Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for June, 2004

Supreme Court to Bush On Enemy Combatants: “Whoa, Boy!”

Wednesday, June 30th, 2004

Yesterday, the U.S. Supreme Court handed George Bush and John Ashcroft a stinging defeat in their effort to render enemy combatants as non-people not entitled to any legal protections under U.S. law (Justices Affirm Legal Rights of ‘Enemy Combatants’). The justices, by surprisingly lopsided votes considering the essentially right-wing & deferential nature of their interpretation of executive power, said that enemy combatants in U.S. custody ARE entitled to their day in a U.S. court and are entitled to legal representation, all of which the Bush Administration had denied them previously.

While this is a tremendous victory for civil libertarians and those who respect Constitutional law, it is equally important to note the limits of these rulings. They merely state that these individuals are entitled to access to court and their lawyers. They do not provide any indication of how the courts should look on these individuals nor what standard of legal proof the courts should use in determining whether they ARE dangerous people worthy of designation as enemy combatants.

While the World War II Japanese internment is considered possibly the most egregious U.S. violation of civil liberties in the 20th century, at least the Japanese complainants were never denied their day in court. Once they received that day in court however, their legitimate rights continued to be denied on the flimsiest of legal pretexts. So these enemy combatants could still face the prospect of spending their lives behind bars even after a court hears their cases.

Bush’s Poll Ratings Lowest in His Presidency

Wednesday, June 30th, 2004

The political news yesterday was very good indeed. The New York Times reports in
Bush’s Rating Falls to Its Lowest Point, New Survey Finds that the latest NYT/CBS poll finds his approval ratings at their lowest for his entire presidency (42%). 51% disapprove of the way he’s conducting his presidency.

And there are more welcome findings as well in this chart which tracks previous poll results:

1. over 60% of American’s believe the loss of life in Iraq “was not worth it.”
2. 59% believe that Bush is “hiding something” in his statements about Iraq
3. 55% believe that U.S. involvement in Iraq has “created terrorists.”
4. 51% say he has “divided” the nation, rather than united it.

Perhaps the happiest piece of news here is this statement:

Over the past 25 years, according to pollsters, presidents with job approval ratings below 50 percent in the spring of election years have generally gone on to lose. Mr. Bush’s father had a 34 percent job approval rating at this time in 1992.

All of this does not translate immediately into a boost for Kerry since Americans have not yet turned to Kerry in vast numbers as a viable alternative to Bush. But it is still very early in the campaign and if things continue to go as well as they have for him (or to be more precise, as poorly as they have for Bush) then as we get closer to Election Day and voters focus more on the race, this will happen.

Ansari X Prize Founder: Purpose of Commercial Space Flight is Tourism!

Monday, June 28th, 2004
SpaceShipOne

(credit: Flatrock.org)

Jon Stewart’s The Daily Show ran another hilarious piece of video in which Ansari X Prize founder, Peter Diamandis, says that his purpose in promoting the type of space flight represented by SpaceShipOne is to promote tourism. We’ll build hotels out there and ferry tourists to and from outer space!

Stewart’s witty rejoinder was: “Just what outer space needs–tourists!” And mini-malls, strip motels, and McDonald’s Golden Arches, too! Let’s mess up space like we’ve messed up our living space here on Earth while we’re at it.

SpaceReview.com said it well:

The new space era reverts to essential American values: having fun, taking risks, pushing frontiers, and trying to make a buck.

But after the fun is had and bucks are made, who pays the price for the mess we’ve made??

My Reply to the Music Industry: Everything is Free Now

Monday, June 28th, 2004

I just heard a great cover of Gillian Welch‘s Everything is Free on KBCS-FM. The performer enunciated the lyrics more clearly than Gillian and I could hear them clearly for the first time. As I listened, I realized that the song is a perfect rejoinder to the music industry’s assault on music file sharing:

Everything is free now,
That’s what they say.
Everything I ever done,
Gotta give it away.
Someone hit the big score.
They figured it out,
That we’re gonna do it anyway,
Even if doesn’t pay

Well, sure the song’s actually about making music for the pure love of it, rather than for the ‘big score.’ But I think the music industry qualifies as the ‘big score,’ don’t you? In fact, Gillian makes clear that ‘the big score’ is not fame and fortune, but making music for love.

Make no mistake, I’m not saying that the music industry should adopt Gillian’s approach to making music. But there are far better business models than what the industry has adopted including suing teenagers and grandmothers for illegal music downloading.

