Galleries round-up: Wildlife artists bring nature to life…and the magic of Morris – Yahoo News UK

Marchmont House Creative Spaces Courtyard, 05/11/2020:.Photography for Marchmohnt Ventures from: Colin Hattersley Photography - wwww.colinhattersley.com - cphattersley@gmail.com - 07974 957 388...

Marchmont House Open Studio Weekend

14-15 May. Free. Marchmont Studios, Marchmont Estate, Greenlaw, Duns, TD10 6YL.

The Open Studio weekend at Marchmont House, right, gives visitors the chance to meet artists and makers whilst exploring the expansive sculpture collection at one of Scotlands great stately homes. There will also be a 10-stall Makers Market, as well as print and clay workshops. Some of the artists include stonecutters and sculptors Michelle de Bruin and Jo Crossland, as well as rush-seat chairmakers Sam and Rich, among others.

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk

Wildlife Art Exhibition

7 May - 5 June. Free. Scottish Ornithologists Club, Waterson House, Aberlady, EH32 0PY.

This exhibition presents work from experienced wildlife artists Kittie Jones and Wynona Legg, below. Their works come primarily from their direct observation of animals in the wild, aiming to capture their movements and the constant change of nature. Some of the work was created during various lockdowns where both artists had to adapt to new ways of working, which makes for some interesting viewing.

https://www.the-soc.org.uk

Hosting Stillness

11-14 May. Free. Centre for Contemporary Arts, 350 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow, G2 3JD.

This work explores the magical forms of the minor gesture in response to time, site, audience and its relationship to themes within care, ableism and posthumanism. It examines vulnerability as well as celebrating some limitations within the body. This exhibition acts as evidence of the development of the project as a whole, including a video discussion between artist and curator.

https://www.cca-glasgow.com

ReCollection

7 May. Free. 40 Fox Street, Glasgow, G1 4EQ.

Emerging artist Alison McCoys first exhibition, titled ReCollection, is on display in Glasgow. Her body of work showcases abstract and figurative paintings relating to memory more specifically her memories of growing up in the 1970s. Using memories of scenes from her childhood holidays she produces large, abstract paintings.

Story continues

http://www.alisonmccoyart.co.uk/

Legacy of an Invisible Bullet

7 May. Free. Centre for Contemporary Arts, 350 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow, G2 3JD.

For the past 10 years, BAFTA nominated filmmaker Doug Aubrey has been making short films and exploring a personal archive dating to the 1970s. This exhibition explores Aubreys inward experiences and reflects on the film-making process.

https://www.cca-glasgow.com

Searching for Life: Photography from Syria

7-30 May. Entry Free. The Glasgow Gallery of Photography, 57 Glassford Street, Glasgow, G1 1UB.

The Glasgow Gallery of Photography returns this month, giving visitors a taste of some great photography at their brand new gallery on Glassford Street. This month marks the start of a month long solo exhibition from Syrian photographer Khaled Akacha.

https://www.glasgowgalleryofphotography.com/

Street Photography Exhibition

7-30 May. Entry Free. The Glasgow Gallery of Photography, 57 Glassford Street, Glasgow, G1 1UB.

Another exhibition marking the opening of the Glasgow Gallery of Photographys new studio is this Street Photography exhibition. Taking place in the lower gallery, this exhibition showcases some of the contributors greatest street photography shots.

https://www.glasgowgalleryofphotography.com/

Studio Bizio

Monday - Saturday. Entry Free. 20A Raeburn Place, Stockbridge, Edinburgh, EH4 1HN.

Studio Bizio is a photography gallery which specialises in 20th century and contemporary photography, with the occasional venture into other areas of the specialism. This new gallery supports fine art photography artists and collectors by providing collectors with access to some of the best fine art photography from the last century. Theres plenty of interesting work to explore at this gallery which is currently showcasing artist Ateliere O Haapala.

https://www.studiobizio.com/

The Living Legacy of William Morris

7 May - 16 July. Free. Dovecot Studios, 10 Infirmary Street, Edinburgh, EH1 1LT.

Running alongside the exhibition The Art of Wallpaper, explore the artist through the gallerys balcony display. Discover more about Morris revitalisation of the art of tapestry, as well as the studio he founded at Merton Abbey in London. Follow his journey to Scotland and the legacy for Scottish tapestry that he created.

https://dovecotstudios.com

A Passion for Art

7-28 May. Free. Macrobert Arts Centre, University of Stirling, FK9 4LA.

