Santa Cruz Good Times

Saturday
May 25th
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size

Kundalini Rising

coverwebA local devotional singer and her yogi parents are raising consciousness and making miracles happen. GT’s Damon Orion illuminates their spirited tale with exclusive interviews with Oprah Winfrey, Ram Dass and The Grateful Dead’s Bob Weir.

The spiritual teacher Ram Dass has a great line: “We’re all God in drag.” In other words, behind all the costumes—the individual body types, social roles, personalities, occupations, etc.—each of us is a manifestation of the same divine consciousness.

As Oprah Winfrey’s voice spills out of my phone, the truth of those words hits me not as a concept, but as a palpable sensation. There’s an unshakeable feeling that something vast, formless and unfathomable is expressing itself through the metaphor of this moment. In the grand earthly melodrama, I have been cast as a reporter charged with the noble and intimidating mission of interviewing a woman who has interviewed the Obamas, Bill Clinton, Paul McCartney and Bill Gates. And Oprah, the goodhearted, down-to-earth megastar, has phoned me to discuss her connection to a Santa Cruz-based singer named Snatam Kaur, whose spiritual chants she listens to each day before meditating. In particular, I’m interested in hearing Winfrey’s description of an unexpected encounter that she had with Kaur in 2012.  

“No, I cannot describe that experience,” the entertainment icon states, noticeably energized by the mention of the event. “I’m going to start crying if I start talking about it. It is still one of the greatest manifestations I’ve ever had. It fills me with such hope: just, ‘Oh, my gosh! That can happen! That unbelievable, magical thing can happen.’”

Long story short: On the eve of her 58th birthday last year, Winfrey was sitting with a small group of friends at her house in Maui. Slightly after midnight, she and her guests were nearing the end of a five-hour conversation. Winfrey, who was scheduled to interview the aforementioned Ram Dass two days later, began singing Snatam Kaur’s “Guru Ram Das,” a devotional chant to a different spiritual guide with a strikingly similar name.

“Maria Shriver, one of my dear friends, was sitting next to me, and she said, ‘What are you singing?’” Winfrey recalls. “I said, ‘It’s this woman. You wouldn’t know her.’ And she said, ‘I do know her, because I listen to her music every night! She’s helped me through so much!’ So we start screaming: ‘Oh, my God! You love her? I love her, too!’”

cover oprah

Then the truth came out: Winfrey had considered inviting Kaur to sing for her birthday, but had decided against trying to track her down and fly her to Maui at the last minute. “I said [to Shriver], ‘If I had known you loved her, I would have done it,’” Winfrey says.

At sunset the following day, Winfrey and her friends were kicking back on the porch, enjoying some cocktails after a two-and-a-half-hour land-blessing ceremony with a native Hawaiian priest. Out of the blue, one member of the group, Omega Institute’s Elizabeth Lesser, stood up and read a poem. “And then she said, ‘I want you to know that this is one of the great manifestations. You manifested this,’” Winfrey explains.

Lesser rang a bell, and a turban-clad Snatam Kaur descended the stairs singing “Ong Namo,” the song that had first attracted Winfrey to her music. “And the tears just shot out,” Winfrey states. “I just started sobbing, because I couldn’t figure it out: ‘How did this happen? How did this happen?’”

It seems that after Winfrey had gone to bed the previous night, Shriver went from room to room, plotting to bring Snatam Kaur to Maui. In the morning, they tracked Kaur down and offered to fly her to Maui from wherever she was, only to learn that she was already in Maui, 20 minutes or so from Oprah’s place.

Winfrey’s voice rises in pitch as she retraces the events that led up to the birthday concert. “What are the chances that we would have that conversation … at midnight?” she asks rhetorically. “The word amazing is so overused, but that was just jaw-dropping.” She likens the experience to the time when she desperately wanted to be in the film The Color Purple, but thought she had lost the part. “I was literally praying: ‘All right. I’m gonna let it go. I’m gonna surrender it,’” she says. “And the second I said, ‘I surrender it,’ there was a phone call. And it was Steven Spielberg.” 

Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door

Snatam Kaur was—and is—no less stunned by her encounter with Oprah than Winfrey herself. “Miracles do happen, I’d have to say,” the Colorado-born, California-bred vocalist offers. In Kaur’s view, the first miracle was the fact that she was already in Maui when she was invited to Oprah’s birthday party, while the second miracle was seeing Winfrey chant mantras that Kaur had experienced in the yoga community. “Suddenly seeing such an iconic figure as Oprah chanting our chants made the world seem a lot smaller to me,” she states.

