TD Logo: Welcome to TurtleDreams
home discussion pieces professional about faq search links tags
Israel Invades Lebanon
Posted by ceciliescott on 08/02/06, 12:21:56 PM

Share

I read the news on Democracy Now with dismay and a sense of helplessness.
I sign the Jewish Voice for Peace petition with a couple of clicks of my mouse. It's sadly wishy-washy, but, to use the punch line from an old Jewish joke, "It wouldn't hurt."
I find decent coverage of the indecent on the following sources:
Common Dreams
Democracy Now!
Salon news coverage, particularly that by Mitch Prothero.
See his The "hiding among civilians" myth.
And of course, anything by Robert Fisk.

Comment (0) | Permalink

 

To Beirut -- peace to Beirut with all my heart
Posted by ceciliescott on 07/26/06, 2:49:36 PM

Share

Robert Fisk, writes for The Independent of Britain and has lived in Beirut 30 years. He ended his must-read article Sunday, July 23, The Empire Leaves Beirut to Burn, by quoting Fairouz, the most popular Lebanese singer:

To Beirut -- peace to Beirut with all my heart
And kisses -- to the sea and clouds,
To the rock of a city that looks like an old sailor's face.
From the soul of her people she makes wine,
From their sweat, she makes bread and jasmine.
So how did it come to taste of smoke and fire? 

Fairouz was to perform at this year's Baalbek festival, cancelled like all Lebanon's festivals.

Comment (0) | Permalink

 

Lebanon Once More
Posted by ceciliescott on 07/25/06, 3:31:59 PM

Share

Between June and September of 1982, American and Canadian poets responded to the televised images of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon. Their poems were gathered into a book that should be only a collectors item by now, a historical footnote: And Not Surrender: American Poets on Lebanon. The book is out of print, the poems still rendingly timely.

Here are the concluding stanzas from Canadian poet Dennis Lee's "After Sabra, After Shatila."

(. . . I think of where death entered--
     in the soft of the stomach for some;
  for some at the hairline, very close to the temple . . .)

  If we mean to continue,
     continue existing on earth,
  we need not love one another.
But we must draw together, and know our enemies
     for there are things that are no longer
  acceptable,
     if the planet is not to go down.

  Our enemies are those who do not recognize
     our painful, shared community.
We must know them well,
     after Sabra . . .
  after Shatila . . .

Comment (0) | Permalink

 

Umbrella Against Iraq War
Posted by ceciliescott on 02/21/03, 1:00:06 PM

Share

What to do when the threat of war has you hyperventilating each morning?

My friend Alysoun headed out to the art supply store, bought oil crayons, and got her umbrella ready for a rainy day.

This photo was taken at the Seattle demonstration opposing War against Iraq, Saturday, February 15th. People from all around Puget Sound came together to join voices and signs in the biggest march I've ever seen, bigger than any of the demonstrations against the war in Vietnam.

Makes it easier to get out of bed each morning.

 

umbrella: Photo by Cathi Linden 021503, No Iraq War - Seattle
See the Seattle Independent Media Center for more demonstration coverage.

Comment (0) | Permalink

 

Super Highway to War with Iraq
Posted by ceciliescott on 09/21/02, 9:48:18 AM

Share

Ever have that dream, where you're in a car and suddenly realize you have no brakes? Then you find the steering wheel doesn't respond. Problem is, it's not a dream.

Stephen King horror pales before Bush & Company's race towards war with Iraq. We are being taken for a ride, and so far Congress shows no inclination to seize control. During the last presidential election Nader and the Green Party told us the Dems were no different from the Republicans. If Congress fails to stop the war against Iraq before it starts, the TweedleDum/TweedleDee claim will be all the more compelling.

peacepledge: link to peacepledge.org

Comment (0) | Permalink

 

The Return of Madame X
Posted by ceciliescott on 08/16/02, 10:06:23 AM

Share

Being Madame X is back on TurtleDreams.

I'd taken it off in order to work on a print version for submittal. Mistake! It just plain didn't work without graphics and links. I hated the result.

So I've revised it, adding more graphics, more links, and making better use of quotes that illustrate how this Sargent portrait, particularly its subject, has been pushing buttons ever since 1884.

Comment (0) | Permalink

 

Bombing Afghanistan - Whose History?
Posted by ceciliescott on 10/21/01, 9:46:48 AM

Share

Histories have been traded and quoted in the last month - first in response to the attack on the WTC and Pentagon, then as we struggle to answer questions about reprisal, justice, and defense. Histories filled the editorial and letters columns of the online and offline press. 20th Century histories were reduced to sound bites on TV and talk radio and to slogans used by politicians - both aimed at replacing thought with instant certainties.

Histories, yes. Clearly there is no single history. There are official histories, family histories, personal histories.

Consider, for example, the differing histories taught to and experienced by a Palestinian refugee living in a camp in Gaza and a Jewish refugee from New York living in a settlement on the West Bank.

I grew up on Leon Uris, on Kirk Douglas or Jeff Chandler playing the role of heroic fighter for a homeland for the Jews in Israel. My earliest memories of news photos are of those in Life magazine in 1945 - concentration camp survivors and mushroom clouds. Auschwitz and Hiroshima are forever and inextricably linked in my imagination.

So my task has been to learn other histories. Here are a few Links that have helped me in this task. And Common Dreams is a good site for reading today's news from multiple perspectives - histories in the making.

I'm still learning ... to live is to learn.

Comment (0) | Permalink

 

< Older Entries | Newer Entries >
 
sdcturtle-150: © Stephanie Dalton Cowan
RSS feed icon for Turtle Dreams RSS feed for Turtle Dreams
 
commondreams: click here for excellent news source
 
Pieces
Being Madame X
   by Cecilie Scott

Map Dreaming
   by Judith Yarrow

Touring Egypt
   by Dotty DeCoster

Choices
   by Susan Bell

Eat for Me
   by Rebecca Sargent

Searching for She Who Knows
   by Zarod Rominski

Listening to the Mountain
   by Cecilie Scott

Smart Bombs at Borobudur
   by Cecilie Scott



 



© 1996-2012 Cecilie Scott