In anticipation of Central Oregon Community College’s (COCC) 14th annual Season of Nonviolence, the college is convening a series of community book groups focused on Robin Wall Kimmerer’s New York Times-bestselling “Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants.” COCC’s Season of Nonviolence, which begins in mid-January and spans through mid-March, will feature a Jan. 24 livestreamed keynote event with Kimmerer, co-presented by the University of Oregon Common Reading program. A complete Season of Nonviolence schedule will be announced early next month; visit
cocc.edu/seasonofnonviolence for more information.
Coordinated by COCC’s office of diversity and inclusion and the Nancy R. Chandler Lecture Series, the “Braiding Sweetgrass” book groups, staged throughout Central Oregon, will begin meeting in early January in advance of the
free livestreamed author event. A botanist, distinguished university ecology professor and enrolled member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, the award-winning Kimmerer writes about the natural world in “Braiding Sweetgrass,” examining plants through storytelling and Indigenous science to convey a broader message of coexistence.
Book group participants are encouraged to begin reading or rereading the book now to be ready for discussion next month. Groups will individually decide on a remote or in-person meeting format.
In Bend, four book groups are convening. The COCC sustainability group will meet Fridays at noon, beginning Jan. 7, at the COCC Bend campus’s Health Careers Center, Room 260; contact Noelle Copley at
ncopley@cocc.edu. The Trinity Episcopal Church group will meet Wednesdays at 4 p.m. beginning Jan. 12; contact Betsy Warriner at
betsy@betsywarriner.com. Oregon State University-Cascades is hosting a Bend group on Thursdays at 4 p.m. beginning Jan. 17; contact Judith Sadora at
judith.sadora@osucascades.edu. A COCC library book group is set to meet Tuesdays at 12:30 p.m., beginning Jan. 25, at the COCC Barber Library’s South Oregon Room; contact Cat Finney at
cfinney@cocc.edu.
In Redmond, an Environmental Center book group will meet Wednesdays at 5 p.m., beginning Jan. 5, at COCC’s Redmond campus; contact Priscilla Calleros at
priscilla@envirocenter.org. A Madras and Prineville book group will meet Mondays at noon, beginning Jan. 10, at the COCC Madras campus; contact Michelle Cary at
mcary@cocc.edu. In Tumalo, a Cascades Academy book group will meet at 5:30 p.m. on Jan. 26 and Feb. 24 at Cascades Academy; contact Katie Lamarre at
lamarre@cascadesacademy.org.
Inspired by the work of Mahatma Gandhi, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., César Chávez and Chief Wilma Mankiller, the Season of Nonviolence honors the vision for an empowered, nonviolent world. Colleges and universities throughout the country celebrate the Season of Nonviolence by educating students, employees and communities to use nonviolent methods to create a more peaceful world. For more information on COCC’s 2022 Season of Nonviolence, contact Charlotte Gilbride, coordinator of the Nancy R. Chandler Lecture Series, at 541-383-7257 or
cgilbride@cocc.edu, or Christy Walker, director of diversity and inclusion, at 541-383-7412 or
cwalker2@cocc.edu.