Kaur, an internationally known touring musician with 10 albums to her credit, explains that kirtan (Indian devotional singing) is a key part of the Sikh tradition into which she was born. The mantras that she chants are intended to cause “the energy of the mind to shift to the realization that the divine light is within,” and the pronunciation of these words is designed to stimulate the glandular system as the tongue taps the roof of the mouth. Kaur references an MIT study in which the brainwaves of participants who uttered one of these chants were shown to move from a stressed-out “red” state to a calm “blue” state.  

The soft-spoken, unassuming singer says her earliest exposure to kirtan came via her mother, Prabhu Nam Kaur, one of the leading musicians in the western Sikh community. “As things got a little challenging in our lives, my mom would always go to the chanting, and it would do something special for her. [I felt,] ‘I want some of that!’” she laughs. Kaur would later journey to northern India’s Golden Temple, a Sikh sanctuary situated on a lake founded by Guru Ram Das in 1574, to study kirtan with the same musician who taught her mother. “I felt lifetimes of pain and suffering release from just being there,” she says.

cover 1Photo by Jasper Johal

Kaur speaks of experiencing a “golden light energy” while doing kirtan—a description that aligns with her father Sat Santokh Singh’s account of a vision he once had while chanting to one of the founders of the Sikh faith. Interestingly, this was the same being Oprah called out to when she manifested her own miracle: Guru Ram Das. 

At a summer solstice gathering approximately 20 years ago, Singh was sitting with a group of fellow devotees, chanting the name of that long-deceased guru. “I began to see these beautiful, rolling, golden clouds,” he recounts. “And then I see a gold temple—not the one in India; I’ve been to that one. I don’t know what it was.” He then saw a face, which he intuitively understood to belong to Guru Ram Das. “And I ask him a question: “I’ve been chanting your name for 20 years now. You’ve been gone for 400 years. What am I chanting to? What form do you have? Do you hear my prayers?’ And he said to me—I’m not telling you this is the word of God; this is what came into my mind—‘I am merged with the One. I am merged into divine consciousness. Divine consciousness is infinite; it can do anything at any time. When you call on me, it can manifest as me. And yes, I hear your prayers.’” 

Singh says this experience changed his perception of Guru Ram Das’ true identity. “Instead of chanting to a man who lived 400 years ago, I’m chanting to an aspect of the Divine that’s formless, who was that person,” he explains. “The Divine is too big for me to grasp; that’s a handle I can use.”   

The Golden Road

The irises of Singh’s eyes are imbued with a rich golden hue, as if permanently transformed by his encounter with the Divine. Framed by a white turban and cumulus beard, they lend an extra measure of authenticity to the 73-year-old Sikh’s Holy Man air. But embedded in Singh’s speech pattern are clues to his history as a Jewish kid from the Bronx, and his easy-does-it demeanor hints of his pot-scented ’60s days, when, after serving as an activist in groups like Committee for Non-Violent Action and the War Resisters League, he managed the pioneering psychedelic rock band The Grateful Dead.

The tale of Singh’s first brush with the Dead is no less colorful than one would hope. In early 1967, he took his third LSD voyage in another Golden Temple of sorts: San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park, where the band was part of a concert event that also featured groups like Jefferson Airplane and Quicksilver Messenger Service. As the LSD was kicking in, Singh and his friend Ron Thelin were listening to Anonymous Artists of America, a band that had been gifted a Buchla synthesizer by Richard Alpert (now Ram Dass). “They’d sing the words, ‘I’m dying; I’m going out of my mind,’ and the [Buchla] machine would scream,” Singh states. “I’m coming on to my third LSD experience, and I am dying and going out of my mind.”

cover brainAn MIT study in which the brainwaves of participants who chanted were shown to move from a stressed-out “red” state to a calm “blue” state.

Naturally, Singh did what any temporarily insane person would do in this situation: He began to literally crawl away from the band. As he put some distance between himself and the Anonymous Artists, his mood went from bad to better, and then from to good to incredible. Raising his head, he found himself situated in front of The Grateful Dead. One of the band’s managers, Danny Rifkin—“with hair out like [comic book character] Mr. Natural”—was leading what Singh describes as a long snake dance. “This was my first experience of awe: just, ‘What an incredible world!’” he says. “And I thought to myself, ‘Wouldn’t it be incredible to be able to hang out with these people all the time?’”

