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Peace Talk November/December 2009

Gift Shop

Premier Shopping

A Jewel of a Giftshop in the Foothills of the Smokies
 
 
Do you wish that you could get exactly what you want for a gift? Is it difficult to know exactly what to get for a friend or a special someone?
 
Here is the solution:
 
There is a lovely little giftshop, nestled in the foothills of the mountains, which is known only to those who have been to the Center for Peace. This giftshop is quite unique in the quality, beauty and value of its merchandise.
 
Bring your friend or come alone and shop, then fill out a "Wish List Card" at our Premier Shopping Days ---Saturday, November 7 and Saturday, December 12. The hours will be from 10 am to 6 pm.
 
You can shop while your relative, partner or friend enjoys a cup of tea or coffee and a cookie and a friendly conversation with other persons of like mind. Then trade activities (They shop, you visit.)
 
The Center for Peace giftshop carries very high quality silver and gemstone jewelry, Native American type jewelry and items, beautiful rocks, minerals and crystals of all sizes. We have had many people from several states tell us that our prices are unbelievably low. All of our items, whether pendants, stones, beaded velvet bags, bracelets, earrings, spheres, sage bundles, massage stones, silver crosses or any other of our numerous wares, are all hand picked, with very few duplicates.

With your Wish List in hand, your partner can’t go wrong in choosing the perfect gift for you!
 
Mention the newsletter to receive 10% off of any single item of your choice during our two Premier Shopping Days.
 
For more information call 865-428-3070

View or print our flyer

Raffle for "For The One Youth Dance"

    “There’s a smile on my face for the whole human race. Why, it’s almost like being in love.” These lyrics float in my mind every time I think of writing this letter. When I discovered this song was from the musical Brigadoon the relevance was immediately realized. The town of Brigadoon appeared for one day each 100 years. We are all given windows of opportunity to enhance our lives and the lives of others. The window of opportunity to support the 3rd “For The One” World Youth Dance happens once in a lifetime. This special dance takes place next year here at the Center For Peace
 
Each dance brings unique qualities with it’s variations of time, the land it is danced on, events in the world and the individuals who come together on many levels of support to create this dance. You make a difference.
 
It is the youth who will lead the way and bring hope to our world
 
We need your help in bringing this event into manifestation
 
There are several ways you can be a major part of this extraordinary gathering of diverse cultures:
 
    * Participate in this raffle. Buy ticket/s and/or help sell them
    * Give a donation
    * Sponsor a Dancer
    * Donate air miles
    * Come to the Center For Peace and help support
    * All or any combination of the above.
 
More about the Raffle:
 
We have 6 items for 6 drawings. The drawings will occur on November 21st, 2009 at the Native Nurturing Weekend at the Center For Peace. Each ticket is $5. There are 3 necklaces, a Native American Flute, bracelet and an afghan.
 
Thank you, Colby McLemore, for the photos! Photos appear below.
 
 
 
 
 
NOTE:
When you follow the link below, you will be directed to JeanneWhiteEagle.com
The information there may describe the dance as being held in South Africa. That information is out of date. The Dance will be held at the Center For Peace, dates to be announced shortly. Be sure to follow the directions on that website for donating to the "For The One World" Youth Dance Raffle.

For more information and to buy tickets - Click Here

Drumming Workshop

I WANT TO DO THAT!

LEARNING TO DRUM AND SING FOR DANCES

When I first went to Joseph's Moon Sun Dance in New Mexico in 1995, I was totally captivated by the songs and drumming of Joseph's brothers and niece.  After nearly every set, I would go up to Benito Rael, the most approachable drummer, to ask about what the song meant.  I sang phrases of them that I could remember all the time on our journey home.  My fascination with this tradition and the special songs created to carry the energy has never flagged in the intervening years.  So I want to offer to any others who are called in the same way, the opportunity to apprentice as a drummer/singer.
 
On November 13-15th will be a workshop to teach what I have learned in the way it was taught to me.  Friday night, 11-13,7-9PM, we will explore the sacred tradition of the drum, calling in drum spirits, learning to start and stop drumming all together. speeding up, slowing down, honoring drum beats and chanting to the drum.  On Saturday, 11-14, 9AM-4PM,  the emphasis will be learning the songs in the ancient way through practice and repetition (no tape recording devices will be allowed).  We will learn at least 6 songs, focusing on the energy and meaning of the songs, how to send the songs into the dance in a clean way and keep ourselves clear channels for the ancient singers to come through.  
 