Matilda Hall has been a collector of Scottish art for over half a century. She helped to collect for Stirling University and was later an important part of the founding of charity Art in Healthcare. This exhibition showcases some of the works from collections influenced by her, including pieces from Joan Eardley and Janka Malkowska.

https://macrobertartscentre.org

CHARLOTTE COHEN

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Galleries round-up: Wildlife artists bring nature to life...and the magic of Morris - Yahoo News UK

Abortion: The Culmination of Secular Thought – Answers In Genesis

IntroductionRescue those who are being taken away to death; hold back those who are stumbling to the slaughter. If you say, Behold, we did not know this, does not he who weighs the heart perceive it? Does not he who keeps watch over your soul know it, and will he not repay man according to his work? (Proverbs 24:1112)

In Genesis 2, we see Gods created institution of lifelong, monogamous marriage and his command for Adam and Eve (and, by extension, all humanity descended from them) to be fruitful and multiply. Family is the first institution established by God, long before the governments attempt to redefine it.

When Christianity confronted the Roman world, one striking difference between those who followed Christ and those who followed the false gods of the Romans was the value that Christians attributed to babies, children, women, and slavesall classes of people who were seen as the chattel of the free Roman man. Contrary to the culture, Christians called men to love their wives and to see their slaves as fellow human beings and even brothers in Christ (e.g., Philemon 1). Christians not only rejected abortion and exposure for their own children but rescued children that others had exposed.

This Christian way (worldview) of seeing other humans as fellow image-bearers of God took time to seep into the pagan culture. Eventually, these cultures, after being sufficiently influenced by the Christian worldview, began to truly value children and women and became the first nations to abolish slaverythe first nations to even see slavery as a wicked thing. These nations also outlawed abortion and infanticide, not only because abortion was about as likely to maim or kill the woman as to kill her unborn child but also because the child was seen as a valuable image-bearer of God, even in the womb!

It should not be surprising that people who hate God also hate the family model that he instituted. As secular worldviews begin to dominate a culture, the family unit is always the first to be attacked, especially the vulnerable members who benefit the most from Christian influence. Consequently, every key element of the family gets attacked. The permanence of marriage is attacked through no-fault divorce. The definition of marriage itself is attacked through same-sex or open marriage. The fruitful design of marriage is attacked through premarital relations, unwed parenting, and ultimately, through abortion on demand, even in the context of marriage.

Secular activists (rebels against God) have been in constant war against Gods designed family unit. Today, were seeing commercials, cartoons, and even childrens books promote the message that families can have two mommies, two daddies, or any number of other family structures. For instance, popular commentator Dave Rubin and his homosexual partner recently announced that they had used donor eggs and two surrogates to conceive two babies and were roundly congratulated by conservative media figureheads.1 This horrible scenario potentially turns babies into commodities who can be created on demand by anyone with enough money to rent a womb, particularly when these distortions are presented as suitable, if not better, alternatives to the biblical family unit (with a mom and a dad who stay married for life).

In our current culture of death, a daily average of nearly 118,000 unborn children are systematically murdered through abortion worldwide.2 Abortion is not only promoted but actually encouraged today (Romans 1:2832) by those who hate the biblical family unit. And this hatred is fueling a deadly plague thats killing millions of people around the world every year. This is the lethal result of a culture that is saturated in rebellion against Gods authority and his Word, which plainly states that those who reject God ultimately love death (Proverbs 8:36), and were seeing evidence of this truth today.

Those who oppose the cultural influence of Christianity need something to put in its place. Whether one examines Karl Marxs philosophy or that of the Enlightenment-era skeptics, there has been a consistent, conscious attempt to elevate mans thoughts above God. That is, man tries to define right and wrong apart from Gods revealed Word. And the deadly result of this rebellion against Gods Word was recently seen in the twentieth century, when hundreds of millions of people were slaughtered, all in the pursuit of secular utopias, such as in Soviet Russia, Maoist China, and other communist nations. This also includes the millions upon millions of unborn babies across the world who have been sacrificed on the altar of human autonomy.

People in the (past and present) culture have accepted secular definitions as a good thing to help progress humanity. For instance, Karl Marx promoted a Darwinian idea that the family unit is merely a primitive stage that needs to be abolished and ultimately replaced. More specifically, traditional socialists have advocated for the

Today, most feminists are pro-abortion and see this as essential to womens equality. Biologically speaking, free love is more costly to women than men (because men dont get pregnant). And this results in them shouting for more access to contraception and abortion, which they believe are required to enable women to engage in the same promiscuity as men without the consequences of a baby.

