Hi All,
Here is a link to an online training video on how to participate in the online dialogue that begins tomorrow. It basically steps through all the things I talked about on the phone today. You are able to pause the video at any time using the bar at the top of the screen.
Let me know if there are problems. You will need to have internet access to view this video.
And please feel free to use this group space to communicate with the other featured practitioners about topics, or questions.
Best,
Kristin
Dialogue: Lessons from a successful media campaign

Ottawa, Sept. 2003 — Monia Mazigh holds a procession for the return of her husband, Maher Arar. She's joined by their two children, Barâa (to her side) and Houd (in stroller), her own mother (left) and Maher Arar's mother (right). Photo: Philippe Duhamel.
When I met Monia Mazigh in 2003, she was a dignified, immensely worried lone campaigner for her husband's release.
On September 25, 2002, Maher Arar left his wife Monia, their 5-year old daughter Barâa and 7-month baby son Houd in Tunisia, where they were vacationing on her side of the family. He had to return to work in Canada. The rest of the family would return later. They bade him farewell and he took a taxi to the airport.
This was the last time Monia and the kids saw him for over a year.
Maher Arar was pulled aside during his stopover in New York, while waiting for his connecting flight to Canada. He was interrogated for hours, detained incognito, and then "renditioned" (sent secretly) to Syria, where he was tortured and held for 10 months and 10 days in a tomb-like cell where rat packs would run, and cat pee would rain from an opening in the ceiling.
It was a slow buildup. First there was radio. Then a news headline in the local paper.
What's this?