Multi-Generational Collaboration: Shaping Tomorrow, Together |
Tuesday Nov 25 2008
Reprinted with kind permission from "Changing the World Together", Spring/Summer 2008 Kosmos Journal
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Lenox, MA 01240. Subscriptions
Juanita
Brown and David Isaacs are co-founders of the World Café, an innovative
approach to large group dialogue being used across sectors on six
continents. Their award-winning book, The World Café: Shaping our
Futures Through Conversations that Matter, is a key resource for
fostering conversational leadership across the globe. Samantha Tan, a
dynamic young leader from Singapore, is a former Research Fellow at
Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government. She is a founding partner of
the Meristem Group which nurtures leadership skills for change agents
who are creating inspired futures in multi-stakeholder environments.
Discovering One Another
In
the summer of 2004, the World Café, the Berkana Institute, and the
Shambhala Institute for Authentic Leadership convened an innovative
inquiry into intergenerational wisdom and collaboration for the common
good. A multi-generational team that ranged in age from 23 to 81 hosted
the gathering. What we thought would be a small ‘learning laboratory’
of 20-30 people took off like wild-fire. The meeting, held in Nova
Scotia, Canada, rapidly mushroomed to more than 80 participants from 18
different countries whose life experience spanned eight full decades.
We were amazed and delighted! From that powerful encounter, we began to
realize that if we and others could create spaces for authentic
dialogue and effective collaboration across the generations, a
tremendous force for social change and innovation across the globe
might be ignited.
The demographics alone reveal this exciting
opportunity. In the U.S., for example, members of the ‘Boomer
Generation’ (now in their 50’s and 60’s) are entering their elder years
with a much longer lifespan than earlier generations. Members of this
generation helped to launch the civil rights, environmental, women’s
and social justice movements. Many still want to make a difference, and
have the time, health and wealth to actively contribute. Those in the
Millennial Generation (in their teens to late 20’s) are just
discovering their own passion for creating more life affirming futures.
“At the center of our new consciousness of connectedness and change is
a dynamic form of transformational activism,” Joshua Gorman, founder of
Generation Waking Up, noted in the Fall 2007 issue of Kosmos Journal.
“We are taking up our world’s two most urgent needs—spirituality and
social change—fusing them together, and unleashing powerful pathways to
personal and planetary transformation.” These two generations alone are
estimated to be 163 million strong and make up more than 50% of the
current U.S population. If even a small percentage of the people who
really care and want to make a difference from these two groups had
opportunities to ‘find’ each other and learn to use each others’ gifts
in the service of a better world what might we be able to create
together?
Just at the time we most need all of our unique
contributions and perspectives to discover innovative paths forward, we
suffer in cultures around the world from the rapidly escalating
tendency to separate ‘us’ from ‘them’—to create barriers rather than
bridges in the face of differences in religious or political beliefs,
cultural values, personal lifestyles and relationships between the
generations. Yet it is painfully clear that none of us in this
vulnerable and interconnected world can go it alone. How can we honor
and use each other’s unique contributions and gifts to access the
collective wisdom and co-creativity that resides in us, as a single
generation, alive and awake together—whatever our chronological age or
stage of life?
More on Thursday...
Written by eldering at Wisdom in Action
Tagged with: multigenerational_collaboration shambhala_institute wisdom world_cafe