For Josee, Lara, Jesicca, Jennifer, Sonia, Michelle, Monique and all the other good ladies Who enrich my life ....
31 December - 1857: Queen Victoria chooses Ottawa, then a small logging town, as the capital of Canada.
Monday, December 31, 2012
Sunday, December 30, 2012
The Sunday Christ
As my friends Irini and Fotis mulled over whither Fotis really needed a Darth Vader helmet or a feather boa (sensible boy he bought neither) I wandered out of the Hollywood Costume Exhibition Shop at the Victoria and Albert into a small gallery next door. Though it is located a good deal away from the splendid Medieval Galleries it houses a few lovely pieces of religious art of mixed origins from the period. As often happens I focused in on one lovely piece of the carver's art.
This time the medium wasn't wood but alabaster and as is often the case with works of the period, this figure is dated circa 1500, the artist who created it is unknown. And until I saw this piece I must admit that the subject was unknown to me: The Sunday Christ. The card in the case explained that this was a unique work probably from Southern England or Wales and was meant not as a devotional object but as an admonition to those who wounded Christ by working on the Sabbath.
Normally the figure of the Sunday Christ appears in paintings and frescoes, often larger than life, and seems to have been particular to southern England, Cornwall, Wales, and the Alpine regions of France, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Slovenia and northern Italy. Frequently situated at the entrance to a church the painting or fresco portrayed "The Man of Sorrows" acquainted not with grief but with the grievous wounds caused by the tools of workmen who had chosen not to "to abstain from those works and affairs which hinder the worship to be rendered to God, the joy proper to the Lord’s day, or the suitable relaxation of mind and body." In more than one representation the blood from the wounds have a particularly gory aspect which causes me to wonder why it didn't become the subject for more Southern artists who seem to revel in suffering with a capital "S". It was hoped that in regarding the Sunday Christ (with or without the gore) the pious could find assurance that they were not amongst those re-crucifying Christ and the repentant would see what their act of impiety had led to. I'm not sure what effect it would have on those who continued to work as they wouldn't have darkened the door step of the church to view the suffering their sinful behavoir had wrought.
There is a theory that in the wake of the Black Death the Holy days of obligation had increased to a point where if craftsmen, labourers and farmhands had abstained from work on all of the required days that nothing would have been done. In many cases work was necessary, if crops were to be planted or brought in, buildings to be constructed or water to be drawn that work continue despite it being the Sabbath. It was very much a case of "damned if you do, damned (or starved) if you don't".
It is highly unusual for The Sunday Christ to be worked in stone or wood and this little figure is the only known representation in this form in England. The figure was probably stored in a shuttered tabernacle close to the door of the church and may even have been carried in processions on one of the many Feast Days or Days of Obligation. Perhaps it was when viewed in those processions that the shame of working and inflicting new wounds on their Lord overcame those labouring and they threw down their tools and did their duty.
Thought I have been a trifle tongue in cheek about the purpose of this little figurine I can recall the time was here in Canada when Sunday was indeed a welcome day of rest. And it was very much the same in our area of Roma and many places in Germany and Austria that we visited. Sunday was a day to go to church, if you were so inclined, visit the family, stroll through the park or go to lunch with friends. All of which fit perfectly in to the canonical command "to abstain from those works and affairs which hinder the worship to be rendered to God, the joy proper to the Lord’s day, or the suitable relaxation of mind and body." and none of which would have contributed to the suffering of this little Christ figure.
30 December - 1919: Lincoln's Inn in London, England, UK admits its first female bar student.
This time the medium wasn't wood but alabaster and as is often the case with works of the period, this figure is dated circa 1500, the artist who created it is unknown. And until I saw this piece I must admit that the subject was unknown to me: The Sunday Christ. The card in the case explained that this was a unique work probably from Southern England or Wales and was meant not as a devotional object but as an admonition to those who wounded Christ by working on the Sabbath.
Normally the figure of the Sunday Christ appears in paintings and frescoes, often larger than life, and seems to have been particular to southern England, Cornwall, Wales, and the Alpine regions of France, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Slovenia and northern Italy. Frequently situated at the entrance to a church the painting or fresco portrayed "The Man of Sorrows" acquainted not with grief but with the grievous wounds caused by the tools of workmen who had chosen not to "to abstain from those works and affairs which hinder the worship to be rendered to God, the joy proper to the Lord’s day, or the suitable relaxation of mind and body." In more than one representation the blood from the wounds have a particularly gory aspect which causes me to wonder why it didn't become the subject for more Southern artists who seem to revel in suffering with a capital "S". It was hoped that in regarding the Sunday Christ (with or without the gore) the pious could find assurance that they were not amongst those re-crucifying Christ and the repentant would see what their act of impiety had led to. I'm not sure what effect it would have on those who continued to work as they wouldn't have darkened the door step of the church to view the suffering their sinful behavoir had wrought.
There is a theory that in the wake of the Black Death the Holy days of obligation had increased to a point where if craftsmen, labourers and farmhands had abstained from work on all of the required days that nothing would have been done. In many cases work was necessary, if crops were to be planted or brought in, buildings to be constructed or water to be drawn that work continue despite it being the Sabbath. It was very much a case of "damned if you do, damned (or starved) if you don't".
