Thursday, April 28, 2005

"If one is lonely neither in a crowd nor in the deep mountains, one is an able person who knows how to enjoy absolute freedom."

-Jae Woong Kim, "Polishing The Diamond"
Copyright Wisdom Publications 2001.

Reprinted from "Daily Wisdom: 365 Buddhist Inspirations,"
edited by Josh Bartok, with permission of Wisdom Publications
www.wisdompubs.org.

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

It's the birthday of the humorist Armetus Ward, born near Waterford, Maine (1834), who said, "I am happiest when I am idle. I could live for months without performing any kind of labor and feel fresh and vigorous enough to go right on in the same way."

I'm very proud of Jack Layton and the federal NDP's efforts to make sure that a progressive budget is passed in Ottawa.

Monday, April 25, 2005



"Atavistic"

by Irene McKinney from Vivid Companion, Vandalia Press
(Reprinted with permission by NPR.)


I wanted to walk without clothing
in the woods beside the creek,
and to come to the barn at night.

and sleep beside the horses, curled
in the smell and scratch of hay
with the bitch and pups.

The life of the house was flat,
filled with monotonous talking,
passing to and fro among the rooms,

and for what. My mother hated
animals, the way they ate the
food and dirtied the floor.

They were her enemies; she fought
their right to be there and
would have wiped them off the earth

if she could have. If a cat or a dog
came too close to the back door she
threw scalding water on it, and

was righteous in her anger, shouting
that they were not human and
didn't feel real pain.

If we must choose sides, I said
as a child, I take
the side of the animals.

Phelps Klan Greeted With Gay Kiss In Albuquerque
by The Associated Press
Posted: April 25, 2005 12:01 am ET

(Albuquerque, New Mexico) Stunned that protesters were flashing hateful anti-gay messages to traffic along a busy street on the weekend, Chris Lucas had to pull over to join a counter-protest. Then, just as spontaneously, Lucas found a way to stun the protesters. The 31-year-old massage therapist and a man he just met locked in a passionate kiss just feet from the protesters. ‘‘I know the protesters were shouting things at me, but I couldn’t hear what they were saying,’’ said Lucas, who is gay. ‘‘I had my eyes closed. It was actually kind of liberating to do this.’’

The kiss was one of several creative responses to a demonstration by 20 members of the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kansas. The group travels the country to rally against homosexuality.

‘‘These young adults need to know there is a hell and there is a judgment day on which they will be judged for their sins,’’ said church member Deborah Hockenbarger, 51. ‘‘We are trying to warn them about their filthiness. It is not OK to be a fag. God almighty says so.’’

Hockenbarger waved a sign that read: ‘‘Fags are worthy of death.’’ Other church members took shots at Catholicism with signs that read: ‘‘Pope in Hell’’ and ‘‘Your pastor is a whore.’’ They view the church as a pro-gay institution.

About 40 gay rights supporters reacted by waving white cloths they called angel wings, dressing up their dogs with slogan T-shirts, chanting or simply quietly turning their backs on the protesters.

‘‘I don’t believe God hates anybody,’’ said Jeanne Pahls, a peace activist from Albuquerque. ‘‘I believe in civil rights. People who are gay, lesbian or transsexual ought to be given the same respect as anybody else.’

’Poet Joanna Cattonar, 63, waved a large placard with the words: ‘‘Fear + Ignorance = Bigotry.’’ She said she got her orders to attend the rally from Vice President Dick Cheney. ‘‘When the vice president was speaking at the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auchwitz, he said that hatred and intolerance must be opposed before they turn into action,’’ she said. Cattonar said some activists suggested ignoring the anti-gay group. ‘‘But what happened when people ignored the situation in the 1930s? It led Hitler to power,’’ she said.

Across the street, the anti-gay protesters professed the same sense of mission and purpose. Jacob Phelps, the 21-year-old grandson of Westboro’s pastor Fred Phelps, said his church teaches that God hates homosexuals.‘ ‘We wouldn’t be here doing this protest if we hated people absolutely,’’ he said. ‘‘What we’re expressing is not our hate, it’s God’s hate. That’s a pure hate. It’s the only kind of hate allowed. I feel this is my obligation to God.’’

The Westboro Church began its anti-gay demonstrations about 15 years ago. Targets include churches — even conservative ones — that the congregation deems too soft on homosexuality and labels ‘‘fag-enablers.’’

Jessica Bachicha, 35, repeated the words of Albuquerque Mayor Martin Chavez who said the Westboro protesters weren’t welcomed in this city. ‘‘We don’t need them coming to pollute our city or state with hate,’’ said Bachicha, a lesbian. Although she turned her back to them, her partner was provoked to tears by the protester’s jeers.

Sophia Cortez, 34, said: ‘‘After everything we’ve been through, why do we have to put up with this?’’

Police said the demonstrations were peaceful and no arrests were made. The Westboro group planned a series of protests in Santa Fe through Monday.

©Associated Press 2005

Sunday, April 24, 2005

"The Angel"
by Michael McFee,
from Earthly (Carnegie Mellon University, 2001)
(reprinted with permission by "The Writer's Alamanac", NPR)

The Angel

unhooks her wings after another long day.
They are her glory but also a burden,
binding her chest and making her sacrum ache.
She reaches behind herself to unfasten them
without the least hesitation or thought,
letting the sweaty wings collapse to the floor.

The angel scratches a ticklish spot
and starts to let down the radiant hair
sometimes mistaken for a halo,
unweaving her braid as gracefully
as she composed its strands long ago.
But how can those backward fingers see?

And then she slips off her slip in the dark.
My heart is tinder to that holy spark.