Not more than a month later, Singh was appointed treasurer of a Haight-Ashbury-based educational collective called Kiva. Ron Thelin brought him to his new workspace, which happened to be located in the same building as The Grateful Dead’s business offices. Having gained some experience as an organizer while serving as executive director of the War Resisters League, Singh was quickly enlisted to help put together the Bay Area’s Summer of Love concerts, almost all of which featured the Dead. During this period of his life, he forged a lasting friendship with the band’s leader, Jerry Garcia. “I’ve almost never loved anybody as much as I loved Jerry,” he notes. “Sitting and talking with him one-on-one was like listening to his music: The conversation would always go higher and higher and higher.” 

Speaking by phone from his Mt. Tamalpais home, former Grateful Dead guitarist Bob Weir recalls that Singh (then Bert Kanegson) exuded a spiritual presence that inspired the members of his band to call him Holy Bert. He says Singh taught him “that spiritual endeavors will tend to positively affect one’s intuition. When he mentioned that to me, it’s like the tumblers clicked, and a door opened up to me.”

Singh’s days with the Dead weren’t all scarlet begonias and Orange Sunshine, though: That’s him being bludgeoned with pool cues in the documentary film Gimme Shelter, which chronicles 1969’s catastrophic Altamont Speedway Free Festival. His head wounds required 60 stitches, and were it not for his Stetson hat absorbing some of the impact of the blows, he would have joined the list of concertgoers who died at the festival.

As his interest shifted away from psychedelics and toward a life of serving others, Singh traded his tie-dyes for holy robes. In 1970, he became a devotee of Sikh leader Yogi Bhajan after hearing that guru speak and lead a chant in Boulder, Colo. Taking the name Sat Santokh Singh Khalsa, he “quit smoking cigarettes and dope, drinking, eating meat and having a very active, ’60s-type sex life, all in one day.”

B. Weir Now

However dramatically his lifestyle might have transformed after his conversion to Sikhism, Singh has remained firm in his commitment to help ease human suffering. In the late ’80s, his dedication to social change led him to found Creating Our Future, an organization designed to empower young people to become activists. Other advisors and participants included Ram Dass, Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir and a teenaged Snatam Kaur.

cover ramdas

One of Kaur’s most vivid memories from her Creating Our Future days is of co-writing a song called “Save Our Earth” with Bob Weir. The young vocalist had planned to sing that song with Weir at a 1990 Earth Day concert in San Francisco; instead, Weir surprised her by handing her his guitar and pushing her onstage with 10 other teenagers. “I’m so grateful that he did that,” she chuckles. “At first I was completely terrified, but if you’re really going to empower young people, you might as well start somewhere.”

Weir recalls the situation differently. “I didn’t know that she had intended for me to sing with her!” he states with a laugh. “But that was the whole Creating Our Future vibe, if you will: getting these kids to stake their claim to this world and affect it in a positive manner.”

As an adult, Kaur continues to put that principle into action. Adhering to a policy she picked up during her days as a food technologist for a company called Peace Cereals, the singer, who holds a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry, sets aside 10 percent of her earnings for the benefit of others. She also gives concerts in hospices, juvenile detention centers and other facilities for people who normally wouldn’t have access to live music, and she is part of a group of artists who are working to help raise funds for an ongoing effort to clean up India’s Ganga River.

In a phone conversation from his home in Maui, Ram Dass, the renowned spiritual figure indirectly responsible for Oprah Winfrey’s birthday surprise, notes that while serving in Creating Our Future, he was inspired by Sat Santokh Singh’s fusion of social action and spirituality. “In the ’60s, one group wanted peace inside, and one wanted peace outside,” he offers. “And we were very, very [divided]. [Singh] helped me bridge those two things together.”

With characteristic playfulness, the “Be Here Now” author adds that Singh is “a fine friend. He’s very dedicated to his work, and he has a good sense of humor. And he dresses funny!”

