Sedona Red Rock News; Veterans Park at Halfway

newsAttending A Sept. 13 Fundraiser for the Veterans Memorial Park at Tlaquepaque are, left to right, Arizona Secretary of State Ken Bennett, Sedona Fire District Fire Chief Kris Kazian, Sedona Korean American Association President Banya Lim, Marine Corps League Sedona Detachment 1237 Commandant Ray Stueve and Sedona 30 President Joel Detor. Funding for the park is currently at the halfway point, with another $35,000 needed before the park’s tentative March 2013 completion date.

Sedona RedRock News; Public memorial honors area veterans

Veterans 9-11-12RRN

Across the nation communities are erecting memorials in a public place to honor the area’s veterans, and Sedona plans to be among them.

The Sedona Detachment 1237 of the Marine Corps League joined with the Korean-American Association to create a Veterans Memorial Park within Jack Jameson Memorial Park at the southwest corner of State Route 89A and Northview Drive.

“We were planning to build a memorial park for Korean War veterans and found out the league had the same type of idea so we joined with them to create a memorial for all men and women Sedona veterans for all the wars,” said Banya Lim, chairwoman for the project.

The league is sponsor for the project, which originally had a price tag of $300,000. Between the league and the association, they were able to bring the price down to approximately $100,000 to $110,000.

“It’s going to recognize people in Sedona who served in our military — in all five branches. The only requirement is they must have lived in Sedona for a minimum of one year and were honorably discharged,” said Ray Stueve, commandant for the Sedona Marine Corps League detachment.

Written by Lu Stitt
Wednesday, 12 September 2012 16:06

http://www.redrocknews.com/News/public-memorial-honors-area-veterans.html

Sedona Military Service Park

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THE GOAL
We would like to create a Military Service Park in Sedona.  It’s purpose is to honor all our brave men and women who have served their country honorably in times of peace and during war. This monument is meant to be a lasting tribute to their loyalty and bravery. All branches of the military will be represented. Especially Korean War Veterans Memorial Monument  will be dedicated to the many men and women that served during the “forgotten war”.

THE PLAN
We intend to modify the existing Jack Jamesen Memorial Park. The center for the park will have a circular viewing area. Surrounding the area’s perimeter, facing inward, are smooth black granite walls. Etched on these walls are the names of veterans who have lived in Sedona. In the middle, flying high overhead, will be Old Glory and the flags from each branch of the service.

THE NEED
What we need right now is your support in funding this project. We’re asking the community to make this military memorial park a reality.  It will be a permanent reminder to us of the sacrifices men and women have made and continue to make to protect our freedom.

Sedona celebrates the Lunar New Year – From the Red Rock News

Sedona celebrates the Lunar New Year

Written by Lu Stitt
Monday, 23 January 2012 00:00
Banya Lim and other members of the Sedona Korean-American Association will host their second annual Lunar New Year Festival on Saturday, Jan. 28, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., in Uptown. The festival will include Asian food, folk games, traditional Asian entertainment and other activities.

Tom Hood/Larson Newspapers

Banya Lim and other members of the Sedona Korean-American Association will host their second annual Lunar New Year Festival on Saturday, Jan. 28, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., in Uptown. The festival will include Asian food, folk games, traditional Asian entertainment and other activities.

Led by fourth-grade student Kristian Trujillo, 9, children from LouAnne Scott’s class at West Sedona School practice Wednesday, Jan. 18, with a 40-foot long, hand-crafted dragon for their upcoming Chinese New Year celebration. The 32 students from the class will parade around campus with the dragon for fellow students to see Monday, Jan. 23.
Tom Hood/Larson Newspapers
Led by fourth-grade student Kristian Trujillo, 9, children from LouAnne Scott’s class at West Sedona School practice Wednesday, Jan. 18, with a 40-foot long, hand-crafted dragon for their upcoming Chinese New Year celebration. The 32 students from the class will parade around campus with the dragon for fellow students to see Monday, Jan. 23.

The new year may only be a few weeks old, but for many Asian cultures the new year won’t begin until Monday, Jan. 23 — the Lunar New Year.

The Lunar New Year will be celebrated around Sedona with a festival at the Brain Respiration Clinic in Uptown, an open house at Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine in West Sedona and a dragon made by students at West Sedona School.

The Lunar New Year begins on the first new moon of the new year. It is a celebration of change to ring in all of the good and end all of the bad — a time for renewal. Its origin is centuries old.