Thus, abortion is frequently touted in our culture today by feminists and pro-death Marxist advocates as a reproductive right for women thats simply part of their family planning or healthcare. But at its core, this ideology is really just an idol that is built on autonomy (emphasis on bodily autonomy) that ultimately reduces babies in the womb to nothing more than simply a clump of matter (with perhaps less worth than cats, dogs, or even rocks). Some pro-abortion advocates unashamedly acknowledge that the unborn child is a human life from fertilization yet, nonetheless, still believe the child has less value than the mothers ability to choose abortion. As one pro-abortion advocate stated, I would put the life of a mother over the life of a fetus every single timeeven if I still need to acknowledge my conviction that the fetus is indeed a life. A life worth sacrificing.4

Overall, this is the tragic consequence of the evolutionary worldview, which is really built on the religion of secular humanism. But this religion is actually nothing new and has existed since the fall of humanity. Behind these idols of presumptive happiness and comfort is our great adversarySatan, the one who deceived Adam and Eve (Genesis 3) into the short-sighted thinking that they could be a law unto themselves, thus elevating their own autonomous thought/reason in rebellion against Gods ultimate authority.

Satan has been using this same tactic for thousands of years on humanity (and especially parents) in retaliation against that first Messianic promise (Genesis 3:15). So in an attempt to destroy the seed of the woman, his wicked desire has always been the destruction of the family unit. That is, by continuous enmity, his purpose is always to steal, kill, and destroy humanity (John 10:10). This means Satan doesnt care whether parents sacrifice their child to Molech (as the Israelites did in the Old Testament eraLeviticus 18:21) or hand their child over to an assassin to be murdered at places like Planned Parenthood (the modern-day version of Molech); he is pleased anytime he deceives someone into murdering their offspring, who bears the image of God.

Despite Satans head being victoriously crushed by Jesus Christ and ultimately destroying Satans work via the cross (1 John 3:8), our enemy remains determined in his hatred of the church. And since he knows the victory is certain and imminent, hes looking to take casualties with him, prowling around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour (1 Peter 5:8). So, in his feeble attempt to prevent Gods kingdom from expanding (Matthew 6:10), Satan still deceives many to do his bidding and destroy our unborn neighbors, all under the pretense of choice.

As the ruler of this world (John 12:31; Ephesians 2:2), Satan has blinded and ensnared many (2 Corinthians 4:4; 2 Timothy 2:26) to ultimately doubt the truth and authority of Gods Word, which plainly states that every child is a gift and blessing from God (Psalm 127:35), who is fearfully and wonderfully made from the moment of fertilization (Psalm 139:1316). And most importantly, the truth is that every child is made in the image of God (Genesis 1:27), thus deserving of care and protection.

So biblically speaking, abortion is the literal destruction of image-bearers of God. And that is why its Satans crown jewel and his deadliest weapon against the church and the family unit, which has existed in different forms throughout history.

But how should the church respond to this evil afflicting our society today? The way the church has always responded. Just as the church both condemned abortion potions and the exposing of children, we need to condemn the murder of unborn children in the clearest, strongest terms possible. Just as Christians rescued children who were exposed by their Roman parents, we need to create a culture of adoption to rescue otherwise unwanted children. And just like Christians proclaimed the gospel to a world that hated and devalued entire classes of humanity, we should be salt and light in our culture by proclaiming Gods forgiveness extended to all who believe, including those who have committed the heinous sin of murder of the unborn.

In short, this darkness needs to be exposed by the light (Ephesians 5:11). As Charles Spurgeon (who, by the way, actually lived at the same time as Karl Marx) once famously put it, A church that does not exist to reclaim heathenism, to fight evil, to destroy error, to put down falsehood, a church that does not exist to take the side of the poor, to denounce injustice and to hold up righteousness, is a church that has no right to be.5 Or, as my old pastor once put it during a sermon, the culture around us is the report card of the church; how are we doing?6

Simply put, our society today truly depends on the condition and well-being of the churchthe bride of Christ (2 Corinthians 11:2; Ephesians 5:2527). Clearly from Gods Word, we see that the church foundationally rests on the family unit (e.g., Genesis 2:24; Matthew 19:5; Ephesians 5:3132). Biblically speaking, the family unit is the establishment of Gods kingdom in the home, where God originally commanded man to multiply and fill the earth (Genesis 1:28). And this is only accomplished by faithfully producing godly offspring through the biblical standard of the family (Malachi 2:15).

Throughout our recent history, the church has unashamedly brought this biblical standard of the family as redemptive liberation to pagan societies around the world. And this was considered radical to these civilizations that largely allowed men to leave their wives and children for any (arbitrary) reason. At the same time, as part of the biblical worldview, women were also elevated as equal in value to men (this was, and sometimes still is, unheard of in these cultures), which ironically is the goal of the modern feminist movement today (that logically and utterly fails due to their lack of commitment to biblical authority).