Though the initial iteration of Creating Our Future disbanded in the early ’90s, one of its most memorable events—a chanting clinic led by Ram Dass, Kaur and Singh—gave rise to the Healing the Wounds of Life Workshops that Singh leads in the present day. These courses are intended to help participants regain their sense of self-worth, thus allowing them to feel deserving of happiness.

Singh remarks that when he does this healing work, he is calling on Guru Ram Das. “As far as I’m concerned, it’s not me doing the healing,” he states. “I am a vehicle for this divine energy.”

Metaphysical Fitness

For the past 40 years or so, Singh has been sharing the spiritual wealth as a teacher of Kundalini yoga, a set of practices designed to induce higher states of consciousness. He and Prabhu Nam Kaur currently train students and teachers of this discipline at a San Leandro ashram called Hargobind Sadan. Based on a system created by Yogi Bhajan, their classes cover various meditations, yoga sets and kriyás (movements and breathing techniques) for expanded awareness and better physical health. Singh maintains that over the years, more than half of the major Kundalini yoga teachers from Monterey to the northern border have taken teacher training courses with him, and he estimates that about 2,500 people around the world graduate from his classes each year.

From Jan. 26 through Sept. 22, Singh, Prabhu Nam Kaur and Snatam Kaur will present a Kundalini yoga teacher training program at the Pacific Cultural Center in Santa Cruz. Students can take the course to become teachers themselves or simply to immerse themselves in the teachings of Kundalini yoga.

cover satsantokhPhoto by Jeremey Bot

According to Snatam Kaur, the practice of Kundalini yoga enables one to “make the shifts in your life to go full speed ahead in your fullest potential in this lifetime.” As an example of the many Kundalini yoga students she has seen undergo huge metamorphoses, she mentions a man who used to work for the financial services firm J.P. Morgan: “He was one of their top guys. He did the Kundalini yoga teacher training, and he could not take the dirt and the under-the-table dealings [at the firm]—all of those things that we hear about from afar, but he was right in the middle of it. And within two years—I kid you not—he quit his job, started a completely new company that operated in a completely conscious way and was able to take along a number of customers who would prefer to work with him, because he was working in an honest way.”

Naomi Charanpal Kaur, a Kundalini yoga teacher at Santa Cruz’s DiviniTree Yoga & Art Studio and a member of the local resource Kundalini Yoga Santa Cruz, says she had huge anger issues before taking up this practice. “Now that my neutral mind has been nurtured, the things that used to make my blood boil don’t bother me so much,” she offers. “I’m just more relaxed no matter what is happening around me.”

In spite of the name Kundalini yoga, Singh says these classes don’t focus on the awakening of Kundalini (dormant energy at the base of the spine that supposedly can be raised to the top of the head via various yogic and Tantric methods). “What we concentrate on is developing the whole being, so the energy gradually raises, and then your nervous system becomes strong; your practice is strong, so that when these [Kundalini] experiences come, they don’t blow you away.” The instructor notes that he and Prabhu Nam occasionally encounter people who have aroused their Kundalini without properly preparing themselves through the practice of Kundalini yoga. “They’re usually blown off their center, and their nervous system is shot.”

Ram Dass describes a precarious Kundalini awakening he had during his first trip to India in 1967: One afternoon, he was sitting at the feet of his guru, the Indian saint Neem Karoli Baba, who unexpectedly “went over on his side and snored. And then the snoring made my Kundalini rise.”

A strong heat climbed up Ram Dass’ spine, mingling with each of his chakras (bodily energy centers). “As the chakras energized, if I was attached to anything in that chakra, the energy went out of my body, and the rest of it went toward the crown chakra. I think that I lost energy from my second chakra, which is the sexual chakra.” When the electrical current reached his throat chakra, he grew “absolutely frightened by the fact that my neck was going to be damaged. And then [Neem Karoli Baba] sat up and said, ‘He’s not ready yet.’ So I guess I’m not ready for that,” he chuckles. “That fear of my neck being broken—that was ego.”

Singh cautions against the pursuit of peak mystical experiences for their own sake. “Practicing Kundalini yoga is not shooting to get totally high and blow yourself out,” he asserts. “It’s about learning how to be centered and be in your flow.” He adds that this practice isn’t just about learning yoga postures; it’s also about learning how to breathe, chant, eat and live on the planet as a conscious human being.

