This Man on This Day

April 20, 2009

“There must be a limit, even to the neutrality of Switzerland. Today is the day? This is the man to speak? This is the outlook for the future?” -Shimon Peres

http://haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1079628.html

http://haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1079592.html

I’m not sure I have any more readers, but am curious: do you think that the boycott was the best way to deal with the problem?

Am I the only blogger who lacks hits from scandalous search terms?  At last check, you all googled “rivkahreport,” “arts transition statement,” “boaz mauda,” “gefilte fish gala 2008,” “murakami jerusalem,” and “avenue q downloads.”  With the notable exception of the gefilte gala crew, that makes you pretty dignified.

That came out horribly.  You’ll have to view it yourself: http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/documents/violence-against-women-poll?view=Binary

Interesting Reading

March 11, 2009

Do I blog, or just create reading lists?  If it’s the latter, at least I do it well.

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/15/magazine/15Africa-t.html?scp=1&sq=saharan&st=cse  ”The Saharan Conundrum”

http://haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1070314.html The Syrian Chance

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1068918.html Three Imaginary Conversations

Flickring Iran

March 6, 2009

In between l&d stuff, I’ve been taking a few minutes to think about Iran.  I think it’s important to know countries on every level, to understand their art, architecture, poetry, political structures, geography and more.  Today had me thinking of modern images, and nothing political.

http://flickr.com/photos/-lucie-/2674844090/

http://flickr.com/photos/sefroyek/2061791855/ This one reminds me of a certain place in Athens, towards the bottom of a hill on a crowded street; another street intersects about the point of the structure.  On the off-chance that you have any idea what I’m talking about, let me know.

http://flickr.com/photos/sefroyek/2068456093/

http://flickr.com/photos/hamed/207210147/

http://flickr.com/photos/hamed/203093850/in/photostream/

http://flickr.com/photos/hamed/162298430/in/set-72157600635817403/

http://flickr.com/photos/mehradhm/2725631582/

http://flickr.com/photos/shagreen/2745730031/

http://flickr.com/photos/waxypoetic/702409954/

http://flickr.com/photos/rfeiz/471237088/

http://flickr.com/photos/horizon/624794772/in/photostream/

http://flickr.com/photos/horizon/576154949/in/photostream/

Thanks, amazing flickrers.

Context

March 6, 2009

One of the famous maxims of twentieth-century poetry is Ezra Pound’s directive to “Make it new.” He didn’t mean invent something out of thin air. That middle word, it, is the key, reminding us that something exists already and we need to see it again, for our own time, with our own eyes. For Pound, the “it” was a long history of civilizations, East and West, but also the tiny details of everyday life, a series of faces glimpsed in the Paris Metro, for example. So it can be very helpful to see a poem among other poems, to see what is shared and what has been made new.

-The Norton Anthology of Poetry

3/5/09

March 5, 2009

GOD HAS PITY ON KINDERGARTEN CHILDREN

God has pity on kindergarten children.
He has less pity on school children
And on grownups he has no pity at all,
he leaves them alone,
and sometimes they must crawl on all fours
in the burning sand
to reach the first–aid station
covered with blood.

 

But perhaps he will watch over true lovers
and have mercy on them and shelter them
like a tree over the old man
sleeping on a public bench.

Perhaps we too will give them
the last rare coins of charity
that Mother handed down to us
so that their happiness may protect us
now and on other days.

                        Yehuda Amichai

Eurovision 2009

March 5, 2009

I think Einaiych was the best of the four, although I don’t really love it.

Here’s the list to date (thanks to Wikipedia):

Semi-final 1

The countries in the list below are arranged alphabetically.

