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Desert Rose Press / Earth Spirit Craft

The flurry of production of cards for Earth Day 1990 ("Earth Celebrations") marked the beginning of Desert Rose Press. For more than ten years the printed works of the press in books, broadsides, and cards have expressed our passion for the craft of printing and bookmaking, and our greater vision of a healthy, peaceful Earth united in Spirit.

As world social and ecological crises escalated, we wanted to express our passions and concern for the Earth to a broader community. We expanded the work of the press to public media and the internet with the creation of Raventalk in 1997. www.raventalk.com

Thank you for visiting our site.


May the gifts of the Earth touch our hearts.
May we be filled with kindness for ourselves,
for our planet and for all beings.
May we have the courage to change.

Books

Across America on the Yellow Brick Road

by Virginia Mudd

Imagine reading a "Cycling Companion Wanted" ad in a bicycling newsletter for a cross-America bike trip, answering it, and setting off two months later with a woman you just met for a 3,500-mile, 60-day journey from California to Washington, D.C. Taken from my journal this tells the story of two twenty-nine year old adventurers who fulfill a common dream. I recall exhilarating roads and landscapes, tedious miles, peaceful times, scary experiences, personal struggles, wonderful encounters with people, and the unfolding of a journey of a lifetime.

Signed copy
150 pages, 25 illustrations
virginiamudd.com

Broadsides

Canticle of the Sun

This famous verse by St. Francis of Assisi is printed on Fabriano Tiepolo paper by an Epson 2200 printer. The type is set in Neue Hammer Uncial. The digital images are taken from original gouache paintings made for a casebound book, printed letterpress, which will be available later this summer.

Broadside, 11 x 17 inches

Cards

Peace & Unity

This card, measuring 5 x 25 inches in an accordion fold, is a prayer for peace. Wisdom from ancient and present sources is presented on each fold. The calligraphed peace sign becomes a circle, encompassing our connectedness, as we all become one in our desire for peace,

All Of Us

This abridged version of our Peace and Unity card contains the quotes of Kofi Annan, Black Elk, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Alexsandr Solzhenitsyn. It is blank on the reverse and fits into a standard #10 envelope. It's handy for writing short notes and we often include it when we pay our bills.

Broadside, 3 1/2 x 8 1/2 inches

What The World Needs Now

The quote by Longfellow, If we could read the secret history of our enemies, we would find in each person's story enough suffering and sorrow there to disarm all hostilities. It expresses the essence of the one vital thing the world needs now. The photograph is taken during Occupy Wall Street, and the placard reads "When the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will know peace."

Gallery

As we prepared to make war on Iraq, a prayer for peace with millions of others around the world.

Gallery > Thich Nhat Hanh Calls It "Interbeing"

Thich Nhat Hanh Calls It Interbeing

One of our broadsides, the Prajna Paramita Heart Sutra, is the essence of Buddhist teaching. While we don't consider ourselves exclusively Buddhists any more than we consider ourselves exclusively Christian, we practice and learn from many traditions. As one Buddhist teacher says, "Buddhism is a clever way to enjoy life." We are equally inspired and instructed by the Tao Te Ching, by great American leaders like Chief Seattle, Walt Whitman, Martin Luther King, Jr., by the Christian mystics, Hildegard of Bingen and Teresa of Avila. All, and so many more, offer us a new way of looking at where we come from, and how to be fully in this present lifetime and moment.

These teachings all challenge us to expand and deepen our perception of the universe, our relationships, of who we are, and how to live creatively, and in harmony with our Earth and all beings. They offer us different interpretations and perceptions of the ancient teaching that "we are all one." Thich Nhat Hanh, the great Vietnamese Buddhist master, poet ad peace activist, offers another way to interpret this essence of oneness in what he calls "interbeing." The cloud, the sun, the tree, the logger, your mind & ours, are all in this piece of paper you are reading. (As you can see, this essay was written before the web took the place of a great deal of paper. What do we see now as you read this on the screen?) Without any one of these elements, it would not exist. Each one depends on the other, and all others together. it is a great challenge to our small perception and limited view to see how we are all connected. Our native peoples knew this, and continue to convey that wisdom to us modern people. For if we are all interrelated, then what we do to ourselves, or to another creature, or just how we live our lives, has an effect on someone or something else. And what we don't do for ourselves, we don't do for our planet.

An extension and expression of this idea is that we are all things. We are both victims and victimizers, both sufferers and the cause of suffering. We can see this more clearly if we witness a harm that a person we know does to another. Since we know a little of that person's history and situation, we can realize how that person might have committed a harmful act, and if we had been in that person's shoes, we might have done the same thing,. We could have been that person; we could be that person; we are that person. We are one. As Thich Nhat Hanh says in his poem, Please Call Me By My True Name, "I am the 12 year old girl, refugee on a small boat / who throws herself into the ocean after being raped by a sea pirate / and I am the pirate, my heart not yet capable of seeing and loving."

Where does this perception lead us? For one thing, it can lead us to experience the qualities of interbeing from an ecological perspective as we interact with our local, bioregional community. Here in the arid southwest, we are constantly reminded of the preciousness of water. We are asked to find our own role as participants in this particular limited situation, rather than ignoring the reality.

A student of Thich Nhat Hanh asked his teacher, "Thay, there are so many urgent problems, what should I do?" Drawing on another beautiful Buddhist text, the Avatamsaka Sutra ("Adoring the Buddha with Flowers") he said, "When you destroy one area, you destroy every area. When you save one area, you save all areas. Take one thing and do it very deeply and carefully, and you will be doing everything at the same time."

Where else does this perception of interdependence and interbeing lead us? To the door of compassion, for ourselves and our fellow/sister beings. If we truly know in our hearts that what we do to the Earth we do to ourselvesâ€"and what we do to ourselves we do to the Earthâ€"we would think very carefully of the consequence of each action, each word and gesture, each thought. We would think and see beyond our immediate needs and desires, and see how our lives affect the seventh generation. We would be gentle with ourselves, and with our planet for the wonder and love of life we would feel as we realize the miracle and magnitude of our creation. We would love the planet as ourselves.