It is highly unusual for The Sunday Christ to be worked in stone or wood and this little figure is the only known representation in this form in England. The figure was probably stored in a shuttered tabernacle close to the door of the church and may even have been carried in processions on one of the many Feast Days or Days of Obligation. Perhaps it was when viewed in those processions that the shame of working and inflicting new wounds on their Lord overcame those labouring and they threw down their tools and did their duty.
Thought I have been a trifle tongue in cheek about the purpose of this little figurine I can recall the time was here in Canada when Sunday was indeed a welcome day of rest. And it was very much the same in our area of Roma and many places in Germany and Austria that we visited. Sunday was a day to go to church, if you were so inclined, visit the family, stroll through the park or go to lunch with friends. All of which fit perfectly in to the canonical command "to abstain from those works and affairs which hinder the worship to be rendered to God, the joy proper to the Lord’s day, or the suitable relaxation of mind and body." and none of which would have contributed to the suffering of this little Christ figure.
30 December - 1919: Lincoln's Inn in London, England, UK admits its first female bar student.
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Christmas Memories - Dylan Thomas
One Christmas was so much like another, in those years around the sea-town corner now and out of all sound except the distant speaking of the voices I sometimes hear a moment before sleep, that I can never remember whether it snowed for six days and six nights when I was twelve or whether it snowed for twelve days and twelve nights when I was six.
With that glorious run-on sentence Dylan Thomas begins his reminiscences of A Child's Christmas in Wales - his rich memory book of childhood Christmases mangled and magnified through the lens of passing time. The language sings on the page without a musical stave in sight. And if it sings in your mind as you read it, it sings even more on the recording Thomas made in 1952 for the newly created Caedmon Records. Thomas has been contracted by Barbara Holdridge and Marianne Mantall-Roney to record several of his poems but Thomas also wanted to read a story and suggested that a piece he had sold to Harper's Bazaar Magazine in 1950 would be a good one. Apparently he showed up for the recording - possibly drunk according to Mantall-Roney - without a copy of the text. A frantic scramble produced a copy of the magazine and the text of 'A Child's Memories of a Christmas in Wales'. It was the first of the many spoken-word recordings that this company was to produce and though its initial release met with only modest success it is still in the catalogues today.
As the Aunties have their tea (and perhaps some parsnip wine) young Dylan manfully tests his skills as a "little engineer" in Fritz Eichenberg's woodblock for the 1959 reissue of A Child's Christmas in Wales. |
If nothing quite matches the magic of Thomas reading his own words a lovely version was filmed for TV with Denholm Elliot in 1987 comes very close. Though adapted and expanded it remains faithful to the loving nostalgia of the original, never ignoring the humour that Thomas also saw in those memories. And it includes a lovely performance by Elliot as the grandfather recounting the stories of the time when it snowed for six days and six nights when he was twelve. Or was it for twelve days and twelve nights when he was six?
. |
Both Grandfather and Thomas wish for snow for Christmas; the one to recapture the memories the other to created them. |
I've always wondered that it hasn't become a Christmas classic amongst all the annual drivel that shows up but it seemed to have disappeared. However I found it available on DVD last year and immediately ordered it. Watching it is now a Christmas tradition in our household along with listening to the original recording.
Here is Thomas in the last passage of that reading made more than 60 years ago that still touches to the heart of the Season.
And then I went to bed. Looking through my bedroom window, out into the moonlight and the unending smoke-colored snow, I could see the lights in the windows of all the other houses on our hill and hear the music rising from them up the long, steady falling night. I turned the gas down, I got into bed. I said some words to the close and holy darkness, and then I slept.
25 December - 800: Coronation of Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor, in Rome.
Christmas 2012
For Unto Us A Child Is Born
Merry Christmas Joyeux Noël Buon Natale
December 25 - 1066: William the Conqueror is crowned king of England, at Westminster Abbey, London.
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Sunday, December 23, 2012
Comfort Ye My People
Like many I grew up with The Messiah as a Christmas tradition - either in its full version as broadcast each year on CBC from Massey Hall with the TSO under Sir Ernest MacMillan or snippets at our local church if the choir master was particularly adventuresome. Both Handel and Charles Jennens would be puzzled by our tradition of their oratorio being presented in concert halls, town halls, school auditoria and churches at Yuletide. It was premiered at Eastertide in Dublin in April 1742 and Jennens' text is an extended reflection on Christ as the Messiah; only Part I addresses the Prophetic Coming and Nativity, Part II and II portraits the Passion, Resurrection, Accession, Last Judgment and Final Victory of Christ the Messiah.
For Jennen's it was not a Christmas message but a Christian one (howbeit skewered to his particular beliefs) that he was delivering. And though at various times his libretto has been denigrated as a mere cobbling together of text from the King James Bible and the Book of Common Prayer it is now recognized as what Watkins Shaw describes as "a meditation of our Lord as Messiah in Christian thought and belief". And despite his dislike for Jennens as a person, Shaw conceded that the finished text "amounts to little short of a work of genius". And that literary genius was wedded perfectly to Handel's musical genius.