Optional Sunday practice. 11-15,10AM-2PM. If the new drummers would like to join in, the regular Center for Peace drum group will have a practice session and they are welcome to participate.  After the practice session, I will talk about the duties and energies necessary to hold the energy as Drum Chief, the difference between being a drum member and leading the drum in ceremony.
 
The cost for the weekend is $100.  If you have taken this workshop with me previously, either here at the Center or in other locations, then you may attend for a donation, to practice what you have learned.  The Sunday drum practice is open to all those who have previously drummed for dances at no cost, new drummers as well.
 
Please bring your own drum beaters if possible, there are a limited number available at the Center.  Please bring food to share for lunch on Saturday and Sunday.
 
Please understand the teachings I offer come from my OWN experience and are not in any way meant to replace teaching of traditional elders.  I encourage all drummers to attend the Drum Elder Workshop held in Tulsa, OK and led by Benito and Carla Jo Rael. Information about that workshop will be discussed and registrations available.  
 
~CRose

Native Nurturing Overnight November 21-22

Native Nurturing Red Eagle.gif 
Center for Peace Youth Program
 
As the weather becomes cooler and the holidays approach, another Native Nurturing Weekend is coming up! 
 
The best way to describe it is FUN!!!  It is a great time to honor our young people and the Center for Peace is a great place for kids to come.  The program starts at 3pm on Saturday; we will spend the evening singing, drumming and storytelling.
 
Nan Citty will once again lead the weekend's activities and there will be fun activitiers and laughter and new things to learn.
 
The weekend is full of meaningful connections between our children and Mother Earth that lead us back to our beginnings.  This is a time to remember the exuberant love that flows so easily from children.
 
We have watched our children grow into thoughtful and brave young adults
 
The program starts on Saturday at 3 pm and will end on Sunday afternoon around 2 pm.
 
For more information contact Nan Citty at 865-405-6809 or email
nativenurturing@centerforpeace.us

Long Dance

 
LONG DANCE
December 5-6, 2009
 
When I am driving, while I watch where I am going I continually check my mirrors for what is behind me.  That is the way I both know where I am and decide whether I am still going the right way.  It is also how I conduct my life.
 
The farmer plants his crops in the spring, cares for them during the summer growing season, harvests the produce in the fall, then selects the best seeds for next year’s planting.  Set that process into a ceremony, and you have the Long Dance: we look at where we have been, where we are now, and decide where we wish to go in life.  This will be the seventeenth year of the Long Dance at the Center for Peace.  In all these years, people have been dancing a new future into being.
 
Starting at sundown and going to sunup, dancing through the night, we sometimes dance into, through, and past our nightmare worries, confront the turmoil of our inner conflicts, and circumvent stubborn obstacles to arrive at a place from which we can “get on with” our destiny and life purpose.  Of course, every dance is unique for each person, no matter how many times you dance.  So, without expectations and with fervent hope for our highest good, many of us “just do it” and witness once again the support of Spirit Of Life In All Things.
 
Jeanne and Perry Robinson were dancers and supporters of the Long Dance, before they became the chiefs of the dance.  They invite you to enter into the dance and become open to receive the blessings, which are already awaiting your acceptance.
 
The Long Dance is a Give-away [see enclosed article on Give-away.]
 
For information, email Long.Dance@centerforpeace.us or register online.
 
Phone number: 865 428-3070

Give Away

By Perry Robinson
 
“Give-away” is an ancient practice of tribal people, which celebrates the connection and absolute interdependence of tribal life.  It is a way of affirming that my people come first.  In western culture we are accustomed to receive gifts at special times:  birthdays, weddings, funerals, Christmas, etc.; whereas in tribal culture these are occasions in which the individual, especially aware of how the tribe is the source of the quality, abundance, place, and safety of existence, does a give-away to the people...
 
 
For many years, because everything involves expenses, the Dance Chief and Center Council would set a fixed “cost”, which participants would be expected to “pay” in order to participate in a dance, for instance.  It seemed necessary to do that, in order to be able to continue the Center’s work, although sometimes it did not feel right; because it encouraged people to ask “Can I afford it?” instead of “Is Spirit calling me to do this?”
 
