Think global and act local…here is a project which shows just how people from all over the world are doing just that…from seed bank projects to material recycling to social justice and reconciliation projects.
What stands out is that each person just starts from where their heart is. They connect their mind, heart and hands to create compassionate, wise actions.
I recommend visiting this site… especially if you are wondering how to create the world of your dreams in simple, sustainable steps.
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The Global Oneness Project is exploring how the radically simple notion of interconnectedness can be lived in our increasingly complex world. Since 2006, we’ve been traveling the globe gathering stories from creative and courageous people who base their lives and work on the understanding that we bear great responsibility for each other and our shared world.
Our living library of films is available for free from our website, through select broadcast outlets, and on DVD. Through events and educational materials we offer opportunities for people to deepen their experience with the different facets of oneness we are exploring.
We hope that by showing the diverse ways oneness is expressed—in the fields of sustainability, conflict resolution, spirituality, art, economics, indigenous culture, and social justice—others will be inspired to create solutions to personal and community challenges from their own lived understanding of oneness.
Global Oneness Projects in Australia
Max "Duramunmun" Harrison
An elder of the Yuin Nation of Southeast Australia, explains fundamental differences between Aboriginal and Euro-Australian worldviews.
Forget about the color of our skins and that. Forget about our different lifestyles and our different belief systems, but believe in one thing and believe in Mother Earth. So that we can look after it because she’s looking after us.
Max Harrison
http://www.globalonenessproject.org/interviewee/max-harrison
Major Muggi Sumner
Major "Muggi" Sumner, is an Aboriginal elder and cultural ambassador of the Ngarrindjeri Nation of South Australia. Major leads a dance group that has performed around Australia and in North America, Europe and South Korea. Major had a "yarn" (as he called it) with us seated at the base of a giant tree near his home in Adelaide.
http://www.globalonenessproject.org/interviewee/major-muggi-sumner
Bob Randall
Bob Randall is a Yankunytjatjara Elder and a traditional owner of Uluru (Ayers Rock). Bob is one of the Stolen Generation of the Aboriginal people, taken from his family at the age of seven. Throughout his life, Bob has worked as a teacher and leader for Aboriginal land rights, education, community development and cultural awareness.
http://www.globalonenessproject.org/interviewee/bob-randall
The Global Oneness Project is a special project of Kalliopeia Foundation, a private grant-making foundation in northern California committed to honoring the unity at the heart of life’s rich diversity.
Watch our trailer »global oneness project
As the structures of modern society crumble, is it enough to respond with the same tired solutions? Or are we being called to question a set of unexamined assumptions that form the very basis of our civilization?
This 25-minute retrospective asks us to reflect on the state of the world and ourselves, and to listen more closely to what is being asked of us at this time of unprecedented global transformation.











