Created: Sep 27, 2007
Updated: Jan 04, 2008
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Topic: How did you meet Habib?

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We think reflecting upon how we met Habib would be a fitting way to start these discussions. Please share with us. I met Habib not too long after he helped start the People's Web. A group of friends had started Co-Op Fremont and I met him at a monthly meeting. He was so gentle and direct. He loved connecting people and selflessly help others achieve their dreams. I miss him already.
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I met Habib in Seattle for a Wiser Meeting, his energy and vision was truly amazing.
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paul about 1 year ago
Jon. Thank you for this. I do remember Habib. This is truly sad. When you meet someone as special as Habib only once, it makes you appreciate who you meet often.
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I met Habib In early January this year, 2007 at a holiday party at Eric and Sarah's and Ally's in Seattle. He was the sweetest man!! He offered to buy my ticket home so I could stay in Seattle a few more days, for the honoring of his work in Seattle. I honor his work no matter where I go! He has been such an intentional networker, introduced me to ONet and great people, and I so appreciate his community building skills, and initiatives. He is one I carry in my heart always.
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I met Habib at a retreat convened by Emerging Futures Network in prelude to Recent Changes Camp in Portland 2007. Well.. actually I met him on O-net. He joined O-net on my birthday, I recall. I felt deep kinship with him right away, as I expect many have.



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I met Habib the same time Michael did, Feb 2007. I met Kachina and Jon that same time, actually. I very much value his commitment to working at the "right pace."
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Habib, my friend, tayata, om gati gati para gati, para sambogoti, vajra soha... I met Habib on O.net through Evonne and through exchanges at our Emerging Network site. Then invited him to our event in Portland last February. We started the network weavers group at about us: http://www.networkweavers.net with Ted's help (and a few others). I went wtih him to Seattle and attended a wiser earth meeting and met some of his friends and he met some of mine as part of our networking day in Seattle. Habib is a very sensitive and loving and compassionate man who taught me alot about balance. For his heart to stop, this is a statement about the larger world. May there be peace in each of our hearts and the hearts of our nations upon this world. Perhaps the recent conflict in Burma was too much.
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I first encountered Habib through his email messages in guiding the organization of the Network for Spiritual Progressives (NSP-Seattle), and then met him in person at the Wiser Commons forum in Seattle in early December 2006, and then soon afterwards at the first Awakening the Dreamer Symposium in Seattle, also in December 2006. He was perhaps the most gentle, caring soul I have ever been blessed to meet.
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I got to meet Habib 6 or 7 years ago at a conference that he cocreated and cofacilitated with Bill Aal and others, called "Co-creating Structures for Change." After that I ran into him at interfaith events and community gatherings and lectures (such as one that Vandana Shiva gave at UW -- and of course Habib already knew the friends I was with, from other connections than the ones I shared with him). And as a subscriber to some of the listservs he moderated, I saw his name in my email often. In the past year or two we have been in more frequent face to face, knee to knee, contact and also I have loved reading the sweet weblog he started last winter (http://group10.sustainapedianw.org/).

An incomparably generous and kind, tender and thoughtful friend to hundreds of people, such a dear and deep and funny and luminous soul. I feel so lucky to know him, and I miss him already too.
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I got to meet Habib 6 or 7 years ago at a conference that he cocreated and cofacilitated with Bill Aal and others, called "Co-creating Structures for Change." After that I ran into him at interfaith events and community gatherings and lectures (such as one that Vandana Shiva gave at UW -- and of course Habib already knew the friends I was with, from other connections than the ones I shared with him). And as a subscriber to some of the listservs he moderated, I saw his name in my email often. In the past year or two we have been in more frequent face to face, knee to knee, contact and also I have loved reading the sweet weblog he started last winter (http://group10.sustainapedianw.org/).

An incomparably generous and kind, tender and thoughtful friend to hundreds of people, such a dear and deep and funny and luminous soul. I feel so lucky to know him, and I miss him already too.
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I met him on the phone several times at the beginning of this year, Julie suggested that we meet. We had lovely conversations about connection. With Ted, we started working on NetworkWeavers.net - he was an enjoyable person to work with, learned quickly and had much to teach. He invited me to a neighborhood networking lunch later on in the year, so I drove to Seattle not knowing exactly what to expect. What I found was that he was a wonderful people person and the group that was at the meeting was wonderfully diverse in every way. He was a joy to talk to and connect with, which made him a wonderful organizer. His spirit will continue to weave through many souls.
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I met Habib online through the Emerging Futures Network - we had several phone calls but never had the opportunity to meet in person. We had just recently discussed a project on social network analysis - his passion. There is so much more he wanted to do - that he now entrusts to the rest of us.
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May the garden of works he has seeded continue to grow and produce, continue to unite, continue to motivate and be carried on by those whom he has touched! I wish I had the opportunity as so many of you have to be inspired by his passion personally. I never have met Habib, but it is obvious to any who are familiar with his testament that he was a passionate individual who will be missed dearly! I wish the best to his family and friends...
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I met Habib in the Omidyar community and over a period of months we began to grow closer together around Network Weaving concepts. Just last week he posted an article on his blog that connected his network to my network: http://group10.sustainapedianw.org/

He started a Network Weaver's discussion on Ned after Omidyar closed. It's at http://www.ned.com/group/networkweavers/news/9/

He was a person with one of the most generous spirits that I've met on the Internet. I think we might have talked once recently, but through many online exchanges we came to know and trust each other. I'm sure that in whatever spiritual world he has gone to he's introducing people to each other, and pointing to us who are still doing this work on earth.
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I met Habib on omidyar.net.