Though I have several versions of The Messiah - including Der Messias, the Mozart arrangement in German and several period instrument performances - for some reason every year I go back to my old Sir Thomas Beecham recording on RCA Victor. It uses the very "unauthentic" and apparently contested arrangement Sir Eugene Goossens made for Beecham in 1959 for performances at the Lucerne Festival. It is grand perhaps even grandiose, the forces are large - Beecham's Royal Philharmonic and the Huddersfield Choral Society at full throttle. The four soloists come no where near giving us "authentic performances" - a phrase which always brings to mind Anna Russell's comment: "terribly pure if a trifle bloodless". There is nothing period or bloodless about the young Jon Vickers and I dare anyone not to be thrilled when his voice cries out in the wilderness.
In a letter in May of 1959 Beecham admonished Goossens: "You will not forget, I am sure, that Hallelujah must lead off with the most glorious and crashing noise, everybody going all out - hell for leather!" Fulfilling Sir Thomas's wish Goossens uses cymbals to start of the thing with a big bang. When challenged about his arrangement by Records and Recordings in 1960 Sir Eugene turned the question around. "And why not?" he asked the interviewer: "Aren't we exhorted in the Bible to 'praise the Lord with the sound of cymbals'?" And praise the Lord Sir Thomas and his forces certainly do. It may lack a certain subtlety but its is joyous and guaranteed to bring an audience to its feet hoary old tradition or not.
Now this is not The Messiah as I always want to hear it - at some point this week the Gabrielli Consort CD will go on the player or the Charles Mackerras Mozart will be clicked on iTunes. The wonder is that Jennen's and Handel's glorious work can take all those interpretations and still move us to tears, joy and contemplation.
23 December - 1823: A Visit from St. Nicholas, also known as The Night Before Christmas, is published anonymously.
For Jennen's it was not a Christmas message but a Christian one (howbeit skewered to his particular beliefs) that he was delivering. And though at various times his libretto has been denigrated as a mere cobbling together of text from the King James Bible and the Book of Common Prayer it is now recognized as what Watkins Shaw describes as "a meditation of our Lord as Messiah in Christian thought and belief". And despite his dislike for Jennens as a person, Shaw conceded that the finished text "amounts to little short of a work of genius". And that literary genius was wedded perfectly to Handel's musical genius.
The Messiah during the Great Handel Festival of 1857 at the Crystal Palace in London - a chorus of 2,000 and 500 musicians made sure that the Hallelujahs were well and truly heard. |
Though I have several versions of The Messiah - including Der Messias, the Mozart arrangement in German and several period instrument performances - for some reason every year I go back to my old Sir Thomas Beecham recording on RCA Victor. It uses the very "unauthentic" and apparently contested arrangement Sir Eugene Goossens made for Beecham in 1959 for performances at the Lucerne Festival. It is grand perhaps even grandiose, the forces are large - Beecham's Royal Philharmonic and the Huddersfield Choral Society at full throttle. The four soloists come no where near giving us "authentic performances" - a phrase which always brings to mind Anna Russell's comment: "terribly pure if a trifle bloodless". There is nothing period or bloodless about the young Jon Vickers and I dare anyone not to be thrilled when his voice cries out in the wilderness.
In a letter in May of 1959 Beecham admonished Goossens: "You will not forget, I am sure, that Hallelujah must lead off with the most glorious and crashing noise, everybody going all out - hell for leather!" Fulfilling Sir Thomas's wish Goossens uses cymbals to start of the thing with a big bang. When challenged about his arrangement by Records and Recordings in 1960 Sir Eugene turned the question around. "And why not?" he asked the interviewer: "Aren't we exhorted in the Bible to 'praise the Lord with the sound of cymbals'?" And praise the Lord Sir Thomas and his forces certainly do. It may lack a certain subtlety but its is joyous and guaranteed to bring an audience to its feet hoary old tradition or not.
Now this is not The Messiah as I always want to hear it - at some point this week the Gabrielli Consort CD will go on the player or the Charles Mackerras Mozart will be clicked on iTunes. The wonder is that Jennen's and Handel's glorious work can take all those interpretations and still move us to tears, joy and contemplation.
23 December - 1823: A Visit from St. Nicholas, also known as The Night Before Christmas, is published anonymously.
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Pussy Cat, Pussy Cat Where Have You Been?
Well actually I've been to London if not to visit the Queen then to do quite a lot of things in four short days.
I first visited London when I was 19 in 1969. Up until then the farthest I had been away from home was New York one Christmas with my mother (when we had the embarrassing scene with the unsuccessful attempted to "poison" me with "uncooked" hamburger at Schrafft's Restaurant) and Nassau with my friend Eugene (who saved me from drowning two hours after we arrived and has suffered with a bad back ever after). You would think that those two episodes alone might have killed any urge I had to travel but no, that May I set off on the first of many voyages to London; and I was to cross the Atlantic once again three months later en route to Austria. In those heady years of high salaries, working for the airlines and living at home if I had been eligible for air points (if such a thing had existed) I would have had enough to do around the world within a year or two. The trips were frequent and mainly to Europe and many of the trips meant time spent in London - sometimes only for a day or two.
The reason for that first trip was opera - The Glyndebourne Festival and the Royal Opera at Covent Garden. Then there was the theatre - Love for Love with Geraldine McEwan at the National Theatre (still housed in the Old Vic back then), Sarah Miles and Eileen Atikens in Vivat Vivat Regina and a trip down to Chichester to see the incomparable Alistair Sim and a very young Patricia Routledge in Pinero's The Magistrate.