Ken Lay’s Theory of Corporate [Mis]Management

Monday, June 28th, 2004
lay

Ken “I Take the Fifth” Lay (credit: LearnedLeague.com)

`I take full responsibility for what happened at Enron,” said Mr. Lay, 62. “But saying that, I know in my mind that I did nothing criminal.”

Kurt Eichenwald captures the querulous, Alice in Wonderland quality of Ken Lay’s corporate governance philosophy in Crimes of Others Wrecked Enron, Ex-Chief Says.

It can be broken down this way: “I WAS responsible, but I’m not responsible. If anyone’s responsible it’s that diabolical other guy down the food chain, not me.”

Gee’s Bend (AL.) African-American Quilters

Sunday, June 27th, 2004

Whitney Museum Gees Bend Catalogue

UPDATE: PBS will broadcast The Quiltmakers of Gees Bend on February 3, 2005. Check your local PBS station for the air date.

Why I Love Quilts

I have a deep passion for folk arts and traditions. I’ve loved quilts in particular for almost twenty years (see these links to previous posts I’ve written about the subject–Quiltmaking: Great American Art Form and Grandma Rose White’s Quilt). My only regret is that I haven’t had the financial means to collect them. But I am very proud to have my grandmother in-law’s 60 year old quilt hanging on our wall.

Why are quilts so meaningful to me? Quilts represent the confluence of many varied skills and reveal much not only about the maker, but about the society which produced her (not too many ‘hims” I’m sorry to say).

geesbendwhitney_12

America Irby, One Patch,1971
Tinwood Alliance (credit: Steve Pitkin
courtesy, Quilts of Gee’s Bend
& Whitney catalogue

Quilts as Expressions of Human Society

I can remember viewing a quilt exhibit at a musuem devoted to quiltmaking somewhere near Asheville, NC. The exhibition’s focus was on the extraordinary technical skils required in designing quilts. The catalgoue explained that well-designed quilts require great mathematical skills. What was especially striking to me about this is that quilters, at least in the popular imagination, are old and young biddies from the country who have nothing better to do with their time then hold quilting bees. The idea that quilters could create complex designs involving mathematical calculations went far beyond what most people (at least in the past) could conceive. What is intriguing about quilting is that a seemingly ‘domestic’ activity can involve such complex manual dexterity plus mental preparation. Quiltmaking lies at the nexus of the mundane everyday world and the world of the mind.

Quilts also combine great utlity with great beauty. They serve a mundane, but nevertheless intimate function (keeping people warm in their beds) while they can last forever as monuments to a great aesthetic tradition. While quilt designs adhere to certain general traditional styles, they do not reflect any strict academic definitions or categories. This enables the art to embrace improvisation, informality and cultural adaptiveness. In fact, the Talk of the Nation moderator (see link following) of the Quilts of Gee’s Bend calls it “visual jazz.”

Quilts are also deeply personal expressions. I remember a historic quit exhibit I saw years ago at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in which quilts commemorated marriages, births, birthdays (even the nation’s). They are the ultimate expressions of the meaning of domestic life and the emotional investment of the quilter in it.

When I first read about the Gee’s Bend quilters in the pages of the New York Times (if anyone can provide me with a live link to this article, I’d be grateful), I was first amazed at the quality and beauty of their creations. I was also impressed to learn that this was a generations-old tradition among African-American women in the community. Prior to this, the general public thought of quilting (certainly erroneously) as a vocation of white women.

Quitmaking is, in a way, the great equalizer. In this art form, the woman can achieve the greatness of any other artist, male or female. Black women can artistically express themselves in as profound and aesthetically complex manner as any creative artist of whatever color. The rural quilter achieves the artistic complexity of the most sophisticated urban artist, a tremendous achievement in light of the assumption of cultural deficiency and intellectual backwardness that once informed society’s prejudices about rural life).

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Map of Gees Bend (credit: )

The Quilts of Gees Bend

Gees Bend is a small, isolated rural Alabama hamlet populated by the descendants of freed slaves. The town sits on an island in the Alabama River and is only accessible by ferry (which only recently reopened after decades). The quiltmaking tradition here goes back generations and is always a profoundly social and communal endeavor. This is true as well with all quiltmaking, but given the social isolation of Gees Bend, this factor takes on added significance. During the tumultuous 1960s when Blacks were reembracing their rights and liberties, the women of Gees Bend particpated in Freedom Quilting Bees, which were the ultimate confluence of the domestic and political lives of Black people.

