Sandra Tamari is a member of the St. Louis Religious Society of Friends and currently resides in Glen Carbon, Illinois. Born in Jacksonville, Florida to Palestinian immigrants, Sandra is married to Steve Tamari, mother to two school-age children, and works as an admissions advisor to international students at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.
Click the play button below to hear Sandra’s reflections on peacemaking.
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The Peace Resources Committee interviewed Sandra in front of a live participatory audience at the 2012 Annual Sessions of Illinois Yearly Meeting. Listen in to hear her reflections on being a peacemaker, feeling discouraged, the seeds of peace that lead her on this path, the security in life that comes from being raised with love, dealing with the isolation of detainment while in Israeli detention, life lessons from rocker Patti Smith, what the perpetual state of war today means for peacemaking, the role of participation and representation, raising children, and keeping hope.
Download Audio: QuakerPeacemakers_Tamari
Click here to learn more about the Quaker Peacemakers Archive Project where you can nominate Friends in Illinois Yearly Meeting you think should be included in this effort. The project aims to compile and preserve an oral history of Friends whose contributions to peace building offer wonderful opportunities for reflection. As Friends tell their stories in their own words, these recordings will capture and preserve unique and inspired personal acts and thoughts which enrich our Yearly Meeting.
Music: “The Big Ship” by Brian Eno (Another Green World, 1975)
Thank thee kindly, Friend Sandra. Thy light still shines for me.
love, maurine
Wonderful. Good to hear your insights, Sandra. Thanks to Breeze for the wonderful, professional technical work. What a joy to be part of this.
Wilmer Rutt shared this message from Jewish Voice for Peace, who put together a 6-minute animation that explains what Israelis and Palestinians are fighting over.
They say it’s not meant to be comprehensive, but it is meant to be a tool to frame the conflict as one about the struggle for equal rights to the land, the vote, the roads, the resources. And it talks about why one of the important tools to move toward a solution is the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.
Click here to view the video.