Well 43 years later I arrived at Heathrow a week ago Thursday past for a few days and the principal motivation once again was opera - plus ca change!!
The Royal Opera House was staging a rare revival of Meyerbeer's Robert la diable - the last time the infamous ghostly ballet of debauched nuns danced on that stage was 1890. And in one of those strange little quirks of serendipity the National Theatre (in their South Bank home) was presenting The Magistrate with John Lithgow as the beset-upon Mr Posket. Did I mention "plus ca change"????
There were, of course, quite a few added attractions - my dear Fotis was coming in from Athens for the opera and we had seats together (quite by accident) in the front row of the amphitheatre; Chantal, a colleague from Rome was on temporary duty at the High Commission and I had an invitation to stay with her and a night out at the National; and David and the Diplomate had issued an invitation to Sunday lunch. It was going to be a full four days.
But of course being London there were all the serendipitous events that pop-up in what is still after all these visits one of the most exciting cities on the surface of this ever shrinking globe. At 1430 on Thursday afternoon Fotis phoned to say that he had an extra ticket for the (sold-out) Hollywood Costume exhibition at the V and A and to get my lily-white over there by 1530 if I wanted to see it. And see it I did - and met his friend Irini Kyriakidou who, as well as being a very beautiful and talented soprano in her own right, just happens to be married to Bryan Hymel who was singing the eponymous Robert. Which then led to an opportunity to go backstage after the performance followed by a late night dinner in Covent Garden with Irini, Bryan, Fotis and their friend Sascha. An e-mail exchange with David about Sunday's lunch led to an unplanned trip to the British Library to see a splendid exhibition of books and illustrations from the Moghul Period in India. And Sunday lunch as well as bringing the delights of a perfectly cooked joint of lamb placed me in the company of David, Diplomate and Edward, a fascinating gentleman with an equally fascinating history.
Some how I managed to squeeze a trip to Seldfridge's and a quick pop by Fortnum and Mason to see their very disappointing windows this year - no moving figures and more advertisement than anything - with a stop behind them at Pink on Jermyn Street. To make up for the disappointment of not spending £175.00 on that great shirt I headed back to the V and A again. A walk-around their remarkable Medieval Galleries, a look-in at the Raphael's and a saunter through the English Renaissance displays wasalmost as good as retail therapy.
A full but strangely not exhausting few days that proved that even after the many visits I am very much not "tired of life".
22 December -1890: Cornwallis Valley Railway begins operation between Kentville and Kingsport, Nova Scotia.
The reason for that first trip was opera - The Glyndebourne Festival and the Royal Opera at Covent Garden. Then there was the theatre - Love for Love with Geraldine McEwan at the National Theatre (still housed in the Old Vic back then), Sarah Miles and Eileen Atikens in Vivat Vivat Regina and a trip down to Chichester to see the incomparable Alistair Sim and a very young Patricia Routledge in Pinero's The Magistrate.
Well 43 years later I arrived at Heathrow a week ago Thursday past for a few days and the principal motivation once again was opera - plus ca change!!
The Royal Opera House was staging a rare revival of Meyerbeer's Robert la diable - the last time the infamous ghostly ballet of debauched nuns danced on that stage was 1890. And in one of those strange little quirks of serendipity the National Theatre (in their South Bank home) was presenting The Magistrate with John Lithgow as the beset-upon Mr Posket. Did I mention "plus ca change"????
Not only the shops in Mayfair were dressed up for the season; though this little girl was not at all impressed with the Candy Cane. |
And if there's a Candy Cane man, you just know there had to be a Candy Kiss on roller skates nearby - after all it is London. |
There were, of course, quite a few added attractions - my dear Fotis was coming in from Athens for the opera and we had seats together (quite by accident) in the front row of the amphitheatre; Chantal, a colleague from Rome was on temporary duty at the High Commission and I had an invitation to stay with her and a night out at the National; and David and the Diplomate had issued an invitation to Sunday lunch. It was going to be a full four days.
Although the landscapes don't quite marry up it is possible that the artist intended the portraits of Ashraf 'Ali Khan and his mistress Muttubby to be a facing each other in a book. Dip Chad is one of the few artists of the period of whom much is known and his style is distinctive for its experimentation and subtle use of colour. For some reason the portrait of Muttubby reminded me of Magritte - funny the associations our minds make.From the catalogue for MUGHAL INDIA, British Library
But of course being London there were all the serendipitous events that pop-up in what is still after all these visits one of the most exciting cities on the surface of this ever shrinking globe. At 1430 on Thursday afternoon Fotis phoned to say that he had an extra ticket for the (sold-out) Hollywood Costume exhibition at the V and A and to get my lily-white over there by 1530 if I wanted to see it. And see it I did - and met his friend Irini Kyriakidou who, as well as being a very beautiful and talented soprano in her own right, just happens to be married to Bryan Hymel who was singing the eponymous Robert. Which then led to an opportunity to go backstage after the performance followed by a late night dinner in Covent Garden with Irini, Bryan, Fotis and their friend Sascha. An e-mail exchange with David about Sunday's lunch led to an unplanned trip to the British Library to see a splendid exhibition of books and illustrations from the Moghul Period in India. And Sunday lunch as well as bringing the delights of a perfectly cooked joint of lamb placed me in the company of David, Diplomate and Edward, a fascinating gentleman with an equally fascinating history.
