Dances of Universal Peace

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A 'Dances of Universal Peace ' session with the dance teacher and accompanying musicians in the centre and the dancers of all ages and abilities in circles around them.

The Dances of Universal Peace (DUP) are a spiritual practice that employs singing and dancing the sacred phrases of the world's religions. Their intention is to raise consciousness and promote peace between diverse religions according to one stated goal.

Sufic origin. They combine chants from many world faiths with dancing, whirling, and a variety of movement with singing.[2]

Format

Five to 500 dancers stand in a

Hebrew, Persian, and Sanskrit.[3] Dance promoters use diverse religious practices, chants and languages to demonstrate how joy lives at the heart of every religion. Dance leaders tend to believe peace can be promoted through experiencing the same One Joy through diverse dance steps, chants, and languages.[5]

The DUP emphasis is on participation regardless of ability as DUP dances are almost never performed before an audience. Dancers of all levels, including children, are able to follow along and dance together. Each dance is taught afresh at each gathering. Dances and dancing of this kind is seen as opportunity to develop participants' spiritual awareness, hand-eye-body coordination, and competency in harmonizing with others through dance. Many dances are choreographed with movements, steps, and gestures encouraging dancers to explore for deeper

mystical meanings of the dance.[6]

History

The Dances of Universal Peace were first formulated by

Rinzai Zen master and drew on the teachings of various religious and spiritual traditions.[3]

Dances were originally performed at camps and meetings with a distinctly

Sufi Order International respectively. Both have continued to be leading exponents of the Dances and Douglas-Klotz's creation of Dances using the Aramaic words of Jesus have entered many alternative and mainstream religious circles.[15][16] The Network has members in 28 countries.[17]

References

  1. ^ Segner, Dance for Peace at the UUCC, eNews Park Forest, 9 September 2008.
  2. ^ Unitarian Universalist Association, Religious Education Curricula, The Cultural Connection. Archived 2009-09-04 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ Stoehr, How to reclaim the historic role of art in expressing spirituality, Charleston City Paper, August 13, 2008.
  6. .
  7. ^ Douglas-Klotz, Neil. (1990). "We Circle Around, We Circle Around: A Short History of the Dances" in Lewis, Samuel L. et al., Spiritual Dance and Walk: An Introduction. Seattle, WA: PeaceWorks. pp. 17-24.
  8. ^ Jablonski, Moineddin. (1990). "The Early Days of the Dances" in Lewis, Samuel L. et al., Spiritual Dance and Walk: An Introduction. Seattle: PeaceWorks. pp 25-31.
  9. ^ "Timeline of the Dances" https://www.dancesofuniversalpeace.org/aboutdancetimeline.shtm - accessed 9 February, 2023
  10. ^ Douglas-Klotz, Neil. (1990). "Ruth St Denis: Sacred Dance Explorations in America" in Cappadona, Diane and Doug Adams: Dance as Religious Studies. New York: Crossroad. 109-117.
  11. ^ Miller. Kamae A., ed. (1997). Wisdom Comes Dancing: Selected Writings of Ruth St. Denis on Dance, Spirituality and the Body. Seattle: PeaceWorks.
  12. ^ The Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) uses the DUP songbook, Important Resources, Archived 2009-09-04 at the Wayback Machine in its religious curricula.
  13. ^ Douglas-Klotz, Neil. (2003). "The Key in the Dark: Transformation in the Sufi Tradition" in Mijares, Sharon G., ed., Modern Psychology and Ancient Wisdom: Psychological Healing Practices from the World's Religious Traditions. New York: Harworth Press. 149-174.
  14. .
  15. .
  16. ^ Meyer. Wali Ali. (2001). "A Sunrise in the West: Hazrat Inayat Khan's Legacy in California" in Khan, Zia Inayat, ed., A Pearl in Wine: Essays on the Life, Music and Sufism of Hazrat Inayat Khan. New Lebanon, NY: Omega. pp. 430-431.
  17. ^ Dances of Universal Peace International Archived 2011-10-02 at the Wayback Machine

External links