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Leader Bio: Arthur Shipkowski
Why I am involved in ADFI'd been curious about ADF for a while, ever since stumbling upon ADF via Isaac Bonewits' website. A number of things attracted me to ADF: the vision of public Neopaganism, the wide range of Indo-European religion, the amount of information available on the public website, and the tolerance and general joy of a number of ADF members I had observed online and in person. Once I joined, the additional information and resources available to me enhanced the resonance I already felt with ADF's cosmology.What I do in ADFBecause I feel ADF has provided me with much, I wanted to give a gift for a gift in order to contribute to ADF's vision. I am currently the ADF Members' Advocate (MA). Beyond the defined duties of this position (essentially, a voice on the Mother Grove more directly representing the members), I feel the best way to be an MA is to actively seek out causes of member dissatisfaction and help people get the most out of ADF. Often the questions and concerns members have about ADF are those where they need someone willing to help them find the information, resources, and understanding they need -- rather than issues requiring a place on the MG agenda. I am trying to attack this from both sides: first, to ensure that people find the information they need; second, to make it easier to them to find that information before they discover they need it. I am also the Grove Organizer for Hemlock Vales Protogrove, ADF in State College, PA. I find it personally important to provide the opportunity for public worship of the Kindreds to others, and have recently begun a blog to discuss my experiences with starting a Protogrove. My personal vision for ADF's futureMany others have already spoken eloquently of the vision of ADF as a larger mainstream religious community, in line with much of Isaac Bonewits' original vision. This is a vision I share; I'd love hundreds of Groves across the US offering public worship through our blend of inspiration and scholarship -- fast as a speeding Oak Tree, of course. But a shorter-term vision I have is that of ADF increasing its breadth not through Mother Grove initiated projects, but through individual ADF members deciding a project is important enough to implement on their own. Great things, like the Core Order of Ritual Tutorial (note, this is a members-only link), have been accomplished by ADF members deciding "we need this" and doing it. Many people focus on the trunk of the tree -- but the tree only grows by increasing the breadth of its branches, and I think the greatest potential for growth in ADF is at the "twigs." We are all a part of the tree.
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