Some how I managed to squeeze a trip to Seldfridge's and a quick pop by Fortnum and Mason to see their very disappointing windows this year - no moving figures and more advertisement than anything - with a stop behind them at Pink on Jermyn Street. To make up for the disappointment of not spending £175.00 on that great shirt I headed back to the V and A again. A walk-around their remarkable Medieval Galleries, a look-in at the Raphael's and a saunter through the English Renaissance displays was
A full but strangely not exhausting few days that proved that even after the many visits I am very much not "tired of life".
"Why, Sir, you find no man, at all intellectual, who is willing to leave London. No, Sir, when a man is tired of London, he is tired of life; for there is in London all that life can afford."
— Samuel Johnson to Boswell, September 20, 1777.
22 December -1890: Cornwallis Valley Railway begins operation between Kentville and Kingsport, Nova Scotia.
Monday, December 10, 2012
Lunedi Lunacy
Well I may as well stop trying to fight it and give in - Christmas is only a few weeks away and the decorations are up in most places. The carols are piping over the sound systems in stores, malls, train stations and I would gather airports. I understand that the Christmas "specials" are appearing on television (I keep thinking that we really should get one but then I think, why bother?). The endless annual repeats of Rudolf, Charlie Brown's Christmas, The Grinch and Frosty the Snowman are once again thrilling young and old. Bing is singing about all our Christmases being white, miracles are happening on 34th Street, wonderful lives are being revealed to despairing bankers and babes are getting lost in Toyland.
So I thought I'd start the season, for me at least, with one of my favourite Christmas "specials" back from the days when a "special" really was "special". The guest stars are fabulous if in some cases faded, the bonhomie is as fake as the snow and the host is as venal in his search for gifts as we all really would like to be.
Here's the opening number from PeeWee's Playhouse Christmas Special.
Now you explain to me why this hasn't become a annual event on television? Oh well alright there was that episode with PeeWee in the "playhouse".... okay lets not talk about it! After all its Christmas in the Playhouse.
December 10 - 1902: Women are given the right to vote in Tasmania.
So I thought I'd start the season, for me at least, with one of my favourite Christmas "specials" back from the days when a "special" really was "special". The guest stars are fabulous if in some cases faded, the bonhomie is as fake as the snow and the host is as venal in his search for gifts as we all really would like to be.
Here's the opening number from PeeWee's Playhouse Christmas Special.
Now you explain to me why this hasn't become a annual event on television? Oh well alright there was that episode with PeeWee in the "playhouse".... okay lets not talk about it! After all its Christmas in the Playhouse.
December 10 - 1902: Women are given the right to vote in Tasmania.
Saturday, December 08, 2012
Kindle the Light of Hanukkah
~ מעוז צור ma'oz tzur*
A beautiful antique silver menorah from Palestine. |
This is a lovely version of the piyyut that many of my friends will be singing tonight as the Feast of Lights begins. Its sung by Blackmore's Night and the English words Candice Night sings in the second verse are only one set of many translations that have come down through the centuries.
This English version of the old canticle is based on a German version by Rabbi Leopold Stein (1810–1882) translated by two renowned rabbis who immigrated to the United States, Marcus Jastrow and Gustav Gottheil.
Rock of Ages, let our song, praise Thy saving power;
Thou, amidst the raging foes, wast our sheltering tower.
Furious they assailed us, but Thine arm availed us,
And Thy Word broke their sword, when our own strength failed us.
And Thy Word broke their sword, when our own strength failed us.
An 18th century oil menorah from Poland. |
Kindling new the holy lamps, priests, approved in suffering,
Purified the nation's shrine, brought to God their offering.
And His courts surrounding, hear, in joy abounding,
Happy throngs, singing songs with a mighty sounding.
Happy throngs, singing songs with a mighty sounding.
Small bronze hanging oil Menorah, c. 1900 based on 14th Century French Menorah |
Though a minor feast in the Jewish calendar Hanukkah has gained in significance as a feast to celebrate and share with family and friends - and in many home an extra place is set should a stranger come to the door in need of food and companionship.Children of the martyr race, whether free or fettered,
Wake the echoes of the songs where ye may be scattered.
Yours the message cheering that the time is nearing
Which will see, all men free, tyrants disappearing.
Which will see, all men free, tyrants disappearing.
To my friends, who with their families, friends and perhaps that hungry wayfarer, begin this celebration of light as the darkest nights of the year approach: hahg same'akh (חג שמח)
My blog buddy Debra has one of the loveliest Hanukkah images on her blog - do take a look!
And two previous posts I've done on Hanukkah:
And Call It Lights
*Stronghold of Rock
08 December - 1660: A woman (either Margaret Hughes or Anne Marshall) appears on an English public stage for the first time, in the role of Desdemona in Shakespeare's Othello.
Labels:
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Monday, December 03, 2012
Lunedi Lunacy
Oh sure Shakespeare has his "Seven Ages of Man" and his "winter of our discontent" but we can do him better here in Canada! We have the "Oh Man, The Seven Ages of Our Discontent with Winter".
The Seven Ages of A Canadian Winter.
Yes I know it's that difficult time of year again, but come on people, we can get through this together. To better navigate our ordeal, it’s important that we take the time to review and prepare for the challenge ahead. We've already been through the first two stages; be brave there are only five more to go.
