Story and photos by Lybra Olbrantz
for The Beacon
The Friends of Peace Park Sheboygan hosted an International Day of Peace Celebration at Fountain Park Sept 21.
Led by Mary Koczan and her husband Frank Koczan, there was much to celebrate in the air that night.
The event started at 4 p.m. with the arrival of food trucks on 8th Street in front of Fountain Park. Jose’s, usually a staple on Michigan Ave, already had a line formed and remained this way for much of the night even after all the festivities were done and everyone had packed up and gone home, they were still taking orders.
Everyone started settling in around the bandshell, people filled the bench seats, park benches, a few sat in the grass on the lawn, performers sat around tables and stood to watch the night’s events take off. Around 5 p.m. Mary took the stage to welcome everyone and introduce Alderwoman Amanda Salazar for District 3, who represents the areas including Fountain Park & the Peace Park. She told us all the story of peace for her, especially in this new virtual age, as she shared it on a video work call earlier that day.
Next to the mic was local author, Mike Leannah. He read his newest book “Most Days”, in which he says, “the world is moving, and I am too.” It gave peace to the anxiousness of the current times, in which everything seems to be moving and changing faster and faster, but reminds us that we are a part of that movement too.
They would return for one more dance routine after local author Charm Der took the stage to read her book “My Happiness Counts”. A joyful children’s book to aid in counting and as her website says to raise awareness “to the possibility of finding happiness in everyday moments.”
Then last up to the mic was Jay Burkard to play three different styles of wind instruments: cedar flute, bamboo flute and penny whistle. Adorned in a rainbow Nepali jacket, his calm energy felt like the perfect peaceful end to the evening. Something about the wind instruments felt like it was moving the energy along, like a gentle wind. It felt like I could imagine him in the Andes or Himalayas just playing these instruments at the side of a snow capped mountain with the clouds beneath him and that imagery alone made it feel like the night’s most peaceful performance.