Often the quilters sang as they worked and some of their music has been collected at the site linked below:

“Their favorite pasttime besides quilting is music, notably gospel, spirituals and blues. Their quiltmaking like the music they love bears hallmarks of improvisation.”
–from Gee’s Bend Cooperative spirituals

Another telling comment about Gees Bend quilting comes from Mensie Lee Pettaway, who describes her “philosophy of quiltmaking” this way:

“A lot of people make quilts just for your bed or for to keep you warrm. But a quilt is more. It represents safekeeping, it represents beauty, and you could say it represents family history.” –quoted in Whitney Museum’s Quilts of Gee’s Bend, pg. 9.

The Corcoran Gallery site (The Quilts of Gees Bend) provides additional interesting background material about the quilts and quilters of Gees Bend and the society from which they derive:

The Quilts of Gee’s Bend features a selection of twentieth-century quilts produced by the women of Gee’s Bend, a small, isolated community in southwestern Alabama. The inhabitants of Gee’s Bend populate a curving peninsula in the Alabama River and descend primarily from the former slaves of the Gee and Pettway Plantations. The origins of the Benders, as they call themselves, date to the early 1800s. Historically an agricultural society where the women plowed and planted and also cooked, kept house, and reared their large families, the Benders lived at a subsistence level well into the twentieth century. The programs of the New Deal in the 1930s and 40s helped these farmers survive, modernize, and, finally, take ownership of the property they had cultivated for generations. Although conditions improved, the community continued to have little contact with the outside world until the 1960s, evolving its own cultural and artistic modes of expression.

Before I continue, I have to say that I am not a folklorist nor trained as a textile artist. These are merely my own feelings and generalizations gathered over the time I’ve spent looking at, and thinking about quilts. If someone professionally trained in the field finds errors or distortions here, I’d be glad to be educated further.

In researching this post, I’ve come across some wonderful and varied resources about the qulters of Gees Bend:

NPR’s Talk of the Nation produced an excellent audio piece during the Whitney exhibition, The Quilts of Gee’s Bend.

For a visual tour of the quiltmaking process courtesy of the Freedom Quilting Bee visit ruraldevelopment.org.

To purchase a Gees Bend quilt (Delia Bennett) reproduction, visit the anthropologie.com site.

J.R. Moehringer’s Los Angeles Times tale of life in Gee’s Bend, Mary Lee’s Vision, won a 2000 Pulitzer for Feature-Writing.gees_bend_cd_cover

The Whitney Museum Gees Bend exhibition catalogue represents the first national exhibition of the handiwork of the Gees Benders (and was the subject of the Times review I mentioned earlier). Some of the quilts pictured here derive from this catalogue.

PBS’ News Hour with Jim Lehrer produced the Quilts of Gee’s Bend. Here’s the streaming link.

Here is the Corcoran Gallery’s The Quilts of Gee’s Bend exhibit information. The Gallery also offers How We Got Over: Sacred Songs of Gee’s Bend a double CD of the songs of the Gee’s Bend quilters (to purchase click on accompanying CD cover art).

Witness the compelling artistic vision of the quilters of Gee’s Bend in the following photo gallery:

geesbendwhitney_4

Annie Mae Young, Medallion,1976
Tinwood Alliance Collection credit: Steve Pitkin
courtesy, Quilts of Gee’s Bend &
Whitney Museum Gees Bend catalogue

geesbendwhitney_21

Nettie Jane Kennedy, Housetop,1955
Tinwood Alliance credit: Steve Pitkin
courtesy, Quilts of Gee’s Bend & Whitney catalogue

gees_bend_

Martin Luther King Quilting Bee, Coat of Many Colors,
1980 (credit: The Quilt Index)

geesbend_whitney_15

Loretta Pettway, Medallion, 1960
Tinwood Alliance credit: Steve Pitkin
courtesy, Quilts of Gee’s Bend & Whitney catalogue)

gees_bend7

Mary L. Bennett, Housetop–four-block variation, 1965
Tinwood Alliance, credit: Steve Pitkin courtesy, Quilts of Gee’s Bend
(Talk of the Nation Quilter’s of Gee’s Bend photo gallery)

geesbendwhitney_1

Arcola Pettway, Bars variation, 1976
locally referred to as Lazy Gal
Tinwood Alliance credit: Steve Pitkin courtesy,
Quilts of Gee’s BendWhitney catalogue)