The new year is known as Chūn Jié in China, Tết in Vietnam, Losar in Tibet, Seollal in Korea and Tsagaan Sar in Mongolia.

The 2012 Lunar New Year is the year of the Dragon, the mightiest of the 12 Chinese calendar’s zodiac signs.

The Sedona Korean-American Association will host the second annual Lunar New Year Festival on Saturday, Jan. 28, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Sun Building, 340 Jordan Road. The festival is free and open to the public.

“We had many people come last year,” said Banya Lim, director of the BR Clinic. “I realized there is an interest in other cultures to see and experience things they never had before, so we are going to do it again the Saturday after the Lunar New Year.”

The festival will feature traditional Asian food, folk games, traditional Asian entertainment, calligraphy art, raffles and music.

“We’ll show two movies — one Korean and one Japanese. I want to show a comedy yet still show the culture,” Lim said.

Everyone in the association will wear traditional clothing and show children and adults how to play Korean games like toss the stick into the bowl and another similar to Hacky Sack.

“We prepare for Lunar New Year and celebrate it just like people do Christmas. People in Korea live frugally all year then celebrate and give gifts at the Lunar New Year,” Lim said.

Lim said Koreans now celebrate the Gregorian New Year on Jan. 1 and the Lunar New Year.

As a treat, people can have their New Year fun fortunes read using the day, year and time of their birth.

“It’s a tradition in Korean culture,” she said. “It will be fun, and any donations we receive will go to the Korean War Veterans Memorial that will be built in the Verde Valley.”

At West Sedona School, students in LouAnne Scott’s fourth-grade class built a dragon for the Chinese New Year. On Monday, Jan. 23 they will go through the buildings so other students can cheer them and see the dragon.

“We’re doing this as an offshoot of a book they read, ‘The Last Dragon,’” Scott said. “When done we’re coming back to the classroom to eat ramen noodles with chopsticks and have fortune cookies.”

The day is marked by several events, Scott said. It is the 100th day of school, Scott’s retirement and new teacher Alex Mace’s first day and birthday.

“The dragon will be a fun activity for her to do on her first day,” Scott said.

Sig and Sarah Hauer will host a free event at their shop in West Sedona at 65 Coffee Pot Drive, Suite D, with food, gifts and special offers.

“It’s an opportunity for people to become familiar with Chinese medicine,” Sig Hauer said.

As with any holiday, a variety of food dishes are associated with the Lunar New Year.

“We eat steamed fish, roasted pork, a lot of vegetables and rice,” said Janet Ho, whose family owns a Chinese restaurant in the Village of Oak Creek.

The new year also celebrates family. A popular dish is jiaozi, round dumplings that signify family reunion. Other dishes include dim sum, spring rolls and sweet cakes.

2012 Lunar New Year Festival on Jan 28

Dear Friend,
You have been cordially invited to the 2nd Annual  Lunar New Year Celebration hosted by the Sedona Korean American Association. This year the festivites will be held in the SUN building located at 340 Jordan Rd.
The Festival will celebrate the Lunar New Year as well as double as a fund-raiser for one of the SKAA’s main goals: raising a Korean War Veterans Memorial Monument in the Verde Valley.
This is a special opportunity to enjoy a variety of traditional Asian food, folk games, personalized calligraphy art, chinese zodiac fortune-telling, and Korean movies.

If you would like more information about the event or have questions please do not hesitate to call me at 928-567-7897 or contact me by email at banya4acu@gmail.com.

The Sedona Korean American Association sincerely looks forward to sharing the Lunar New Year with you.

Warmest Regards,

Banya Lim

President
Sedona Korean American Association


Korean War Veterans Luncheon with Sedona’s Rhythm, Korean Drum Team (Nov 17)

On November 17, Banya Lim, a president of Sedona Korean American Association and Sedona’s Rhythm, Korean drumming team visit Korean War Veterans Association(KWVA) meeting in Prescott, AZ in special recognition of 2011 Veteran Day.

From Left: Paul Yanson(Director of Sedona's Rhythm), Banya Lim(President of SKAA)

From Left: Paul Yanson, Young Han, Gaye Anthony, Banya Lim, John McKinney

FREEDOM IS NOT FREE!



