Take Action Now: Darfur!
Saturday, April 2nd, 2005, 7:30 p.m., Living Arts, 308 S Kenosha, downtown Tulsa
After months of silence, drumming is back at the Living Arts Space and making some noise to kick off the Genocide Intervention Fund’s (GIF) Hundred Days of Action Campaign to stop the genocide in Darfur, Sudan. The campaign begins April 6 and runs through July 14. It was during these 100 days in 1994 that 800,000 Rwandans were slaughtered as the world stood by and watched. Fast forward eleven years later, the world is still standing by and watching as the human destruction and suffering in Darfur reaches almost incomprehensible dimensions. So far, more than 335,000 people have been killed and over 2,000,000 made refugees. $5.00 admission benefiting the Genocide Intervention Fund.
http://www.okcatholicsforlife.org/calendar.htm
In 2006, there was a brief mention of "Drumbeats for Peace" in the TulsaWorld
Drummers organize relief benefit
Josh Massad and Michael Back will lead a diverse group of drummers in an event to help displaced families and villagers from Sudan with essentials such as water and medicine. Drumbeats for Peace will be at Liggett Studios, 314 S. Kenosha St. Tulsa. Admission is $5 and the events is sponsored by Living Arts of Tulsa and the Tulsa Peace Fellowship.
Massad will teach participants a song he learned from the Pigeons de Sable group, a family of drummers who fled genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan.
Donations will also be accepted.
see this PDF file: http://www.pendletonff.com/pdf/20060323%20tulsa%20world.pdf
Also see this short vid from Drumbeats for Peace, April 2010, held at LivingArts, in the Brady Arts District, Tulsa.
TPF is a registered non-profit organization in the State of Oklahoma, a non-partisan and non-sectarian civic sector organization, devoted to peace, social uplift, and nonviolence.
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People to come together to solve shared challenges at the grassroots level. This discussion forum is for events, plans, strategies and tactics to support sustainability and justice, including mutual aid and self-bootstrapping. Put your reviews of peace-promoting games and nonviolent disobedience training here as well.
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