Inbal kashtan biography for kids

inbal kashtan biography for kids

Playwriting - Inbal Kashtan

    She lived first in a commune of about 11 adults and 4 children and then with three friends, both in or near the Mission District.

Grabbing Our Way to Peace - The Natural Child Project

  • Inbal Kashtan (), MA, CNVC Certified Trainer, was co-founder of Bay Area Nonviolent Communication (BayNVC), co-leader of BayNVC's North America NVC Leadership Program and the coordinator of the Center for Nonviolent Communication's Peaceful Families, Peaceful World Project.
  • Inbal Kashtan (Author of Parenting From Your Heart) - Goodreads

      Inbal came into this world on and died on 6 September We, Miki and Arnina, her sisters, mourn that she died before her radical, visionary, and compassionate work got to be more widely known.

    Home - Inbal Kashtan

      1983-1991 – Inbal moved to San Francisco to take part in the Fischer Hoffman intensive three-month process which was the beginning of many years of intensive focus on liberation and strengthening her capacities.

    Meeting Long-Term Needs: Parenting with Empathy, Expression ...

  • Inbal Kashtan (1965-2014), MA, CNVC Certified Trainer, was co-founder of Bay Area Nonviolent Communication (BayNVC), co-leader of BayNVC's North America NVC.
  • The Giraffe Mediator - The Natural Child Project

      We can teach our children about making peace by understanding, reflecting, and nurturing their ability to meet their needs while we also understand, express and attend to our own.

    NVC reference materials - The Fearless Heart

  • Home Home Inbal came into this world on and died on 6 September 2014.
  • Deaths -
    Psychologist Inbal Kashtan (1965-2014) built cultural bridges through compassionate skills and self-inquiry that awaken shared peacemaking.
    Inbal Kashtan.
    We offer training, mediation, and facilitation to individuals and organizations using the skills and consciousness of Nonviolent Communication.

    Inbal the person - Inbal Kashtan

  • I focused primarily on leadership development and transforming parenting, as two powerful strategies for contributing to structural change.
  • Parenting for Peace

    by Inbal Kashtan

    What resources and skills do we need, as a society, to sustain peace? How can parents contribute to society's transition to nonviolence? What can we teach our children that will really make the world different for their generation?

    Several months ago my son, now four years old, asked me to read a book about castles that he had picked up at the library. He picked the book because he loves the Eyewitness series and was methodically going through as many of those books as we could find, irrespective of their subject matter. I didn't like this one. It depicted not only castles but also knights, armor and weapons of all kinds used in battles in centuries past.

    I am not ready for weapons. One of the things I enjoy about my son not going to preschool and not watching TV is that his exposure to violence has been extremely limited. He has never said the word "gun" or played pretend violent games - yet. He doesn't know about war and people purposely hu