gees12

Mary Lee Bendolph, Work Clothes,2002
credit: Modern Primitive Gallery

gees_bend_10_gloria_hoppins

Gloria Hoppins Housetop-–center medallion
1975, Tinwood Alliance
credit: Corcoran Gallery

gees_bend_3_jessie_pettway

Jessie T.Pettway, Bars and string-
pieced columns
, c. 1950s
Tinwood Alliance
credit: Steve Pitkin courtesy, Quilts of Gee’s Bend, Whitney catalogue

gees_mensie_pettaway

Mensie Lee PettwayStrips 2003
credit: Modern Primitive Gallery

gees_anna_young_strips_talk_of_nation

Annie Mae Young, Strips, 1975 Tinwood Alliance
credit: Steve Pitkin & Talk of the Nation photo gallery

gees_ella_irby_texas_star_antiques_fine_art

Ella Mae Irby, Texas Star, 1973
Tinwood Alliance (credit: AntiquesandFineArt.com)


The Reagans Turn Their Wrath on Bush

Saturday, June 19th, 2004

Ron Reagan eulogizes his fatherGeorge Bush and his handlers have grasped the Reagan mantle every which way they could in the aftermath of the Big Gip’s death. But happily, Nancy Reagan and her children will have none of it. It’s interesting that Reagan’s children from his first marriage to Jane Wyman were dyed in the wool Reaganites, while Ron, Jr. and Patti seem to have an independent streak and a mind of their own.

Ron, Jr. especially lambasted the Republicans (though not by name) for mixing politics and religion to create public policy. This was code for “my father died from Alzheimer’s and you jackasses are closing off the single most promising avenue of research that will lead to a cure of this horrible disease. Get a grip!!”

At his father’s funeral last week, Ron was in high dudgeon: Reagan By Association? His Family Won’t Allow It

[Though] Dad was a deeply religious man,” he told mourners gathered at sunset at the Reagan presidential library. “He never made the fatal mistake of so many politicians – wearing his faith on his sleeve to gain political advantage. True, after he was shot and nearly killed early in his presidency he came to believe that God had spared him in order that he might do good. But he accepted that as a responsibility, not a mandate. And there is a profound difference.”

You tell it, Ron!

And no one should doubt that Ron, Jr. made such strong remarks at his own father’s funeral with his mother’s blessing. Nancy, as we all know, if a VERY STRONG woman and doesn’t take shit from anyone. No doubt, after Bush’s mealy-mouthed compromise over stem cell research, Nancy felt terribly let down (as did anyone who feels that such research is the key to trmendous future medical advances). Reagan’s eulogy is the result. Nancy’s telling George: “if you think this is over buddy, you’ve got another thing coming.” Good on ‘ya, Nancy!

In an earlier Salon.com interview Reagan spoke even more overtly about his feelings for Pres. Bush:

“The Bush people have no right to speak for my father, particularly because of the position he’s in now,” Mr. Reagan said then. “Yes, some of the current policies are an extension of the 80′s. But the overall thrust of this administration is not my father’s – these people are overly reaching, overly aggressive, overly secretive and just plain corrupt. I don’t trust these people.”

Patti Davis has been no easier on George:

She wrote passionately about her father’s illness in the online version of Newsweek, this week and last month. “A messy, horrible war that has spun out of control could very well determine the next election,” Ms. Davis wrote before her father’s death. “So should the miracle of stem-cell research [determine the next election] – a miracle the Bush White House thinks it can block.”

It is somehow hard to believe that a President whose political life was so deeply infused with ideology would’ve raised children who’ve gone their own way and not embraced his political straight jacket. But all I can say is hossanah–children who think for themselves and don’t feel subservient to the ideas and opinions of their parents.

Of course that beacon of purity and light, Newtie Gingrich sees things differently through those rose colored glasses of his:

“Ronald Reagan has to be looking down from heaven and smiling at the way the current president, generally speaking, stands and the things he’s doing, even though they might well disagree on some specifics,” Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House, said Monday. He added, “In eight days of nonstop nationwide focus, you get on the ninth day a slight hiccup.”

Hmmm, Ron Reagan, Jr. as “hiccup.” Wonder what Ron and Nancy will think of that insult?

Molly Ivins, Bushwhacked

Saturday, June 19th, 2004

Molly Ivins is one of the funniest political commentators out there. She’s sly, witty, sharp and elegant. Even better, she’s made a career out of skewering George Bush. I just saw an ad in the New York Times Arts section for her latest which I’ve linked to here: