Monthly Archives: May 2014

Faithful – 9 May 2014

Faithful 9 6 13

9 September 2013
Church Center for the United Nations
Manhattan, New York

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Filed under New York, Photo, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Presbyterian Ministry at the United Nations

Seek – 8 May 2014

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26 October 2009
Ghost Ranch
Abiquiu, New Mexico

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Filed under Ghost Ranch People, Photo, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

Journey: 7 May 2014

Journey

25 January 2014
George Washington Bridge

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Filed under New York, Photo, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

Purple flowers, 1st Avenue across from the UN

 

Purple flower face

Carefully,

the comings,

goings,

and doings

of the world

are monitored.

6 May 2014
Manhattan, New York

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Filed under New York, Photo

Begin: 6 May 2014

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Day 1 at the Presbyterian Ministry at the United Nations.

The desk has never been this clean since.

This marks my first entry in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) photo-a-day journey to our General Assembly.

4 October 2010
Manhattan, New York

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Filed under Photo, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Presbyterian Ministry at the United Nations

Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) photo-a-day journey

PCUSA photoAday-2I spotted this on the Facebook page of my friend Larissa Kwong Abazia.

The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) holds its biennial General Assembly in Detroit this June. Larissa stands (Presbyterians don’t run) for vice-moderator.

But she offers this invitation to all Presbyterians:

Calling all Presbyterians! Join in a photo-a-day journey as we prepare for the PC(USA) General Assembly. I invite you to celebrate who we are and who we want to become, no matter who you’re supporting for moderator of GA. Let’s have fun in the next forty days as we seek to serve our Church together. Pass it along! #journeytoGA #pcusa

I plan to give it a try. I invite you to join us.

See you along the Trail.

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Filed under Photo, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

Donald Sterling, the NBA and Racism

Much has been said and written about the case of Donald Sterling and the racism that continues to haunt our society. Here are some reflections by my friend Grace Ji-Sun Kim.

gracejisunkim's avatarGrace Ji-Sun Kim

BKN-CLIPPERS-OWNER-DONALD STERLING Here is my latest for The Huffington Post.  It is on the latest controversy surrounding Donald Sterling.  I would love to hear your comments.

Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling, in a recorded conversation pleaded with a woman to not bring black people to Clippers games and to not publicize pictures she had taken of Magic Johnson, a black basketball all-star.

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Filed under Antiracism, Friends

Remember Palestinian workers on International Workers’ Day

May 1. May Day. International Workers’ Day.

A day to give thanks for those who have worked to extend and protect the rights and dignity of workers. A day to remember those who work, often in situations of degradation and exploitation.  A day to commit ourselves to the efforts to ensure that all people have the opportunity for meaningful, safe work that will allow them to support themselves and their dependents.

A post by B’Tselem reminded me of workers I had not considered on this day:

For Palestinian workers, there is not much cause for celebration: the day is a painful reminder that another year has gone by and nothing has changed. Palestinians are still denied basic rights, including the right to earn a living without risking their lives.

B’tselem reports that Israel exploits natural resources of the West Bank (quarries, water, land) for its own needs and those of Israeli settlers even though this violates international law. This is a major factor preventing the development of a Palestinian economy on the West Bank. No Palestinian economy means limited work opportunities for Palestinians. This makes working within Israel the only option available to Palestinians.

Some Palestinians do so illegally. Such workers live in a state of anxiety, fearing detection, arrest, injury. B’Tselem notes that for such workers “labor rights such as a minimum wage, reasonable work hours, and a pension scheme seem like a distant dream.”

Other Palestinians seek to obtain work permits which Israel controls. Even with permits, Palestinian workers may enter Israel only through designated checkpoints. There, B’Tselem reports “harsh conditions of overcrowding, long lines, and cases of humiliation during inspection. On Sundays, the number of Palestinians crossing through both checkpoints peaks at 4,500. The workers and their belongings are scanned with a metal detector. Then, they move on to stations where personnel check their fingerprints and their papers, including their entry permits.”

As International Workers’ Day draws to a close, I give thanks for those workers who helped established rights workers enjoy today. I look for ways to extend and protect those rights. And I think of situations where workers are abused and exploited. I think of the West Bank how the workers there need the occupation to end so a viable economy can be built as steps toward the day when all can be employed in dignity.

Even as I type, I wonder what the workers of Gaza face. And the workers of other places. And I realize I need to learn more about the workers of the world, all the world including the United States.

The words of Joan Baez come back to me:

And the aching workers of the world again shall sing 
These words in mighty choruses to all will bring 
“We shall no longer be the poor 
For no one owns us anymore” 
And the workers of the world again shall sing

May it be so.

See you along the Trail.

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Filed under Current Events, Human Rights

Call Oklahoma to stop executions

Clayton Lockett died on Tuesday, April 29, 2014. He died in a botched execution by the State of Oklahoma.

The National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty reports that “witnesses say he writhed and twitched in agony throughout the execution.” A second execution scheduled for later that evening, has been postponed for fourteen days.

Lockett was sentenced to death for the murder of Stephanie Neiman. The incident that lead to her death was exceptionally brutal. It involved sexual assault and assault on Neiman and on Summer Bradshaw and Bobby Lee Bornt, according to a report in the Washington Post. While Neiman’s murder carried the death penalty, Lockett was convicted of a number of crimes committed that night.

There can be no justification, no excuses, no rationales for these actions, these crimes.

I grieve for Stephanie, Summer, Bobby Lee, and those who loved and love them. The violence which ended Stephanie’s live and violated Summer and Bobby Lee appalls me.

But I also grieve for Lockett. And his death appalls me even as his actions fill me with revulsion.

However, I believe, I do believe, I still believe, that dealing death for death is never the answer. It inappropriately raises us to the level of God as we decide who should live and who should die. And at the same time, it debases and degrades us to the level of those who resort to violence and destruction and death-dealing.

I opt for living in the tension. For seeking to find ways to protect society from those who kill without killing them. And for doing the hard, at times it seems futile, impossible, work of breaking the hold of anger, hate and violence on human hearts and preventing violence. It won’t come easy. But it is my choice.

The National Coalition Against the Death Penalty has a petition calling the leaders of Oklahoma to “halt all executions until an independent third-party can carry out an investigation with full transparency.”

I will sign because I believe an investigation is crucial both to understand what happened and why and to abolish the death penalty in Oklahoma and across the United States.

I will sign. I hope you do too.

See you along the Trail

 

 

 

 

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Filed under Capital Punishment, Death Penalty