1. Anticipation - October
As the long, hot summer surrenders to the first hint of an autumn breeze, many of us experience a small thrill: the leaves are turn golden yellow and red; winter is on its way, bringing relief from the heat and promising the many splendours that accompany that most Canadian of seasons.
We envision snow-flecked landscapes, ice-covered ponds and joyful Christmas choirs. Digging deep into the closet, we gaze fondly upon our parkas and mitts. We dream of frosty adventures skating on the canal, swooshing down ski-hills and making snowmen.
2. Shocked Surprise - November
The first cruel winds of November cut through us and we pretty much want to fall down and die right there. Three days of hostile muttering ensue.
3. Sarcasm - December
A huge December snowfall—awesome! And maybe a little freezing rain in there because THAT WOULD BE PLEASANT. Wake up and there’s a metre of snow in the driveway—and hey, great, it’s the wet, slushy kind that weighs about a squillion pounds per shovelful and lays those of weak heart in their graves. Yay winter!
Just when we finally get it cleared—literally, just as we finish clearing it away—the plow pushes a huge drift back in front of the driveway. Thanks for that, buddy! And for the record, that could have been anyone’s snow shovel that flew through the air and struck the window of the plow’s cab. We only ran away because we were in the mood for some exercise.
4. Rationalization - January
Yes January - that endless month, we are told it only has thirty-one days but we know that by some cruel joke in the time continuum it last twice that long - has two stages.
Typically this stage is triggered by an enjoyable day spent outdoors in the glittering sunlight of a January day. We are imbued with the belief that not only can we survive winter, we can learn to love and embrace it. We vow to plan more outings. We settle in for hot chocolate by the fireplace.
We look out the window into the deep black of a winter’s night and we are content . . .
5. Swearing
. . . until we realize it’s only 4:35 p.m. Sweet mother of @!%*#. It’s pitch black when we go to work! It’s pitch black when we come home from work! There’s more daylight in Das Boot.
HUMANS WEREN’T MEANT TO LIVE LIKE THIS, BY GOD!
Our stylish leather boots are salt-stained. The legs of our pants are salt-stained. Our will to live is salt-stained, and that’s not even possible. At work, the guy two cubicles over is wearing the same wool sweater for the third time this week. It smells like a wet ferret. And now we smell like a wet ferret. Morning comes and the ice on our windshield is thick, so thick, and we take our scraper and we just hammer on it and hammer on it until we crumble to the driveway, spent and weeping.
Later, at Starbucks, we overhear some cheerful idiot saying the Inuit have dozens of ways of saying “snow.” We tell him we’ve got hundreds of ways of saying, “Shut the $@*# up.” The ensuing conversation with management centres on whether we’re banned from all Starbucks or just this one.
6. Hostility- February
It’s late February. The snowshoes we got for Christmas are still in their box. Communication among family members has devolved to a series of grunts, crude drawings and middle fingers. In this dark moment, a decision is made. The next person who comes up to us and says, “Cold enough for ya?”—we are going to murder that person. Not secretly. Not with any foresight or planning. We are going to reach out with our bare hands and we are going to strangle the life out of that person right then and there, and if anyone tries to get in our way then we are going to murder them as well because we just... can’t..... take it.... anymore!
7. Despair - March
The neighbours are back from their March break in Florida. They’re all tanned and perky, and they sure seem eager to come over and tell us all about it—right up until they spot the barbed wire and land mines. They back away slowly.
But Spring is coming. Dear Lord it must be coming. The nights are becoming shorter, the swish-swush sound of snowsuits is fading from our dreams to be replaced by the faint warbles of birdsong. Our winter nights of despair will be over soon - the sweet buds of April will spring forth and blossom. That is of course unless a late winter blizzard and ice storm doesn't freeze the little suckers to the bough.
That Shakespeare guy wants to see a winter of discontent - let him talk to us sometime around stage 6 - if he dare!
With thanks to my friend David Smith who forwarded the inspiration for this one.
03 December - 1927: Putting Pants on Philip, the first Laurel and Hardy film, is released.
The Seven Ages of A Canadian Winter.
Yes I know it's that difficult time of year again, but come on people, we can get through this together. To better navigate our ordeal, it’s important that we take the time to review and prepare for the challenge ahead. We've already been through the first two stages; be brave there are only five more to go.
1. Anticipation - October
As the long, hot summer surrenders to the first hint of an autumn breeze, many of us experience a small thrill: the leaves are turn golden yellow and red; winter is on its way, bringing relief from the heat and promising the many splendours that accompany that most Canadian of seasons.
Ah the beauty of snow, the delicate patterns of lacy white on trees, the ice glistening on the frozen water, the feel of fresh snow under foot. Oh Joy! Oh Rapture! |
We envision snow-flecked landscapes, ice-covered ponds and joyful Christmas choirs. Digging deep into the closet, we gaze fondly upon our parkas and mitts. We dream of frosty adventures skating on the canal, swooshing down ski-hills and making snowmen.
2. Shocked Surprise - November
The first cruel winds of November cut through us and we pretty much want to fall down and die right there. Three days of hostile muttering ensue.