In February, 2007, Joseph Rael, who brought the dances to the Center – and who set the costs for the dances he brought --, said we needed to make the Sun-Moon Dance that year a give-away and to teach the people about give-away.  That is what we have done ever since for almost all Center activities.  
 
Almost immediately people used the term “free” instead of “give-away”.  [Even in commerce we know we had better “look out”, when something is advertized as “free”.  It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that, if all events at the Center were really “free”, nothing would happen, the Center would cease to exist, and the state of Tennessee would disburse the property to some other charitable organization.]  
 
Even substituting the term “donation” or “suggested donation” doesn’t suit, although every charitable organization accepts “donations”; and the state of Tennessee recognizes give-away to the Center for Peace as such.  
 
In the tribe people were always experiencing different life conditions.  Some had more, some less, some were sick or injured, some were alone, others had many family members, etc.  Those could do more and give more were happy to do so, partly because it would injure their pride to see their people in need or diminished by their need to ask.
 
Give-away is with nothing expected; AND the safety and well-being of the tribe depends upon every person participating.  When all things are in balance there is enough for all.  Native people were very practical; and, when provisions were thin, that was when the balance was most important.  
 
In our life together here at the Center for Peace balance means those who participate here receive spiritual benefit, safety, and the best efforts of the people.  It also means practical needs are met, expenses paid, and the continuity of the Center’s ongoing life – power bills, repairs, taxes and gas – is maintained.
 
Give-away encourages us all to belay the process of “seeing what we are going to get” out of each other.  The Center organization gets to focus less of “what it’s going to get” from the people who come; and the people who come are less encouraged to focus on “what they are going to get” from the Center.  Ideally, give-away allows an atmosphere within which the Center becomes the people who show up; and the people who show up become the Center for Peace.  When we do enough of that, we may remember how it feels to know that there is only one person here.
 
Give-away means I am grateful for my people and what we are doing together; and I give what I can to see that it keeps happening.  Give-away means that I allow the same Spirit, which guided me here, to guide me as I choose my gift.  If I have no money to give, I am here and I give something to express by gratitude to the people.  When I have in abundance, I am here and I give abundantly to express my gratitude to the people.  The person who has no money to give need not feel diminished.  The person who gives in abundance need not feel magnified.  The people just see to taking care of the people.
 
We remember what that is like.  That is how we live with our people.  That is the way the people live.
 
That all the people may live!
 

Holiday Happenings

December 24:  7 pm – Christmas Eve Candle Lighting Ceremony.  
 
We gather as a spiritual family, sing our favorite Christmas songs, and light our candle.  It is our way of celebrating our part of the flow of Love, Wisdom, Grace, and Power, which the holidays signify.  Vicki Jones and Nan Citty will lead the singing.
 
Please bring a favorite “finger food” or beverage to share afterward.
 
Also, please bring a gift, which has not been wrapped, for the give-away blanket.  We do not wrap the gifts; because each person will be asked to take the gift from the blanket, which especially attracts his/her attention.
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
January 1, 10 am – Annual New Year’s Day Sweat Lodge.
 
Let’s make the most of a new beginning on the first day of the year.  Please bring towels, a change of clothing, and food to share.  
 
In addition to bringing food for the feast afterward, please also bring something for a Give-Away after the lodge.  [Idea:  sometimes we know immediately that a wonderful gift we received during the holidays is really for someone else – sometimes we even know to whom it really belongs.  This is a good time to help these gifts find their rightful owners.  Great and useful gifts are even more so, when they find the person who will appreciate and use them the most!]

"Messiah" Training

Tuesdays 7-8:30pm
 
"Beginning September 1,  I began leading a weekly seminar at the Center for Peace around the subject of 'Messiah' Training.  These are on a continuing basis [until they are not] and everyone is invited to participate.
 
"If you have read and liked such books as Richard Bach’s ILLUSIONS and/or are intrigued by the teachings of A COURSE IN MIRACLES and/or follow the visionary path taught by people like Joseph Rael, you already may have been studying up on this subject – already a 'messiah in training'. 
 
"Please do not let the language throw you!  These times together are very little about doctrine, demands, or nice ideas and much more about self discovery, personal power, and mutual support."
 
Perry Robinson

More Information on Messiah Training

Fire Ceremony

7th of each month, 7 pm
           ~ led by Katy Koontz

The purpose of the FIRE CEREMONY is to heal and purify both the planet’s physical oceans and the oceans of cosmic thought.

