The Dream of the Rood

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10/14/2024

We love Italian Americans but we just don’t like Chris Columbus. He was a sadistic jerk. Let’s make Italian American Day better!

09/21/2024

Who in their right mind would trust the Secret Service after their complicity in the JFK Assassination?

09/06/2024

Maybe he can’t stand on his feet anymore and suffering has shaped his character but this speech by Pope Francis from a few days ago is simply AMAZING!

“You can have flaws, be anxious and even be angry, but don’t forget that your life is the greatest business in the world. Only you can stop it from failure.

You are appreciated, admired and loved by many. Remember that being happy is not having a sky without storms, a road without accidents, a job without effort, relationships without disappointments.

“Being happy is to stop feeling a victim and become the author of your own destiny. It's going through deserts, but being able to find an oasis deep in your soul. It's to thank God every morning for the miracle of life. It’s kissing your children, cuddling your parents, having poetic moments with your friends, even when they hurt us.

“To be happy is to let live the creature that lives in each of us, free, joyful and simple. It's having maturity to be able to say: "I made mistakes". Having the courage to say "I'm sorry". It's having a sensitivity to say "I need you". Is having the ability to say "I love you". May your life become a garden of opportunities for happiness... that in spring I can be a lover of joy and in winter a lover of wisdom.

“And when you make a mistake, start over. Because only then will you fall in love with life. You will find that being happy doesn't mean having a perfect life. But she uses tears to irrigate tolerance. Use your defeats to train your patience.

"Use your mistakes with the serenity of the sculptor. Use pain to tune into pleasure. Use obstacles to open the windows of intelligence. Never give up ... Above all, never give up on the people that love you. Never give up on happiness, because life is an amazing show. "

POPE FRANCIS

09/05/2024

“Ten thousand times has the labor movement stumbled and fallen and bruised itself, and risen again;

been seized by the throat and choked into insensibility;

enjoined by courts, assaulted by thugs, charged by the militia, shot down by regulars, traduced by the press, frowned upon by public opinion, deceived by politicians, threatened by priests, repudiated by renegades, preyed upon by grafters, infested by spies, deserted by cowards, betrayed by traitors, bled by leeches, and sold out by leaders,

but, notwithstanding all this, and all these, it is today the most vital potential power this planet has ever known, and its historic mission of emancipating the workers of the world from the thralldom of the ages is as certain of ultimate realization as the setting of the sun.”

- Eugene Debs

08/31/2024

“Dear family and friends,

Jerusalem was divided in 1948, when Jewish – later Israeli – troops laid hold of the western part of the city in the 1948 Arab Israeli War. The old, walled city of Jerusalem, also known simply as the Old City, became part of Jordan. Jerusalem would remain a divided city, until June of 1967, when Israel took the eastern part of the city as well in the 1967 Six Dat War. Although there are no physical barriers that divide the city today, still, most all Palestinians and Israelis know how divided the city is, politically, socially and economically.

Nowhere is this division more visible than along West Jerusalem’s Jaffa Road, the main east-west street, which displays the tell-tale signs of a country caught up in the grip of yet another chapter in what appears to be a never-ending story of conflict, division and hostility.

Lining the walls of shops are posters of the Israeli hostages taken by Hamas on October 7, 2023. A large, Israeli flag is stretched across the front of the Jerusalem Municipality building, and the ubiquitous yellow ribbons with the slogan “Bring them Home Now” are stenciled in store front windows.

1.-DICKS_2024_08_Photo-1 English translation of the Hebrew reads “half a year of neglect” referring to the Israeli hostages Posters of some of the Israeli hostages held in Gaza “Bring Them Home Now,” stenciled in a store window in West Jerusalem The Jerusalem municipality building draped in an Israeli flag Al Jazeera journalist Hani Mahmoud reports from Gaza on the nightly news. There are no tourists, but there is God.
Here, in West Jerusalem, symbols of hostages – and hasbara – are visible everywhere. Hasbara refers to the public relations efforts or propaganda to defend and positively portray the point of view and policies of the State of Israel. Here, the anger and anguish of what many, if not most, Israelis are feeling regarding the events of last October are on display for all to see.
Yet no less real is the loss of life and the scale of destruction of what Gaza and its people have endured. No images of the victims of Israel’s relentless bombing campaign of the Gaza Strip are visible anywhere, and that is just how Israelis want it. They do not know – and they do not want to know – what is happening in Gaza.

Who is suffering is more intense, more visible, more genuine? Whose cause is more just?