November 12th Celebration at the Performing Arts Center

By Ralph Fourmont

Sedona Meditation CenterI read in The Call of Sedona that when you come to Sedona and allow your heart to open, your vision or life’s mission will reveal itself, or a vision that you lost long ago. Like many others, I lost sight of my vision many years ago, and yet it was a vision that was muted and blurred at best. Please let me share not the beautiful vision that I now hold in my heart and my brain, but of the wonderful people who have helped me find that vision with great passion and clarity. Let me share with you my new loving family at the “Celebrate the Sedona Spirit” hosted by the Sedona Meditation Center this last Saturday, on November twelfth.

I began attending the Dahn Yoga classes at the Center on Jordan Road about seven weeks ago, and have increased my attendance to enjoy and learn in a myriad of classes since. I’ve enjoyed energy healing, Dahn Yoga, drumming, Tai Chi, modern dancing, a belly dancing class (I thought it was a yoga class, really!), and special visits from different exotic and spiritual cultures. How could I stay away when I feel so loved, so welcome, and I feel for once in a long time that I may be getting closer to opening my heart and letting Heaven’s beautiful loving energy in to heal my bruised and battered soul. Eventually I made more friends at the center and went on hikes and helped out with various events, so I was quick to volunteer for Ilchi Lee’s appearance on the great event at the Performing Arts Center. Why wouldn’t I be excited and honored to meet the person who was responsible for bringing such a loving, peaceful and crucial mission to humanity? I wanted to enjoy life with my new friends.

Ilchi Lee - Celebrate the Sedona Spirit

The state-of-the-art Performing Arts Center is an amazing building, and we were rushing about trying to prepare in time for the wonderful celebration we had planned. We tied balloons in the cold wind to direct the almost 900 people, set up booths, set out food, prepared the stage and performances; trying to hold it all together like a child with a full bag of groceries on a rickety staircase. The new Meditation Center director, HaeJung Jung, was typically beautiful and brilliant, guiding and thoughtful, yet a powerful mother to us all; appointing places and times like the grand conductor of a massive orchestration. People arrived in droves, exceeding our expectation, and still I had a strong sense of family and belonging as my friends from the center manned booths and assisted visitors. I could not be tied down to a booth as the energy began to grow inside and around me; I found I had to keep moving, running errands, helping, and sharing my energy.

The crowd rushed into the theatre at the appointed hour, and I helped find seats for everyone I could. I shared the kindness and love that I received from the instructors and core members at the meditation center, and experienced such a strong sense of belonging and family, wanting to welcome everyone into this joy and onto this path that I was so freely shown. When Mr. Lee appeared in the audience the crowd responded with a heartfelt cheer and welcome of love and respect. The show began with enthusiasm and excitement, one beautiful and thrilling performance after another of explosive sound, color, and richly flowing culture. But I was too intoxicated by the sheer energy of the event to pay much attention, honestly. The powerful and startling drummers from different cultures, the brilliant dancers, the beautiful singers soaring in my ears; I caught breathtaking and unforgettable glimpses, but had to keep moving, attending, assisting, running between the lobby and the audience. The energy was terrific, and I could not stop; I was drunk with love and excitement, a small child in a huge gathering of close relatives. My heart was open, my family was close, and the night was filled with light and sound and an endless stream of joyful people like ten years of Christmas all in a few hours. We were all connected, and I was glowing.

Sedona Meditation Center - Live Jive and drummers

Nervous and apprehensive later, I waited to take the stage for a Brain Wave Vibration demonstration directed by Ilchi Lee himself. I was honored and deeply grateful to be chosen for this small task, and ecstatic to meet our enlightened teacher. In front of all those people, sitting in a lone chair dancing to the music, I was not alone … I felt everyone giving me their energy, their love, their support. I felt we were all in that chair, I felt we were One. As the rhythm increased, though my body shook and jumped I grew peaceful inside, and still … like a cat in the window on a bright snowy night, warm and safe. As I exited the stage, Mr. Lee took my hand and touched my forehead, and I felt the love and compassion of my new family at that moment, as a bright light filled my heart.

Ilchi Lee at Celebrate the Sedona Spirit

The people left that night in a reluctant rush, more caught up and driven by the energy that filled and unified that Center, than by the thought of beating the parking crowd. Everyone was glowing, and wondrous at the vision they had experienced, excited about learning more about this new Meditation Center that had brought such a remarkable event. I was simply happy, honored and very, very proud of my new group of close family and friends. I felt alive!

(Photos by Franklin Hughes/ Post from Sedonastory.com)