At 7 pm local time, fire elders light ceremonial fires at  each of the Peace Sound Chambers around the world. Those present watch the fire in silence until it burns out, giving to it what we want to transmute in our lives and staying open to the messages and teachings it brings. All are welcome. We suggest you arrive around 6:45 pm.

Donations are appreciated.

Sweat Lodge

Sweat lodgeA sweat lodge or "Purification Lodge", is an intensely rewarding experience. By entering the womb of Mother Earth (the lodge), we seek purification and a deeper spiritual awareness through prayer.
Generally speaking the experience is to deepen spiritual awareness. The steam, heat, and darkness intensify prayers and personal introspection. The lodge leader (pourer), with help from the fire tender, hold an energetic space of safety and security while setting the intent of the lodge. The medicine of the lodge leader and of each participant helps to enrich the lessons of the lodge.
There are composting toilets in the meadow. You may change clothes in these toilets or at the Peace Sound Chamber. There is no nudity in our lodges.
Suggested Items to Bring:
• Two Towels
• Men are requested to wear swim trunks, gym shorts or something similar.
• Women are requested to wear a skirt or dress. (Something for inside the sweat that is modest and you don’t mind getting muddy.)
• Change of clothes (Preferably long sleeve and covers all of the legs to keep from getting the feast area dirty).
• Covered Dish for the Feast.
It is appropriate to bring tobacco, a small gift, or monetary gift for the fire-keeper and lodge master, both of whom offer their services to the people as a gift.
Cash donations are used to support the Sweat Lodge.  We use lots of wood for the fire; supplies like herbs (sage, tobacco, cornmeal, etc.), drinking water, and more. If you are feeling abundant, a donation would be appreciated. 
There is never a charge for Ceremony. If you are not feeling abundant, PLEASE do not allow this to prevent you from coming.
 

Drumming Circle

Every Friday @ 7 pm
~led by José and Tamy

Drumming is a powerful, sometimes dramatic, way to break into other levels of our mind.  Sensitive instruments can measure the way that drumming affects the brain waves.  That’s the reason for tens of thousands of years the shaman has journeyed with the drum.

This drumming is not specifically for journeying; but you get to use it whatever way you wish – including having a good time doing it!
So, on Friday of each week, bring your drum, and come join us.
Donations are appreciated.

BOOK REVIEW- Leaving Church

In LEAVING CHURCH Barbara Taylor Brown wrote a meaningful memoir about being called to service in the Episcopal Church, first as a deacon and then as a woman priest.  The book recounts her journey to serve God through ministry "To be a priest is to serve a God who never stops calling people to do more justice and love more mercy."  This became a kind of mantra for the type of ministry she tried to practice.  When she received a church to pastor in northern Georgia, she promised to stay for ten years and began to try to reform people's attitudes about social justice as well as ministry.  This was a period of time when churches were in deep discussion about gays in the church, whether they could be allowed into ministry.  As well as the political differences between the pastor and the congregation, there was also the unremitting requests to speak at dinners, pray over graduations and ball games, preparing financial reports for the Bishop and other minutiae that claimed her time and had little to do with true ministry as she saw it."I had moved to the country to lie down in more blessed fields, to live closer to the Divine Presence that had help me all my life, but I once again became so busy caring for the household of God that I neglected the One who called me there."
 
Quoting Meister Eckhart, she reminds herself "God is not found in the soul by adding anything but by subtracting."  And so the time came when the way to be closer to God was to leave the church she led.  The second part of the book chronicles the process.  Continuing to live in the community after ceasing to be the minister was very challenging.  Her husband offered their property to a Lakota man they knew to be used for the Sun Dance and from her exposure to that tradition she learned  "the community is centered in Spirit...by valuing direct encounters with God more highly than reading about such encounters in a book, the tradition keeps primary experience alive."  And she compared her own tradition of placing a priest on a higher plane than ordinary mortals with their experience of listening to elders for their wisdom.  "An elders job is to protect the ways and support those who walk them, so that as few people as possible get hurt."
 