But really, starting with the sexual revolution (that primarily took root in the West in the 1960s), the church began letting the world influence it away from the biblical standard of the family by allowing godly institutions like marriage to be controlled and defined by popular opinion rather than by God. This also inevitably resulted in sexual immorality (e.g., pornography) rampantly becoming more normalized, where this lust of the flesh became not only tolerated but also accepted (and even promoted as having certain benefits7). As a result, sexually immoral behaviors like prostitution and places like strip clubs became more permissible (e.g., if a woman was burdened and desperate for money). In the end, children in the womb became the victim of this new revolution, being viewed as a parasite that women should have the right to murder at any time and for any reason.

We live in a culture today that sees the happiness and comfort of a mother as more important than the life of an innocent (defenseless/voiceless) child. So now is the time for the church to boldly start speaking truth once again into this culture of death to rescue those stumbling to the slaughter. And the church will not be able to make up any excuses like we didnt know. For God knows every heart and will judge every action accordingly (Proverbs 24:1112).

But what is the proper (biblical) role of pastors in the church to combat this evil? Sadly, in many churches today, pastors fear troubling their congregation by preaching on cultural issues like abortion. These pastors opt to take the easy route of just staying away from any real controversial matters and instead focus on topics that promote self-help (or self-love) messages. As a result, critical issues like the murder of our unborn neighbors are avoided in the pulpit.

Although pastors may still decide to do their annual pro-life sermon on the third Sunday in January (commonly called Sanctity of Human Life Sunday), many will be cautious for fear of offending those in the congregation who have participated in abortion (and this includes men!). The problem is, rather than calling the sin of abortion what it is biblically (murder and child sacrifice), they simply skirt around the issue by describing abortion using the same language as the secular culture (e.g., using common euphemisms such as terminating a pregnancy).

The Bible repeatedly warns not to conform to this rebellious world nor use its vernacular (e.g., Romans 12:12; James 4:4; 1 John 2:1517). Instead, church leaders are called to disciple their congregation to be the salt and light in this world (Matthew 5:1316). As Charles Spurgeon once said, You are the salt of the world, not the sugar candy; something the world will spit out, not swallow.8

To equip the church to fight this war, pastors need to edify the saints by not watering down or truncating their messages. They need to speak biblically on repentance and sin (including abortion) from the pulpit. That is, they need to get back to preaching all of Gods Word (2 Timothy 4:2), speaking the truth in love (Ephesians 4:15), to ultimately please God rather than sinful man (Galatians 1:10).

Theres no doubt that this culture of death via abortion is being driven not only by deadly Marxist ideology, but really by our greatest enemydeath (1 Corinthians 15:26). Thats why we (especially as Christians) should not compromise at all with this evil and allow it to easily survive while destroying millions of innocent lives every year. Rather, it must be utterly defeated and placed completely under the feet of our Lord (Psalm 110:12). But this can only happen by the church speaking the gospel message of repentance and faith in Jesus Christ (Romans 1:16) to transform hearts and minds.

To drive this point further, Ive personally spent numerous hours ministering and offering help to mothers and fathers outside of abortion clinics (i.e., mills), who were waiting to pay an assassin to rip apart their child. And due to their God-given conscience (Romans 2:15), they already knew what they were doing was wrong (i.e., they clearly knew their baby was about to be slaughtered). All this to say, its not a matter of merely providing the right scientific evidence to parents (which, in my experience, rarely ever helps). Rather, its about the proclamation of the gospel, enabling the Holy Spirit to make them into a new creation (2 Corinthians 5:17), thus giving them the ability to turn away from that place of death and to let their baby live.

And this proclamation should remind everyone who hears that Gods laws, which undergird the gospel, are not suggestions, but actual commands from our holy God. Sinners are commanded to completely turn from sin, which includes abortion (child sacrifice), trusting alone in Jesus as their only hope for salvation from the wrath of God to come (Romans 5:9), and truly confessing he is Lord to the glory of God the Father (Philippians 2:1011). Sharing this Good News will genuinely save lives and is really the most loving thing we can do for others (Romans 10:1417).

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Abortion: The Culmination of Secular Thought - Answers In Genesis

From Tagore, a Triptych of Absorption, Acquiescence and Defiance – The Wire

Today the 25th day of Baishakh according to the Bengali calendar is Rabindranath Tagores birth anniversary.

The early 1900s was a period probably the only period in his long lifetime when Rabindranath Tagore came close to championing what we may describe as cultural nationalism. This was when Tagore often appeared willing not only to conform to, but also eulogise, conservative social values, though these values really went against the grain of the liberal humanism in which his art had been steeped from the beginning.