3. Sarcasm - December
A huge December snowfall—awesome! And maybe a little freezing rain in there because THAT WOULD BE PLEASANT. Wake up and there’s a metre of snow in the driveway—and hey, great, it’s the wet, slushy kind that weighs about a squillion pounds per shovelful and lays those of weak heart in their graves. Yay winter!
Just when we finally get it cleared—literally, just as we finish clearing it away—the plow pushes a huge drift back in front of the driveway. Thanks for that, buddy! And for the record, that could have been anyone’s snow shovel that flew through the air and struck the window of the plow’s cab. We only ran away because we were in the mood for some exercise.
4. Rationalization - January
Yes January - that endless month, we are told it only has thirty-one days but we know that by some cruel joke in the time continuum it last twice that long - has two stages.
Typically this stage is triggered by an enjoyable day spent outdoors in the glittering sunlight of a January day. We are imbued with the belief that not only can we survive winter, we can learn to love and embrace it. We vow to plan more outings. We settle in for hot chocolate by the fireplace.
We look out the window into the deep black of a winter’s night and we are content . . .
5. Swearing
. . . until we realize it’s only 4:35 p.m. Sweet mother of @!%*#. It’s pitch black when we go to work! It’s pitch black when we come home from work! There’s more daylight in Das Boot.
HUMANS WEREN’T MEANT TO LIVE LIKE THIS, BY GOD!
Our stylish leather boots are salt-stained. The legs of our pants are salt-stained. Our will to live is salt-stained, and that’s not even possible. At work, the guy two cubicles over is wearing the same wool sweater for the third time this week. It smells like a wet ferret. And now we smell like a wet ferret. Morning comes and the ice on our windshield is thick, so thick, and we take our scraper and we just hammer on it and hammer on it until we crumble to the driveway, spent and weeping.
Later, at Starbucks, we overhear some cheerful idiot saying the Inuit have dozens of ways of saying “snow.” We tell him we’ve got hundreds of ways of saying, “Shut the $@*# up.” The ensuing conversation with management centres on whether we’re banned from all Starbucks or just this one.
A typical Ottawa intersection after a gentle white falling of snow has turned it into a slippery, snarled tangle of cars, buses and on the sidelines bundled up, wet, cold snarly people. |
6. Hostility- February
It’s late February. The snowshoes we got for Christmas are still in their box. Communication among family members has devolved to a series of grunts, crude drawings and middle fingers. In this dark moment, a decision is made. The next person who comes up to us and says, “Cold enough for ya?”—we are going to murder that person. Not secretly. Not with any foresight or planning. We are going to reach out with our bare hands and we are going to strangle the life out of that person right then and there, and if anyone tries to get in our way then we are going to murder them as well because we just... can’t..... take it.... anymore!
7. Despair - March
The neighbours are back from their March break in Florida. They’re all tanned and perky, and they sure seem eager to come over and tell us all about it—right up until they spot the barbed wire and land mines. They back away slowly.
But Spring is coming. Dear Lord it must be coming. The nights are becoming shorter, the swish-swush sound of snowsuits is fading from our dreams to be replaced by the faint warbles of birdsong. Our winter nights of despair will be over soon - the sweet buds of April will spring forth and blossom. That is of course unless a late winter blizzard and ice storm doesn't freeze the little suckers to the bough.
That Shakespeare guy wants to see a winter of discontent - let him talk to us sometime around stage 6 - if he dare!
With thanks to my friend David Smith who forwarded the inspiration for this one.
03 December - 1927: Putting Pants on Philip, the first Laurel and Hardy film, is released.
Sunday, December 02, 2012
World AIDS Day - II
In 2011 the World Health Organization announced that the slogan for World AIDS Day for the next 5 years would be: Getting to Zero. As I posted last year this has to be more than a theme, or even a hope: this has to be a goal. A goal that all countries try to achieve - but one that sadly many countries - including my own - are ignoring.
There are still nations in the world where people are told that AIDS is a "foreigner's disease"; countries where people are shunned because of the disease; countries where children are forced into prostitution and spread the disease and are discarded when they are too sick to "work"; places where it is preached as a less-than-loving god's punishment for an abnormal life style; and countries where promises are made and then once the photo-op has passed ignored or given only lip service. It would be nice to think that these are what were once called "third world" nations but sadly my own country is one of those nations that made grandiose statements and promises and claims to be a "world leader" is really only a bit player.
I made the statement at work the other day that I was ashamed of Canada but was quickly corrected and told that I had no reason to be ashamed of my country - we were still a nation of caring people. What, I was told in no uncertain words, I should be ashamed of is my government. And looking at events in the past few days I am in complete agreement with that sentiment.
On Thursday evening C389 an amendment to a bill that would have made generic pharmaceuticals affordable and available in third world countries was defeated. A bill that would have gone a long way to meeting our commitment to be a nation that cares about AIDS at home and abroad lost by seven votes. The next day on radio Mike Lake, the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Industry mouthed weak excuses and platitudes about our continued role as a "world leader"in the fight against AIDS - unfortunately he could not give any concrete examples of that "leadership". And in the interview that followed Stephen Douglas, a strong voice for AIDS advocacy, put paid to the party line as spouted by Mr Lake. I found it strange that something so centred around health was addressed by someone with the Industry portfolio. But then that is what it was really all about - protecting the pharmaceutical companies. It had little or nothing to do with our role in combating AIDS in the world but more to do with making sure the big corporations were happy and protected.