“To be able to stop in life and to give oneself, each day, a moment when you’re in touch with your higher consciousness is a gift that’s incredibly precious,” he states. “Very few of us allow ourselves that. Most of us wake up late and rush off to work, and we never catch up. Life is always running after something that you never catch up to. And the feeling [is] that when I sell my house, when I get married, when I get divorced, when my kids grow up, when I do this or that—then I can live. It’s not just Kundalini yoga; any real spiritual practice is about … well, it’s like Ram Dass said in his first book: being here now.” 


For more information about the Kundalini yoga Teacher Training, go to satsantokh.com, call (510) 895-2813 or email Sat Santokh: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . To hear Snatam Kaur’s music, go to snatamkaur.com.

Comments (7)Add Comment
WWW.Everydayyoga.ca
written by Ruby Amarsharan, January 20, 2013
Well,
Its time to bring the Kundalini Yoga teachers training to Maui.
Sat Santokh has been here for Self Worth Workshops for the last 3 years.
Now Kundalini Yoga is out and believe it .. its the only experience to know that you are not your mind. YOu are your body.
Sat Nam
way to go!
written by harg, January 11, 2013
nice to see a whole family making it happen all together!
Kundalini
written by Japmeet Kaur, January 11, 2013
What it is and what it isn't can be felt through experience. Please go to a class with a registered kundalini yoga teacher to feel this sacred, safe practice.
Registered Nurse
written by Daniel B., January 10, 2013
For an alternative understanding of Kundalini type phenomena take a look at:
True and False Kundalini: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVkebxmQpH0
The Truth About Chakras: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bYr1Cd9zgZg
Working with Kundalini Syndrome Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iold2Gyid-8
Working with Kundalini Syndrome Part 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlWn9ciYvK8

...
written by K. Scott, January 10, 2013
There is a down-side to the practice of Kundalini Yoga, but not one that the followers of Yogi Bhajan are going to include in a self-serving tribute to their own means of support. Just ask any former followers in Santa Cruz.
...
written by belleb, January 09, 2013
Amazing! Really Enjoyed reading this article.
Reader
written by Robin Runaround, January 09, 2013
Readers who see through this hype about the business end of Kundalini yoga can start here.
http://freedomofmind.com/Info/...nization)
http://yogibhajan.tripod.com/
http://www.rickross.com/groups/3ho.html
http://indiakids.blogspot.com/

Write comment
smaller | bigger

busy
 

Share this on your social networks

Bookmark and Share

Share this

Bookmark and Share

  • Search
  •  

    Free Angela

    Political activist and UC Santa Cruz Professor Emerita Angela Davis commands the spotlight in a riveting new documentary. PLUS:  UCSC’s Bettina Aptheker opens up about the political upheavals of the ’60s and ’70s—and today. Angela Davis is not a human being who can be easily summed up in several sentences or paragraphs—books maybe, but, even then, capturing the political activist, scholar and author in the most comprehensive light is downright complex. That’s because Davis is an undeniably unique political creature, one who should be seen and heard to be fully absorbed and downloaded. Which is what makes Free Angela and All Political Prisoners, the new documentary about Davis and the turbulent political upheavals she faced during the late-1960s and ’70s, so inviting. In it, filmmaker Shola Lynch marks the 40th anniversary of Davis’ acquittal on charges of murder, kidnapping and conspiracy with a historical vérité style of filmmaking to illuminate a side of Davis few may have seen (or can recall), and captures the events that thrust the woman into one of the most fascinating orbits of notoriety and political intrigue of the 20th century.

     

    No Big Surprises

    The highly anticipated draft Environmental Impact Report for desal is finally out. Will it change anything? When scwd2, the group pursuing the proposed joint desalination plant for the Santa Cruz Water Department and Soquel Creek Water District, set up a booth at the Santa Cruz Earth Day festival in 2012, its reception was less than warm. Signature gathering for Measure P, the “right to vote” on desal ballot measure, was in full swing, as were tensions over the controversial project, which would produce up to 2.5 million gallons per day of desalinated water and cost an estimated $100 million. What were representatives of an energy-intensive desal plant doing among the recycling and conservation booths? That was the attitude Melanie Mow Schumacher, public outreach coordinator for scwd2 (pronounced “squid squared”), remembers sensing.