Some strengthening words came from a former parishioner who had fallen away from regular church attendance "You have everything you need to be fully human.  There is nothing outside of you that you still need--no approval from the authorities, no attendance at temple, no key truth hidden in the tenth chapter of some sacred book.  In your life right now God has given you everything you need..."  I found this book wonderfully honest.  In our New Age fringe tradition, I see people minimize the struggles of those people who choose to be in mainstream Christianity.  The tendency is to think of them all as Bible thumping fundamentalists since we receive so much attention from that quarter.  This author writes eloquently of her struggle to stay true to God as she knows Him.  
 
~CRose

Perry's Ponderings

 
Power
 
By Perry Robinson
 
Facing the many challenges and personal burdens of our time, our fascination with drama and spiritual strength may lead us to ignore one of our most useful power tools:  perseverance.  Even after we have studied and remembered the wisdom and insights of our spiritual teachers and masters, done our dances and ceremonies, and had our visions, we can sometimes falter in the face of such immediate “threats”, as an economic downturn, a job loss, a health challenge, or emotional burnout!
 
I think it is sort of like what the dancers may remember as the Sunday afternoon of the Sun-Moon Dance or the Saturday afternoon of the Drum Dance.  Worn out, hungry, thirsty, body in what feels like all-out rebellion, hot, and the tree or feather is just THERE.  It is still right there in front of you like the matador’s red cape in front of the bull in the bull ring.  You have gone at it and gone at it until your get-up-and-go seems to have gotten up and “went” – and it is still there!  Many times at times like these I have really wanted to say [expletives deleted] and just go lie down, pull my dirty towel over my face, and say “I quit!”  Quite honestly, sometimes, the only thing that has kept me from doing just that has been something I saw in the face of another dancer or something I heard from the drum – or something I heard between the drumbeats!  And I would keep dancing; or I would crawl on hands and knees; but the dance went on.
 
I think a lot of people are experiencing something like that in their personal lives right now.  A few months ago, when we were still flying, we might have thought it weakness to have arrived in such a state.  We were, after all, healthy, poised, smiling, courageous, and on top of the world – and on top of that we elected a President who looked at a huge mess in and said, “Yes we can!” --; and we took a deep breath.  
 
What happened to that person we once were?  . . . .NOTHING!  I am still that person, and so are you!  
 
No matter how flashy or junked up the car is, the really telling point is where the “rubber meets the road”.  That’s where we are.  One of the ways we know we are alive on planet earth is when we run into change.  Along the way there are uphill and downhill stretches; there are hot and cold days, wet and dry; there are happy crowds and angry mobs; there are new and wonderful ways that people can sing and bless; there are people lining up to shoot and bomb.  We get to see – and, thus, sort of experience – much more of all this; because it is in our faces on our computer or TV screens.  
 
When it gets really rough going, sometimes it would be easier to sit down and despair.  But we don’t.
 
When I see people in dire situations manifesting courage and valor, I know that these are the times for which we have been preparing.  Maybe we were caught short on some of our supplies, savings, and stamina; but we are making it; because that is the way we are.  In the burned-out Saturdays of our lives we persevere!  And, yes, sometimes perseverance means being willing to step back and just let the energy and love of our people carry us for a moment.
 
Few have it easy.  The Center for Peace has its challenges, too, as an organization.  
 
Over the years a community of sorts has emerged around the Center for Peace.  We come together here and do things together.  We write up our stories and send them out to those who are too far away to be here on a regular basis.  There are some in such far away places as Africa, Australia, the Middle East, Central and South America, and Europe, who have never been here.  Yet they can feel somewhat a part of what we are doing; for they, too, are grounding the Light into the very soil and fiber of this world where they are.
 
Here’s how I see it.  Even if I had never danced, I can allow the dance arbor be a metaphor of how I live in this world with my family and friends.  The community is like the group of people, maybe momentarily like a tribe, who are here for a dance ceremony.  There are the dancers, the drummers, the fire keepers, the chiefs, the elders, the mothers and fathers of the moon and sun, the cooks, the protectors, the support people and the servers.  
 
There are people doing and experiencing many things; yet in reality there is only one Person!  Whether it is the dance arbor at the Center for Peace or Planet Earth, there is truly only one Person!  And the quality of that Person’s life, health, and spiritual experience is enhanced, when I persevere.
 
In this One-Person world, my perseverance is both for me and for you; your perseverance strengthens me in my off moments; and our accumulated and amalgamated persevering effort carries us – this One Person – through.  It is really important to pay attention to this One-Person world AND to keep in touch with it!  When all else fails:  communicate!
 