And in our country a whole segment of the population has been, if not neglected, relegated to a minor concern in AIDS education process. Yesterday figures were released by the Canadian Aboriginal AIDS Network; figures that indicate that our First Nations, Métis and Inuit are more at risk than any other group in our country. According to statistics (2006 census) that though they represent only 3.8% of Canada's population, they account for 7.5% of Canadians living with HIV.
In 2008 aboriginal people accounted for 12.5% of all newly reported cases of HIV infections in Canada. This was 3.6% higher than the rate for other groups that year. Research is being carried out to find out why the rate is so high and there is real concern that an alarming number of aboriginal Canadians are engaging in risky lifestyles. And in most communities the stigma attached to AIDS is ever present and a barrier to working together with the Federal Government to education people. Families shunning members with AIDS and turning them out of the community is a not uncommon reaction. And the remoteness of many communities means that treatment - and even diagnosis - is not always readily available. There is a program in the works to produce educational material in aboriginal languages and groups like the Network are attempting to stem the rise in HIV and AIDS cases among aboriginal people by teaching young people — in a culturally appropriate way — how to protect themselves. As with all organizations and people concerned with the spread of HIV and AIDS their goal is ZERO.
The Canadian Aboriginal AIDS Network programme is an example of what must be done: to reach that goal of ZERO there must be ZERO fear, ZERO stigma, ZERO discrimination, ZERO risks before we can reach ZERO new cases and ZERO deaths.
The CBC has published an interactive map charting the global reach of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic.
02 December - 1763: Dedication of the Touro Synagogue, in Newport, Rhode Island, the first synagogue in what became the United States.
Labels:
AIDS,
AIDS Statistics,
Canadian Shame,
FAIL,
World AIDS Day
Saturday, December 01, 2012
Larry's Advent Calendar
As he has for the past six years my dear Larry has created a virtual Advent Calendar to count down the days until the Feast of the Nativity. I'll quote from Larry's entry for this first day of Advent by way of introduction:
A click on this very beautiful modern church door by Igor Mitoraj will lead you to the beginning of Larry's photo tour through some of the 250 modern churches often overlooked amongst the baroque splendour that dominates the city.
Another door by Mitoraj - one of the two for Santa Maria degli Angeli e dei Martiri - posted on the sidebar will give you access to each day's door and another modern church in our beloved Roma.
December 1 - 1885: First serving of the soft drink Dr Pepper at a drug store in Waco, Texas .
Previous years I have posted Roman windows, doors, gates, angels and fountains. This year I will continue my Advent Calendar tradition with Modern Churches in Rome. It is a type of building that is usually not seen in the Eternal City by most visitors (and residents). Every day of Advent you will be able to log in and see a different church of the 20th or 21st century that I have encountered here in Rome.
A click on this very beautiful modern church door by Igor Mitoraj will lead you to the beginning of Larry's photo tour through some of the 250 modern churches often overlooked amongst the baroque splendour that dominates the city.
Another door by Mitoraj - one of the two for Santa Maria degli Angeli e dei Martiri - posted on the sidebar will give you access to each day's door and another modern church in our beloved Roma.
December 1 - 1885: First serving of the soft drink Dr Pepper at a drug store in Waco, Texas .
Labels:
Advent,
Advent Calendar,
AmoRoma,
Larry's Advent Calender
World AIDS Day 2012 - I
From GRC University of Portland |
Once again this year I am posting his post as a reminder that so many of us have indeed "won the lottery".
December 1, 2005
I have lottery fantasies.
I dream about being able to buy fast cars and designer clothes until they come out of my ears. I want houses in London, New York, East Hampton and Rio. I want to be able to travel first class and work out at The Third Space and get reservations at Annabel's just because of who I am. I want to be able to take hot dates on tours of the National Gallery. When it's closed. Because I'm one of it's biggest benefactors.
Needless to say, twice a week, I am disappointed.
This morning, on the way to work on the tube, I was reading a Times article, written by Annie Lennox, about the millions and millions of people in Africa who are suffering with HIV and AIDS, and dying, and how the governments of the richer nations, such as the one I live in, have pledged support over an eight year period. And how they absolutely must stay committed to this goal.
One of the kids she spoke to on a recent trip to Africa was dying of AIDS. But before he got sick he lost his mother, father, brothers, sisters and pretty much everyone else he cared about to the same disease. He was totally alone in the world. With no hope. And certainly no dreams of fast cars or a nice comfortable house, anywhere. And that shit isn't even near the important stuff.
There are approximately 6,450,000,000 humans on Earth.
Most of them are not 33 year olds who have careers which afford them access to guest lists to the best clubs and bars the city has to offer. They don't have friends who will stick with them no matter what (and slip them Jil Sander dress shirts every now and then.)They don't have housemates who have Thai cuisine prepared and ready to eat when they arrive home. They don't have comfortable beds to sleep in at night.
6,450,000,000.
When I think about it I kinda did win the lottery.
About 33 years ago
EVERYTHING IS NOT REAL - Christopher
For Pierre, Lawrence, Bill, Jim, Don, Andrew, Brian and the many others that we've lost but still love and hold in our hearts. And for my friends who may have lost the lottery but won the battle.
01 December - 1987: The first World AIDS Day was observed.
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