     

    The Maya-Ixil Move Forward

    Local nonprofit works to educate and create opportunity for indigenous communities in Guatemala In an isolated region of the Guatemala mountains called Ixil, the indigenous Maya population was devastated by a civil war between the government and leftist guerrilla factions that spanned 1960 to 1996. During that 36-year war, the Guatemalan military eradicated entire Mayan communities. In what amounted to genocide, soldiers burned Mayan farmlands and homes, raped and tortured the people, and scattered families. By the end of the war, 200,000 Mayans had been killed, 7,000 of whom were Maya-Ixil.

     

    Public Thinking

    Watsonville teens host TEDx event Santa Cruz County is no stranger to the TED brand. TED—which stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design—talks have come to the area through independently organized events 10 times since 2011. This month, the gathering returns to the county with a new twist, thanks to the Watsonville Youth City Council. TEDxYouth@Watsonville, which will take place Sunday, May 19 at the Henry J. Mello Center for the Performing Arts in Watsonville, will feature only speakers younger than 19 years old and will traverse topics from racial stereotypes and renewable energy to traditional Mexican dance.

     

    Transoceana

    Danny Moriarty’s musical influences have been known to impact his life beyond his local rock band, Transoceana. “I went through two periods,” confesses the singer, guitarist and songwriter. “I borrowed Bono’s mullet look from the ’80s for a while, and then I dressed like I was from the ’70s and had big hair like Jimmy Page.” Bono and Page are also symbolic of Transoceana’s evolution as a band during their three years together.

     

    Cruzin’ for Inspiration

    Former resident pays homage to Santa Cruz with locally shot thesis film When he left Santa Cruz for the University of Southern California’s graduate film program in 2010, Christopher Guerrero had completed the film major at UC Santa Cruz in 2008 and worked on campus in the film and digital media department. It wasn’t until he headed south, that Guerrero began to reminisce about the coastal town. “It was really really hard when I moved to L.A., to acclimate and find friends,” he says, adding that—counter to the philosophical, conversational culture of Santa Cruz—he found nowhere in his new town where he could simply sit and talk about life with someone. “I didn’t really realize why I love [Santa Cruz] so much until it was gone.”

     

    Beck to the Future

    In celebration of Beck’s solo acoustic show at The Rio, GT explores Song Reader, the alternative rock icon’s most ambitious interactive art piece yet. Here’s an odd little paradox of the digital revolution: The more sophisticated our technology gets, the more our musical milieu begins to resemble that of a bygone era, when song ideas were passed around from musician to musician, perpetually taking on new twists. Dozens of different YouTube users might try their hand at setting somebody’s rant about cats or double rainbows to music, or you might hear the Belgian musician Gotye turning the many and varied covers of his song “Somebody That I Used to Know” into a virtual orchestra (see below).

     

    Growing Berries Without Bromide

    Researchers test a new alternative to a controversial chemical The scarecrows perched in Santa Cruz strawberry fields do little to scare away the birds, much less the insects and fungi harbored in the soil. Everything likes to eat strawberries, which makes growing them a risky business. This predicament led UC Santa Cruz professor Carol Shennan to take an unconventional approach to pest management. Nine years ago, the fatal plant disease Verticillium wilt was wiping out strawberry plants at the university farm. Chemicals hardly phase the pathogen, and Shennan saw little improvement with crop rotation, which is typically used to treat infested fields. A visiting plant pathologist from the Netherlands recommended a little-known organic technique called anaerobic soil disinfestation, and, with so few other options, Shennan decided to give it a try. 

     

    Uniting All That Has Been Separated

     

    Legal Battles Drag On

    More than a year after the 75 River St. occupation, four defendants remain embroiled in ongoing case  More than a year and a half since a group occupied the former Wells Fargo building on River Street in an act of protest, felony charges linger on for four of the original defendants and a trial may be imminent. Gabriella Ripley-Phipps, Brent Adams, Cameron Laurendeau and Franklin Alcantara were scheduled to begin trial May 13 in connection with the late 2011 protest. That trial now has been pushed back to September due to scheduling conflicts. The four face a felony charge of vandalism and a misdemeanor for trespassing.
    Sign up for Tomorrow's Good Times Today
    Upcoming arts & events

    Latest Comments

     

    The Pleasure of Süda

    Süda is a happening place. As my friend Jan and I were enjoying dinner, every table in the restaurant filled up and nearly all the outdoor seating was occupied as well. Located in the Pleasure Point area, Süda is a magnet for just about everybody hanging out in that neck of the woods.

