
Co-presented with SAND (Science and Non-Duality) and Bolinas Film Festival
For tens of thousands of years, indigenous peoples were in deep kinship with the natural world while stewarding ancestral land and wisdom. Through the narratives of colonialism, capitalism, and individualism, our “modern” Western mindset has cast a collective fog of amnesia, and lead us into believing that we are separate from the Earth, each other, and the ancestral realm. Eternal Song is the first in a series of award-winning films that explore the devastating impact of colonization on indigenous people and lands, and cultures–and how our collective future depends on remembering the eternal song of existence which calls us back to our original sense of belonging.
We will start with a half-hour conversation with Zaya Ralitza Benazzo and Maurizio Benazzo, filmmakers and founders of SAND (Science and Non-Duality)—a global community that comes together over these amazing documentaries—followed by a screening of the film (88 minutes).
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Gallery Commonweal is a 1,500-square-foot gallery with 30-foot ceilings, large north- and south-facing windows, and unique historic detail. For 25 years, we’ve featured arts that heal our bodies, minds, and souls. Gallery Commonweal is on the 2nd floor of our historic building, and there is no elevator.
Saturday, August 15
1 pm – 3 pm PDT
In Gallery Commonweal and on Zoom
$25 ticket price
Saturday, August 15
1 pm – 3 pm PDT
In Gallery Commonweal and on Zoom
$25 ticket price
Saturday, August 15
1 pm – 3 pm PDT
In Gallery Commonweal and on Zoom
$25 ticket price


Zaya Ralitza Benazzo was born and raised in Sofia, Bulgaria. For as long as she can remember, she has been fascinated with exploring life’s big questions. She feels most at home in nature and, increasingly, within herself. Zaya is a producer and film director with engineering, environmental science, and film degrees. For many years, she worked as an environmental activist in Europe. Her deepest passion is bringing together wisdom from spiritual traditions in service of all life. Zaya believes that individual and collective liberation are inextricably interwoven.
Maurizio Benazzo grew up in Italy, and in 1984 came to the United States on a ninety-eight-year-old sailing boat. He started working as an actor, model, and filmmaker, but his thirst for knowledge was only satisfied in 2001 upon encountering I Am That, the seminal work by Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj, while he was in India shooting the award-winning documentary Short Cut to Nirvana.

Susan Grelock Yusem, PhD leads strategy and innovation at Commonweal, where she’s part of the stewardship team guiding the organization and supporting the 30+ programs that call Commonweal home. A trained depth psychologist and community psychologist with a doctorate from Pacifica Graduate Institute, Susan’s career has unfolded at the forefront of the organic and regenerative food movement, including leadership roles at Patagonia’s regenerative food division and Amy’s Kitchen. She brings together strategic communication, psychological depth, and collaborative leadership, with deep interests in narrative design, radical hospitality, and bringing the sensibilities of depth psychology into everyday life and group settings. Susan lives in Point Reyes Station, California, where you’ll often find her hiking, trail running, writing, cooking, and celebrating the ways we gather and create meaning together.



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