What a gentle and giving soul. Just Monday this week he was working with me to increase the visibility Opok Farm Village on Razoo and Facebook. He was so open and giving even in the hard times he was having.

He reminded me that things are never too bad in your life to keep you from helping another person who needs you.
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I met him on omidyar!
I recently joined the "network weavers" at "about us", and I was looking forward to what it could lead to. He started it.

I have never met him, I live in France, so I don't know anyone for real!

Yet, I see that even virtual conversations weave links and we can appreciate someone without actually meeitng him!

I'm sad, but I feel part of a tightly-knit community, and that is a good feeling in this world

We have lost a friend

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I met Habib through my husband and partner, Jon Ramer. Habib was participating in a "cooperation Study" course that Jon had started about 4 years ago. Over the years I got to know Habib as a networker extraordinaire, collaborator on several events in the community, a true mensch/good guy and he always encouraged me to step out and speak up. His straight talking, kind and playful ways will be missed and I will remember to give more openly from knowing him.
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I met Habib online -- through one of the several listservs we both subscribed to. I was the lead organizer for an issue-based event - and doing my best to network with potentially interested people in all the ways I could figure out to do, both online and in-person. it was all a bit overwhelming for me.

Habib noticed. He noticed that I could use some advice, connection, and friendliness. In a way it seemed he stepped through the static I was experiencing -- to provide information and connections, orienting me to groups and listservs that had connection to my topic and introducing me, online, to several people. Then he went a step further and came to visit me in Kent -- a town about 20 miles from where he lived. He'd invited another activist with him and we sat at a local restaurant and talked for a couple of hours.

Interestingly, it was Habib's request that we meet at a locally-owned restaurant that afternoon that finally got me to start moving toward the habit of choosing the local rather than the chain restaurant. I'd known for a long time that I wanted to do that -- but habits can be difficult to establish!

All during our conversation that day, I saw that Habib was skillfully helping to keep our conversation flowing in a way that brought out connections and interests we shared. And I learned a lot -- just in that conversation but more as I came to talk with Habib further -- about the dynamics between online and in-person relationships. This has significance for the activist community and Habib was actively exploring and mapping out this territory, thinking and doing and connecting the whole time -- helping to open up the potential.

It is through Habib that I noticed the fortuitous irony that the most global and least in-person resource possible -- the Internet -- was creating all this possibility for people to connect, face-to-face, in their own communities. Here's Habib's Neighbor Networking blog: http://group10.sustainapedianw.org/

What I am thinking of now as I think of Habib -- is that he had this drive to build on possibility, to spark awareness, to help connections form. I feel a sense of personal disappointment that he is gone so soon.

"The history of the living world can be summarized as the elaboration of ever more perfect eyes in a cosmos in which there is always something more to be seen" -- Tielhard de Chardin
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I first met Habib online thru omidyar.net and we got the chance to meet face to face for a coffee and chat at the original Starbucks in downtown Seattle August 10th of this year. We had a great time brainstorming together and I last chatted with him when he called 9/8 to introduce me to Sala Sweet. We were bouncing around many interesting ideas at ned.com and I will miss his energy, his spirit, his thoughtfulness and his kindness.
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Habib and I met in person at a NICA gathering many years ago... I have no idea which gathering or how many years ago. NICA is the Northwest Intentional Community Association (google it), which has regular meetings at different Intentional Communities around the PNW. Habib was not so much interested in ICs, as in learning from groups that had made that level of commitment - to actually live with each other, all the time - to inform his own community networking efforts. This was, I believe, before his NeighborNet ideas came together.

I was immediately attracted to his warm, gentle energy and great curiosity. He was eager to connect, to provide resources, to be of service - and this he put this first, before his own interests of learning how Intentional Communities might relate to his own interests.

He attended period IC events over the years. The last three events where we met may be of interest... the Seattle Premier of "Commune, The Movie" - The Art of Community NW, an event presented by the FIC (Fellowship for Intentional Community), and a Sustainable Seattle workshop.

For me, Habib was a key connector to another form of community-building... building community where you are. This has significant differences from building a residential, intentional community, as it gets to skip the land development portion, involves less risk, less concern about money, and is much more accessible to everybody.

I've been inspired by the Habib's ideas, by his energy, and by his gentle spirit. He lives on in my heart and will influence my actions for many years to come.

For example, the New Earth Song Cohousing vision statement, which I recently helped craft, is:

"We're forming sustainable community with Songaia Cohousing, creating a new kind of welcoming neighborhood committed to lifelong care for the Earth and each other."

This broader neighborhood perspective, that looks beyond our little "enclave of goodness" (the two sister cohousing communities on 15 acres), is a direct influence of Habib. Our intention is to develop authentic relationships with our neighbors, to network with them, inviting them to participate our community as they desire - and to individually connect with them, where they live - without trying to convert them into the more radical communitarians that people who choose to live 'in community.'

Thank you Habib!
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