The Palestinian residents of Gaza have been displaced from the northern part of the strip to the southern part of the strip, south of Wadi Gaza. They have been moved again, back to the north, and also to the west, along the Mediterranean Sea. Now, they are being told once again to flee to the south. No place in Gaza is safe; not even those zones that have been declared “safe zones” by the Israeli military. Only days ago, a school where people were taking shelter was hit in the pre-dawn hours, killing at least 93 Palestinians.

The death of close to 40,000 Palestinians, including over 15,000 children has barely shocked a world that can simply turn on, and then turn off and tune out the pain and suffering that seems so alien and distant. Yet, their anguish is no less real, their torment, no less palpable, their blood, no less red.

Silence in the face of the tragedy unfolding now in the Middle East between Israelis and Palestinians is complicity. The events of the last 11 months will be a dark stain on the consciousness of a world that has simply sat by and watched it happen. The silence of the religious communities on all sides of this conflict is deafening. Their voices should have been louder than our own, yet they have not been.

The church should always strive to be on the side of justice. As Christians, we should want for both peoples what they cannot seem to achieve for themselves. We must seek to be part of the solution, and not part of the problem. It may require tough love, but that is what we are called to exercise “Friends don’t let friends drive drunk,” or so the saying goes. However, and in this case, the drunkenness has been caused by blind rage, an eagerness for blood and revenge, and a lust for power.

The disproportionate use of force by Israel, and the wholesale slaughter of women, children and the elderly in Gaza who have been caught up in the latest round of violence will serve no one well.

Were it not for the Al Jazeera network broadcasting daily images from Gaza, one would not know of the pain, the suffering, the devastation and destruction, and the immense loss of life in this tiny enclave along the Mediterranean Sea, home to 2.2 million Palestinians, 75% of whom are refugees and their descendants from the 1948 Arab-Israel War.

A walk on the west side of Jerusalem serves as a reminder to those who are still being held in Gaza by Hamas. Their families long for their return, as the families of over 9,000 Palestinians being held in Israeli jails, many under what is known as “administrative detention” long for their return as well.

It would be immoral to dismiss the anguish, the suffering, and the grief of either peoples in this ongoing conflict. I pray for moral clarity for leaders and politicians, and for those who have sat on the sidelines and allowed this bloodletting to go on for far too long.

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich recently stated that “it may be just and moral” to starve two million Gaza residents until Israeli hostages are returned, but “no one in the world would let us.”

Given the way this war has been waged thus far, I would not be so sure about that. God forbid!

Lord, have mercy,

Doug Dicks”

https://mondoweiss.net/2024/08/we-wont-leave-our-people-the-medical-workers-refusing-to-evacuate-central-gazas-last-func...
08/29/2024

https://mondoweiss.net/2024/08/we-wont-leave-our-people-the-medical-workers-refusing-to-evacuate-central-gazas-last-functioning-hospital/?ml_recipient=131001673138046898&ml_link=131001595156498411&utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_term=2024-08-29&utm_campaign=Daily+Headlines+RSS+Automation

Medical staff at al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital are refusing to abandon their patients after an Israeli army evacuation order. “If we leave our positions, we will fail ourselves and our society,” a doctor at the hospital told Mondoweiss.

08/29/2024

In 2006, a high school English teacher asked students to write to a famous author and ask for advice. Kurt Vonnegut was the only one to respond, and his response was magnificent:

“Dear Xavier High School, and Ms. Lockwood, and Messrs Perin, McFeely, Batten, Maurer, and Congiusta:

I thank you for your friendly letters. You sure know how to cheer up a really old geezer (84) in his sunset years. I don’t make public appearances anymore because I now resemble nothing so much as an iguana. What I had to say to you, moreover, would not take long, to wit:

Practice any art, music, singing, dancing, acting, drawing, painting, sculpting, poetry, fiction, essays, reportage, no matter how well or badly, not to get money and fame, but to experience becoming, to find out what’s inside you, to make your soul grow. Seriously! I mean, starting right now, do art and do it for the rest of your lives. Draw a funny or nice picture of Ms. Lockwood and give it to her. Dance home after school, sing in the shower, and on and on. Make a face in your mashed potatoes. Pretend you’re Count Dracula.

Here’s an assignment for tonight, and I hope Ms. Lockwood will flunk you if you don’t do it:

Write a six-line poem about anything but rhymed. No fair tennis without a net. Make it as good as you possibly can. But don’t tell anybody what you’re doing. Don’t show it or recite it to anybody, not even your girlfriend or parents or whatever, or Ms. Lockwood. OK? Tear it up into teeny-weeny pieces and discard them into widely separated trash receptacles. You will find that you have already been gloriously rewarded for your poem. You have experienced becoming, learned a lot more about what’s inside you, and you have made your soul grow. God bless you all!" ~Kurt Vonnegut

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQOyohOLMFs
08/28/2024

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQOyohOLMFs

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