     

    The Power of Conversation

    Local author Cecile Andrews emphasizes importance of community engagement in newest book Cecile Andrews, author of the new book “Living Room Revolution: A Handbook for Conversation, Community and the Common Good,” probably wouldn’t get along too well with Larry David’s character from HBO’s Curb Your Enthusiasm, known for hiding his face and avoiding communication with anyone he runs into on the street. Andrews is a longstanding part-time Santa Cruz (part-time Seattle) resident who says something that’s struck her about this town over the years is people's willingness to participate in a practice she’s dubbed the “Stop and Chat”—which is exactly what it sounds like.

     

    What do you know about Monsanto?

    Santa Cruz | Self Employed  

     

    Best of Santa Cruz County

    The 2013 Santa Cruz County Readers' Poll and Critics’ Picks It’s our biggest issue of the year, and in it, your votes—more than 6,500 of them—determined the winners of The Best of Santa Cruz County Readers’ Poll. New to the long list of local restaurants, shops and other notables that captured your interest: Best Beer Selection, Best Locally Owned Business, Best Customer Service and Best Marijuana Dispensary. In the meantime, many readers were ever so chatty online about potential new categories. Some of the suggestions that stood out: Best Teen Program and Best Web Design/Designer. But what about: Dog Park, Church, Hotel, Local Farm, Therapist (I second that!) or Sports Bar—not to be confused with Bra. Our favorite suggestion: Best Act of Kindness—one reader noted Café Gratitude and the free meals it offered to the Santa Cruz Police Department in the aftermath of recent crimes. Perhaps some of these can be woven into next year’s ballot, so stay tuned. In the meantime, enjoy the following pages and take note of our Critics’ Picks, too, beginning on page 91. A big thanks for voting—and for reading—and an even bigger congratulations to all of the winners. Enjoy.  -Greg Archer, EditorBest of Santa Cruz County Readers’ Poll INDEX | Shops | Food & Drink | Arts & Entertainment | Health & Fitness | Professionals | The Rest |

     

    Poetic Cellars

    Poetic Cellars makes the most romantic wines. With a verse or two of beautiful poetry on every label, mostly poems of love and romance, this is the perfect wine to open up over dinner with your sweetheart. I particularly love winemaker Katy Lovell’s Syrah ($28) with its voluptuous velvety textures and dark fruit flavors.

     

    The Gypsy

    French-born jazz vocalist Cyrille Aimée lives for musical freedom and improvisation Cyrille Aimée is a musical gypsy. Her sound incorporates elements of Latin American, American, Brazilian and other styles of jazz, she has recorded albums as a duet with Diego Figueiredo, she currently performs with the Surreal (same pronunciation as her first name) Band, and she is working on a new album with yet another band. As it happens, Aimée can actually blame gypsies for her love of jazz. “I grew up in Samois-sur-Seine, which is a little town in France where Django Reinhardt used to live,” she says. “Every year they have the Django Festival in his honor, and so gypsies from all parts of Europe come and honor him and play guitar. I started hanging out with the gypsies and became obsessed with their music, their way of living, their freedom. What drew me to jazz music was the freedom of it, all the improvisation, and the fact that it’s a style of music that is constantly changing.”

     

    May Day in the Alps

    When my daughter returns to Santa Cruz from her new home in Los Angeles, she comments on how quiet it is here. It was even more so during a trip to Ben Lomond, when we set out for a sample of her second favorite macaroni and cheese. Sitting at the front of the Tyrolean Inn restaurant, the green tarp with plastic windows kept out the chill as well as the noise of an occasional passing car. A new draft beer celebrating the German spring, Maibok ($6) was refreshing, served in a hefty glass stein, but specialty cocktails are unique as well.

     

    Exposed

    David Cay Johnston’s new book explains how big companies rob us blind In his late teens David Cay Johnston started to ask questions. “Why do we have these guys in uniforms with guns driving around in cars all day?” “Why is the Santa Cruz County Courthouse being built in such an unusual shape?” He wrote an article, while still living in his hometown of Santa Cruz, proving that the off-kilter courthouse building, which officials had promised would save money, actually cost more than a conventional building.

     

    What are you a total sucker for?

    A cold beer after a long bike ride, gossip, and fighting over politics. Kyle McKinley Santa Cruz | Lecturer