Anticipating the government shutdown, we strolled through the arboretum late Sunday and watched tens of bees at the asters.
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Where I Live - Irish Folk Music in Transformed Space
The Jewel Box is a pop-up gallery in a vacant commercial space that was once Fleisher’s Jewelers. The strip mall has always been an eyesore but the space has been temporarily transformed into an artful and value-filled place, as geographer Yi-Fu Tuan would say. The current exhibition features regional artists and is open every Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Events such as this Irish folk music performance happen every weekend in September. This is part of the Art Lives Here initiative.
Sunday, September 8, 2013
Drum Circle at Malcolm X Park, DC
Years ago I would occasionally drum and even dance here in the park. During the warmer months people gather every Sunday afternoon as they have been since the 1950s. It had been a couple of years for me and I'm still amazed at how wonderfully it all comes together. So many percussionists in sync, feeling one another, and driving the beat.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
50th Anniversary of the March on Washington
Feeling energized by many of the speeches yesterday. Newark Mayor Cory
Booker summoned the words of his father: “Boy, don't you dare walk around here
like you hit a triple, because you were born on third base. You are enjoying
freedoms, opportunity, technology, things that were given to you bought by the
struggles and the sacrifices and the work of those who came before. Don't you
forget where you come from."
John Lewis recalled Bloody Sunday in 1965 when the police beat
him and other protesters: “I gave a little blood on that bridge in Selma,
Alabama for the right to vote. I am not going to stand by and let the Supreme
Court take the right to vote away from us . . . You cannot stand by. You cannot
sit down. You got to stand up. Speak up. Speak out, and get in the way. Make
some noise!"
It was particularly wonderful to see the excitement among the
children around us when the 9-year old activist Asean Johnson took the stage:
"Every child deserves a great education. Every school deserves equal
funding and resources. I encourage all of you to keep Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.’s dream alive. Help us fight for freedom, racial equality, jobs, and public
education because I have a dream that we shall overcome."
Friday, August 16, 2013
Shadow
Shadow was my father-in-law's constant companion for 12 years. This is an excerpt from a tribute his son (and my husband) wrote the night we received the news.
**
**
Shadow always loved the Lake and would often wade in it,
fishing for minnows, but she had long ago stopped trying to swim, because she
couldn’t seem to remember to keep her mouth closed and thus had the quickly
discouraging experience of nearly drowning. So mostly when you went down to
swim, she would run along the shore, watching you. But that day this week with
Dad, they were on the dock and before Dad knew it, she had dived off the end of
it. He watched her a while, astounded, as she swam out to the left, toward the
Lake’s main channel and greatest depths. Worried that her strength would fail
her, he finally went in after her, but he soon realized that she was swimming
at least as fast as he could. She had suddenly realized that she was quite good
at this and had no intention of turning back immediately. The two of them ended
up swimming together in the Lake for about 45 minutes before Dad was able to
steer her back to shore.
This was the moment of Shadow’s life that Dad was trying to
retain and wanted me to retain: two days before her death, Shadow had surpassed
herself and overcome her old boundaries. Her felt like her last great gift to
him was to show him that this is possible, in whatever limited time we have
left. Amid his grief, he was looking to this point of light, which in this case
was a small black creature swimming into the distance, paddling and breathing
as naturally as if she had been doing this all her life.
For my part, I thought that this is of course what Dad does.
His life’s work has been telling stories in praise of others, largely by
letting them tell their own stories—the mountain people, his father, and others
(Samson, Hannah Arendt)—in his poetry and visual art, his mother in the
collection of her letters to Papa that Dad found in her attic and collected and
had printed for the rest of us so we could recall her strength. I thought what
an extraordinary, and extraordinarily generous, gift this is. In my life I have
too often recalled those no longer with me with bitterness, the pain of being
abandoned. Dad instead looks for the light they have left behind, so that we
may continue and in turn also leave behind a light to guide those who will
follow us. This is the radically sustaining power of gratitude.
How blessed we are.
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Thursday, July 4, 2013
Sunday, March 24, 2013
the divide, rio grande valley
It's hard to believe that a 2010 Rasmussen poll revealed that 68% of Americans favored building the wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. I wonder how many Americans have seen it and understand the catastrophic effects it has had on human lives, sovereign Native American nations, wildlife, and the environment. The rust-colored fence appears along highway 281 in the Rio Grande Valley, where it runs through wildlife sanctuaries. Fragmenting these habitats creates significant obstacles for wildlife that include hunting, foraging, mating, and getting access to what may be their only source of water--the Rio Grande River. One also sees how the fence divides people's private properties. Indeed, the federal government has made homeowners, farmers, municipalities, and private nature preserves give up their land to build this patchwork of fences and walls. So much death and destruction, and totally ineffective. An estimated 97% of people who attempt to cross the border make it. www.no-border-wall.com
Between January and October 2012, nearly 150 people were found dead in the Rio Grande Valley, a 200% increase over the previous year. And yet migration across the U.S.-Mexico border has dropped to a historic low of 62% over the last five years. Fewer people are crossing but more are dying.
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Mi abuelita and my mother looking through the fence at Matamoros, where our family has deep roots. |
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I was deeply dismayed by the sight of border control vehicles and floodlights, and then we saw this. |
Labels:
border wall,
Rio Grande Valley
Location:
Brownsville, Texas
Saturday, January 5, 2013
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