Friday, July 31, 2020
Friday Funnies: Would You remarry if I died?
Wednesday, July 29, 2020
Growing Up under Southern Apartheid (Part 1)
The body of Rep. John Lewis crossing the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala. via horse-drawn carriage (photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images) |
Monday, July 27, 2020
Monday Music: "Stop, children, what's that sound? "
Saturday, July 25, 2020
Saturday Haiku: Dusk
childhood memories
Friday, July 24, 2020
Wednesday, July 22, 2020
The Witness of John Lewis
In a report about John Lewis on Face the Nation this week, John Dickerson stated that on that fateful day in Selma, in 1965, as the march began across the Edmund Pettus Bridge, a young 25-year-old John Lewis expected to spend the night in jail, so he carried two books in his pocket. One was The American Political Tradition and the Men Who Made It, by Richard Hofstadter; the other was The Seven Story Mountain, by Thomas Merton.
The
Privilege of Books
That book by Thomas Merton caught my attention. I think of
where I was at 25 years of age. I was in seminary and had just discovered
Thomas Merton, but the witness of these two books in John Lewis’s pocket reveals
how far ahead the young John Lewis was compared to my own life when I was 25,
sitting in relative ease in seminary classes. The Selma march was two years
after an even younger Lewis gave a speech at the March on Washington in 1963.
John Lewis had those two books in his pocket to have
something on hand to read while in jail, for he fully expected to be arrested that
day. He did not know that he would instead spend the night in a hospital after
having his skull fractured by a policeman’s billy club.
The
Privilege of Libraries
Lewis was born in Troy Alabama, his father was a
share-cropper. He has told of his dismay when he tried to get a book from the
public library and was told that the library was for whites only, not for black
children. He recounted that that incident made him all the more determined, he
said to get an education.
When I was a boy growing up in Alabama, the library was a
special place. I remember when the Dadeville Library was in an older building
on the town square, and I also remember when it moved to a nice new building just beyond the town square. That was, indeed, a proud day for the town. It was always a delight to visit the library when I was a boy, but looking back, I also
remember that there were no black patrons there.
John Lewis’s story is a painful reminder of the white privilege that made my life easier but spurred Lewis to become an agent of change and transformation. With his life, he was able to offer the nation hope.
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Monday, July 20, 2020
Saturday, July 18, 2020
Saturday Haiku: The Comet Passes
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Comet Neowise over Stonehenge
Friday, July 17, 2020
Remembering Rick Watson
Rick and his wife, Jilda at his book table |
In his columns and in his books, Rick shared many homespun stories of life as he observed it. He loved fly fishing and offered to teach me the art. He told me he had some extra waders and I could join him anytime on the river.
Rick was an excellent photographer with an eye for nature. Here are two of his photos he posted on his blog just last week:
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Thursday, July 16, 2020
Norman Rockwell's America
Image from History Tech |
Of course, Rockwell painted many hundreds of iconic images of Americana for The Saturday Evening Post. Some may not be aware that Norman Rockwell, observer and chronicler of American life, saw the problem of racism and wanted to help America see its own struggle. To do that effectively, he had to leave The Saturday Evening Post, which once had him remove a black person from one of his paintings because the magazine only wanted to portray blacks in servant roles. Rockwell went to Look Magazine which allowed him the freedom to express his social and political views.
Last week I shared his painting, "The Problem We All Live With," which depicted the first elementary school integration in New Orleans, Louisiana in 1964.
In 1965, after reading a newspaper article about the killing of civil rights workers in Mississippi, he painted, "Southern Justice."
In 1967, when America was beginning to experience equal housing opportunity allowing blacks to move into previously all-white neighborhoods, he gave us "New Kids in the Neighborhood."
With "equal opportunity" in the 1960s, American neighborhoods countered with white flight. The result is that today, we continue to see inequality, injustice, and re-segregated schools and neighborhoods. Thankfully, with groups like Black Lives Matter and Rev. William Barber's Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for a Moral Revival, we continue to be confronted with who we are and where we need to set our sights for a more equitable society.
For Further Reading about Norman Rockwell:
- Norman Rockwell and Race: Complicating Rockwell's Legacy
- Why Norman Rockwell Matters
- Facing Hard Realities: Rockwell's Hope for a Compassionate Society
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Monday, July 13, 2020
Monday Music: Wild Mountain Honey Organic
A new version shared with me by the original songwriter, Steve McCarty. We met Steve some years ago because my wife LaRae worked with his wife Trish. He shared this new version of his song Wild Mountain honey written when he was very young living amongst the Redwoods of Northern California. He was playing with the Steve Miller band at the time and wrote this one, along with Fly Like an Eagle, which became hits all over the world for the band. This one has long been a favorite in my own youth growing up in the 70's. The message is perfect for today and the massive changes that are happening before our eyes. I made the video some time ago, but I feel it is a powerful message for today. Enjoy and please share!
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Saturday, July 11, 2020
Saturday Haiku: Buddha's Garden
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Photo by Charles Kinnaird
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Friday, July 10, 2020
Wednesday, July 8, 2020
The Problem We All Live With
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In 1964, Mr. Rockwell chose to memorialize in oil and canvas the racial conflict that gripped American life as schools were forced to integrate. He had left The Saturday Evening Post due to the limitations the magazine placed on the expression of his social and political interests. He found a more open environment at Look Magazine. "The Problem We All Live With" depicts Ruby Bridges, the first black child to attend an all-white elementary school.
Image: "The Problem We All Live With," 1964, Norman Rockwell Museum Collections.
Monday, July 6, 2020
Monday Music: Here Comes the Sun
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Saturday, July 4, 2020
American Tune (Simon & Garfunkel)
Performed by Simon & Garfunkel at their reunion concert in Central Park in 1981, may this remind us of who we are, what we have been through, and who we hope to be.
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Saturday Haiku: One Nation
Friday, July 3, 2020
Friday Funnies: Public Hygiene
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Cartoon by Gary Larson
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Wednesday, July 1, 2020
Bob Dylan - A Long Time Ago
00:00 - THE TIMES THEY ARE A CHANGIN'
02:37 - TALKIN' WORLD WAR III BLUES 07:30- LONESOME DEATH OF HATTIE CARROLL 12:56 - GIRL FROM THE NORTH COUNTRY 16:15 - A HARD RAIN'S A-GONNA FALL 22:16 - RESTLESS FAREWELL