
Menucha
Retreat 2007
Menucha Quiet Time with Jaki Svaren & Colleen Cavin
February 23-25
Menucha Retreat Center, Columbia
Gorge
Cost $175 (2 nights, 3 days including meals & lodging)
Non-refundable $75 deposit required by January 26, 2007
Registration open: download registration
form (PDF)
Questions? Contact Maggie Rogers.
The Portland Society for Calligraphy invites you to reserve a space
at the annual Menucha Retreat. You will enjoy great food, friends & a
very unique art experience. Jaki Svaren & Colleen Cavin will tutor
and conduct two one-hour quiet times. You are free to work at your
own pace with projects of your choosing.
In the words of Jaki, "Menucha is a special gift from
those who love letters to those who love letters. A time & place
away from everyday distractions, which allow for a magic time when
you can truly concentrate on the study of calligraphy. No experience
can equal the comradeship, the warmth and the growth that happens."
About Menucha
PSC retreats at Menucha were begun
many years ago by Jaki Svaren, a student of Lloyd Reynolds. The intent,
then and now, is to spend time-sharing and learning with fellow calligraphers
and to have a small block of time devoted to calligraphy without interruption
from the demands of our busy lives. These retreats are open to all
calligraphers regardless of their level of expertise, with strong emphasis
on all levels.
This retreat offers an instructor for the participants to learn and update skills.
Instruction is always optional. This weekend belongs to the individual to do
as they please. Perhaps you have a deadline to meet or want to have uninterrupted
time to complete a special project.
Accommodations for the weekend are dormitory rooms with bunk beds.
All meals are included from Friday dinner through Sunday lunch. Though
there are occasional summer & fall Menuchas, the winter Menucha
retreat is always the last weekend in February.
About the Menucha Retreat Center
Menucha is a sacred sanctuary held
in stewardship as an ecumenical, community-based mission of First Presbyterian
Church.
Past the stone entry, a forest embraces travelers along a serpentine
road. The destination: a one hundred acre sanctuary in the Columbia
River Gorge. Seven hundred feet above one of the nation's epic rivers,
this is a place where bald eagles float their shadows across old growth
conifers; where trails may lead to heirloom gardens or perennial springs.
It's called "Menucha" (Men-oo-ka),
a Hebrew word meaning
"ever-changing stillness."
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