I almost got whiplash a few years ago, when I heard Hillary Clinton say, “It takes a tribe to raise a child.”  But it’s not just to raise a child, it’s just about anything that is important; and we may see the day when a “tribe” emerges to moves this world through its remaining destructiveness to envision, and to create, the new heaven and the new earth!
 
That sounds almost like getting into another story, doesn’t it.  But then that is why we are here.

In This Issue

Premier Shopping

Raffle for "For The One Youth Dance"

Drumming Workshop

Native Nurturing Overnight November 21-22

Long Dance

Give Away

Holiday Happenings

"Messiah" Training

Fire Ceremony

Sweat Lodge

Drumming Circle

BOOK REVIEW- Leaving Church

Perry's Ponderings

Calendar at a Glance
WEEKLY  
Tuesday, 7 pm
Messiah Training

Wednesday & Friday 10am
Yoga with Sandy Palmer

Friday, 7pm
Drumming Circle

NOVEMBER
 
November 7, 10am-6pm
Premier Shopping Day
 
November 8, 3pm
Pipe Circle
 
November 7, 6:45pm
Fire Ceremony
 
November 13, 7pm-9pm
November 14, 9am-4pm
November 15, 10am-2pm
Drumming Workshop

November 19, 6:30pm
Thursday Night Sweat Lodge

November 21-22
Native Nurturing Overnight
 
 
November 28, 10 am
Saturday Sweat Lodge


DECEMBER
December 5-6
LONG DANCE
 
December 7, 6:45pm
Fire Ceremony
 
December 12, 10am-6pm
Premier Shopping Day
 
December 13, 5pm-7pm
Mopnthly Council Meeting
 
December 17, 6:30pm
Thursday Night Sweat Lodge
 
December 24th
Christmas eve Candle Light Ceremony
 
January 1, 10 am
New Year's Day Sweat Lodge
New Council Members
Two new council members were added at the annual corporation meeting on November 1.
 
Tamy Brown and Dona Polero are the two newest members of the Center For Peace Council.
 
WELCOME and Thank You for agreeing to serve.
Work is Worship
“Work is Worship”
 
Work/activity is one very clear way to celebrate our selves as part of the community by which we are being fed spiritually. And it is always a lot of fun. Time seems to alter into a process rather than a taskmaster and friendships are born and nurtured by our community participation.
Bring gloves, appropriate clothing, water and an open willing attitude. If you have any special skills, please let us know so we can best use your talents. Of course, we will first take care of the pressing needs, but there is a lot of work to be done and all your talents are valuable.
We provide lunch. (So kitchen help is also appreciated.)
Contact:
Perry 865-428-3070 or
Steve 865-300-4424
Chanting in the Chamber
The Peace Sound Chamber is available for chanting, vision quests and ceremonies of many different types.
You are encouraged to come to the chamber and chant, drum, meditate or simply sit (the chamber Spirits love it); please check first that there is not something already scheduled.
 
Please call at least two weeks in advance to reserve our facilities as usage requires council approval.
Council Meeting
This is the gathering of the board of directors to discuss new ideas, future projects, and events.  Feel free to come with suggestions and comments.
 
December 13,  5 pm -  visitors welcome
For more information, call the Center at (865) 428-3070.
Directions to the Center
Directions

 
 
Council Members
The Center for Peace is a non-profit religious corporation in the State of Tennessee. Donations to the Center for Peace can be claimed as deductions from income for income tax purposes.

Active Council Members of the Center for Peace:

Candy Barbee
Knoxville
865-933-9327
 
Tamy Brown
Seymour
865-453-0447
 
 Nan Citty
Knoxville
865-405-6809

Steve Citty
Knoxville
865-300-4424

Margarita DiVita
Jefferson  City
865-475-3799

Al Fletcher
Norris
865-494-9950

Katy Koontz
Knoxville
865-693-9845

Cheryl Patterson
Seymour
865-453-3869

Dona Polero
Sevierville
865-805-8372
 
Jim Phillips
Knoxville
865-971-1959
 
Jeanne Robinson
Seymour
865-428-3070

Perry Robinson
Seymour
865-428-3070

Marcus Weseman
Clinton
865-463-1002
Center For Peace • 880 Graves Delozier Road • Seymour • TN • 37865

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