Update about blogCa

Who knew all this would happen afterwards! Moon-set from Mission Hospital room Sept.8, 2025
Showing posts with label Malala Yousafzai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Malala Yousafzai. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Art through poetry and music

 Music, poetry, painting...arts which I enjoy.

Self-Portrait as Saint Catherine of Alexandria, 1615-17 Artemesia Gentileschi, Italian, 1593-1656


 But I don't try to create any of these.


My friend Annelinde Metzner does create both poetry and music. Here is a link to her poetry as published recently in Women and Religion.

She introduces her poems along with some photos in this way: 

For this post, I’ve collected five of my poems from the past ten years up to the present, which are centered around the people and cultures of the Middle East. Like the region, the poems are filled with hope and unspeakable grief.

One poem starts this way...

Convivencia

The three musicians on the stage-
     the Trio Sefardi,
     music of the Jews of Iberia.
Forced out of Spain in 1492, they spread to the diaspora,
     France, Morocco, Turkey, Yugoslavia.
Drifting deep into the Ladino songs,
     I blink and I’m walking a cobblestone street
     in my Medieval village.
Children kick a ball, carry bread dough, fetch water.
     I wave hello and I hear it!  
     I hear the music!


I include the link to Abraham Jam performing her music in the YouTube video below.


I remember singing this round sometimes with the Sahara Peace Choir when I was a member (many years back). In case you haven't the slightest idea why it's called Sahara except that it isn't the desert, the choir is a blend of Abramaic names of two women - Sarah and Hagar, the two mother lines of Judaism and Muslim belief systems. (Sarah was Abraham's wife, Hagar, her handmaiden who had Abraham's son, Ishmael.)

And here is a bit of background of the Abraham Jam. I enjoyed the video that is about their coming together to make a short documentary. But their story is more interesting than just that. Check out their site as well. https://abrahamjam.com/about/

A Muslim, a Jew, and a Christian walk into a concert hall…

What may be mistaken for a stand-up comedian’s opening line is actually Abraham Jam, a trio of internationally-renowned musicians who have teamed up to create art strengthened by diversity.

Abraham Jam–composed of Billy Jonas, David LaMotte, and Dawud Wharnsby–features three “brothers” from the three Abrahamic faiths. Jonas, LaMotte and Wharnsby have performed extensively over the last few decades in their individual careers.

“Harmony is better than unity,” says David LaMotte, who helped create Abraham Jam. “We don’t have to be singing the same note to cultivate peace, we can sing different notes that are beautiful together.”


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Today's quote:

“Weakness, fear and hopelessness died.
Strength, fervor and courage were born.”

From Annelinde's poem, quoting Malala Yousafzai in her birthday address to the UN Youth 
Assembly, July 9, 2013


Monday, June 30, 2014

What I've been reading

Summer days sometimes are hot, or rainy.  Good times for opening a good book.

I enjoyed "Big Stone Gap," by Adriana Trigiani, which was intriguing because 1. Wendy Welch speaks about it in her book, "Little Book Store in Big Stone Gap," and 2. it's being made into a movie, and 3. I've been there.  Thanks to friend Helen Bell who took a day trip with me to Wendy's store, where we had delicious food in the Second Story Cafe' and I sold my pottery!


Look who's in that movie!  Don't know when it's coming out, and I couldn't find a trailer for it.

I did laugh out loud a few times reading the book, which has some great plot twists, but still is somewhat predictable.  Now I just noticed (sorry, late to the table) there's a trilogy.  Since I did fall in love with the characters, I'll be looking for the others.

I also spent a few nights up later than intended reading "A Short Time to Stay Here," by Terry Roberts.  It's set in nearby Hot Springs, NC, and some of the events and settings in which the novel occurs are real, and/or actually happened, like turning a resort hotel into a concentration camp for Germans during WW I.  I am one of the few people who I know in Black Mountain who haven't ever been to Hot Springs.  I liked that the protagonist was not totally upright and had understandable character flaws.  I found the romance somewhat unusual, but because the author wrote in first person, I only felt that the male half was portrayed realistically.  The woman seemed to have some great ideas, but was just never as understandable or passionate as the male.  She could have been a heroine that I would have loved.  I was struck by finding Vicki Lane, a fellow blogger, thanked in the acknowledgements.  (Yes I'm one of those people who look at acknowledgements in books.)


Now I'm about to start reading "I Am Malala" by Malala Yousafzai, the girl who stood up for education for girls and was shot by the Taliban.  I'm aware of her story, and looking forward to learning more about a modern day heroine!

Jerry Pope, a friend, has written a new book "The Elvis Tooth."  Can't wait to put it on my bedside table.  And Shelly Frome has so many books, I don't know where to start.  At the library because my budget doesn't have a book fund at this point.