Country  ↓ Language  ↓ Artist  ↓ Song  ↓ English translation  ↓
 Andorra Catalan, English Susanne Georgi La teva decisió Your decision
 Armenia Armenian, English Inga and Anush Arshakyans Nor Par New dance
 Belarus English Petr Elfimov Eyes That Never Lie
 Belgium English Patrick Ouchène Copycat
 Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnian Regina Bistra voda Clear water
 Bulgaria English Krassimir Avramov Illusion
 Czech Republic English Gipsy.cz[41]  
 Finland English Waldo’s People Lose Control
 Georgia English Stefane & 3G We Don’t Wanna Put In
 Iceland English Jóhanna Guðrún Jónsdóttir Is It True?
 Israel Hebrew, Arabic, English Noa and Mira Awad Einaiych (There Must Be Another Way) Your eyes
Flag of the Republic of Macedonia FYR Macedonia Macedonian Next Time Nešto što ќe ostane Something that will remain
 Malta English Chiara What If We
 Montenegro English Andrea Demiro Just Get Out of My Life
 Portugal Portuguese Flor-de-Lis Todas as ruas do amor All the streets of love
 Romania English Elena Gheorghe The Balkan Girls
 Sweden        
 Switzerland English Lovebugs The Highest Heights
 Turkey English Hadise Düm Tek Tek Boom bang bang[a]

Semi-final 2

The countries in the list below are arranged alphabetically.

Country  ↓ Language  ↓ Artist  ↓ Song  ↓ English translation  ↓
 Albania English Kejsi Tola Më merr në ëndërr Take me into your dreams
 Azerbaijan English AySel and Arash[42] Always
 Croatia Croatian Igor Cukrov and Andrea Šušnjara Lijepa Tena Beautiful Tena
 Cyprus English Christina Metaxa Firefly
 Denmark English Niels Brinck Believe Again
 Estonia        
 Greece English Sakis Rouvas This Is Our Night
 Hungary English Zoli Ádok Dance With Me
 Ireland English Sinéad Mulvey and Black Daisy Et Cetera
 Latvia Russian[43] Intars Busulis Probka[43] Traffic jam
 Lithuania English Sasha Son Love[b]
 Moldova Romanian[44] Nelly Ciobanu Hora din Moldova Dance of Moldova
 Netherlands English De Toppers Shine
 Norway English Alexander Rybak Fairytale
 Poland English Lidia Kopania I Don’t Wanna Leave
 Serbia Serbian[45]      
 Slovakia Slovak[46]      
 Slovenia English Quartissimo and Martina Majerle Love Symphony
 Ukraine        

Final

The “Big Four” and the host country are qualified directly to the final of the contest, and will not participate in any of the semi-finals.[1] The five finalists listed below will be joined by ten entries from each of the two semi-finals; twenty-five entries in total will compete in the final.

Country  ↓ Language  ↓ Artist  ↓ Song  ↓ English translation  ↓
 France French Patricia Kaas Et s’il fallait le faire And if it had to be done
 Germany English Alex Swings Oscar Sings Miss Kiss Kiss Bang
 Russia        
 Spain Spanish, English Soraya Arnelas La noche es para mí The night is for me
 United Kingdom English Jade Ewen My Time

Thoughts?

And, to remind you of last year and get you in the mood, Russia’s Dima Bilan, and Israel’s Boaz Mauda.

Reverse Order

March 4, 2009

The Walking Stick Insect
Kay Ryan

Eventually the
most accident-prone
or war-weary
walking sticks
are entirely
reduced to antennae
with which they
pick their way
sensitively,
appalled by
everything’s
intensity.

Heavy Reading

March 4, 2009

1.  “It begins with a thought.”  When genocide against women happens in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Amy Elman, professor of political science at Kalamazoo College, does battle to bring Karadzic to justice. Published in Encore magazine, March 2001.  http://www.writesight.com/writers/zinta/article.php?article=224

2.  An arrest regarding the 2001 attacks in Rock Creek Park. http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/03/04/chandra.levy.suspect.guandique/index.html

3.  As the International Criminal Court issues a landmark warrant for the arrest of Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir over war crimes in Darfur, CNN’s Nic Robertson interviews a man who was told to rape and kill children.  http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/africa/03/04/darfur.rape/index.html