+ Develop this exercise in your first language ot the one that is most confortable for you.
+ For this exercise you will need pen and paper.
+ It is an exercise focused on ourselves.
+ To this end, you will have to answer the following question:
WHAT QUESTION WOULD YOU ASK YOURSELF?
+ Look for a comfortable place in the room.
+ You can create all kinds of questions. There are neither good nor bad questions, and there are especially no wrong questions.
+ You have five minutes to ask yourself between one and a thousand questions.
+ Start with any question and continue – if you like – until you fill out the page.
WHAT QUESTION WOULD YOU ASK YOURSELF?
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+ Ok, now go over your questions and choose only one that you would like to share.
+ Now that you have questioned yourself and we have begun an internal dialogue, we are ready to move on to the next exercise.
+ In this exercise you will focus on your work, creating questions from the vision that guides your purpose.
+ To this end, considering your specific field of action, you will answer the question:
WHAT QUESTION IS URGENT TO ASK?
+ You have five minutes to answer this question, either with one or 100 questions.
+ Seek to ask questions that are not just an opinion expressed in the form of a question, but a questioning that precedes or makes possible multiple and even unthinkable points of view.
+ Then:
WHAT QUESTION IS URGENT TO ASK?
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+ OK, now, check again the questions you wrote.
+ When reading them, do not focus on the need to answer them, but to understand that there are multiple answers, many of which go beyond the meaning they have for you.
+ With this in mind, we ask you to choose one question that you would like to share publicly.
+ While you are checking them, you can edit, mix or generate a new question that represents what you find most urgent.
+ Which question would you like to share?
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+ Now that you have chosen a question, you have the option to physically install it in a specific location through a printed Toolkit.
+ Where would you like to install this question and with whom you would like to share it?
+ Choose a place to share this question. It can be in a storefront window, a wall chart, or a public space.
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+ In the last section of this Toolkit, you can either download or request by mail, a set of printed letters with your question. We invite you to install this question somewhere in your home, your neighborhood or your workplace. You can also get together with a group of friends and install or exhibit it in a public place.
+ Now you can move on to the last activity. In this activity we will interrogate the present, thinking about other individuals and communities whose voices we may not have heard yet.
+ A generative question, is a question that can only be answered through another question.
+ For example:
What is an urgent question to ask in your neighborhood?
What question should we ask ourselves regarding civil rights?
What question should be asked of our politicians?
What question is in urgent need of being asked in America?
+ This last activity seeks to propose new questions for other communities.
+ To this end, you will answer the question:
WHAT GENERATIVE QUESTION IS URGENT TO ASK?
+ You have five minutes to develop at least one generative question.
+ Thank you very much for participating in these activities. Now we invite you to share your questions with other participants of this project in the last section of the digital platform.