Indeed, in this period he often spoke in the traditionalist tone so beloved of social conservatives. In some letters he wrote around this time to teachers of his Santiniketan school appropriately called the brahmacharya ashram, literally, hermitage of pure conduct Rabindranath wanted the students to be put through a strict regimen of studies, prayers, physical exercises and plain vegetarian food so that they learnt to appreciate and imbibe ancient Indian value-systems as they grew to adulthood. He even wrote some semi-polemical essays defending traditional social mores, once, incredibly, going even to the extent of hailing the courage of the self-immolating Sati.

At another place, he suggested that the caste system of Hindu society was neither ill-conceived nor morally reprehensible, because it was the glue that held society together. Professor Sumit Sarkar has shown how this unwonted shift towards cultural conservatism coincided with the ascendancy of Hindu revivalism in evidence in much of Bengals Swadeshi movement (1903-08). Some of the poets creative work of those years inevitably mirrored this tonal shift, too. Tagores ambivalence to gender issues at this stage is a case in point: witness his 1902 short story Malyadan (Exchanging Garlands), a maudlin narrative with the unsubtle message that the best thing that can happen to a woman is a loving husband.

Gora by Rabindranath Tagore.

But of course Rabindranath was destined to break the shackles of this intellectual retrogression soon enough, or he would not have been one of the 20th centurys great minds. His novel Gora (1910), where he delved deep into questions of religious identity, religious and social rituals, gender and nationhood, helped him recover his sense of perspective. After that, his work evolved steadily and surely over the last three decades of his life, and he would never again allow his vision to be clouded by unreason, dogma or given wisdom.

Indeed, when one now looks back on his post-1910 views on gender equality, nationalism, democracy and economic and social justice, one realises that his catholicity had few parallels in the contemporary world, except perhaps among the most progressive segments of socialist internationalists in Europe and elsewhere.

Here we take a look at a triad of remarkable short stories Rabindranath wrote between April and July, 1914. These are stories that foreground issues of gender and patriarchy, shining a light on the many different ways gender inequity not only destroys its victims but also maims and cripples the communities that practise such inequity. The power and sweep of their argument, the passion and angst seeping through their storylines, together with the fact that they look at gender and patriarchy from multiple angles, set these stories apart from everything else written in Bengali on these questions.

Published in April, 1914, Haldargoshthi (Haldar Family) revolves around Bonoari, the scion of a prosperous landowning family, who proves to be somewhat of an outsider to his familys cultural milieu. He is head-strong but kind-hearted, quarrels often and violently with his fathers hard-nosed Diwan who thinks nothing of squeezing the last penny out of a poor fisherman who has hit a particularly rough patch, and generally takes up the cudgels on behalf of whoever finds themselves up against the wall. He adores his young wife, soaking her in an excess of romantic love she doesnt know what to do with, and feels exasperated when she fails to stand by or even sympathise with him when he happens to scrap with his domineering father over some injustice.

Bonoaris father always thought of him as stupid and obstreperous, and, after an explosive falling-out with him when Bonoari manages to send the Diwan to jail for wrong-doing, disinherits him for good, leaving his estate to his other son when he dies. In the end, Bonoari is obliged to leave home and embrace an uncertain future, but his wife not only clings to her father-in-laws family but is aghast that her husband has chosen to rock the boat for no rhyme or reason. To her, Bonoari is a renegade unworthy of her sympathy, let alone her love. (At any rate, she recognises faithfulness to her husband as a virtue, while love, even conjugal love, remains an unknown quantity.)

The system of patriarchy has subsumed her so completely that her loyalty to that system blocks everything out, even conjugal loyalty; and that her husband loves her to distraction only annoys her. Though Haldargoshthi is nominally about Bonoari, it is Kiranlekha, the wife, who sits at the centre of Tagores searching critique. She is a victim of the system not any less so because she chooses to be its advocator.

Also read: The Relevance of Rabindranath Tagores Politics on His 158th Birth Anniversary

Haimanti made its appearance in May of the same year. The eponymous protagonist, a 17-year-old, educated girl raised in a liberal family living outside Bengal, is married into an enlightened fin de sicle Kolkata joint family which gladly welcomes her to start with, mainly because she brought in a handsome dowry. Her young, well-educated, husband admires her intelligence, her simplicity, her love of books and, above all, her very transparent honesty, and soon genuine love blossoms between them. But it is her uncompromising honesty that begins to get Haimanti into trouble with her parents-in-law over this, that and the other.

Seventeen years being considered well past the marriageable age in respectable Hindu circles then, Haimanti is expected to understate her age to friends and family. Likewise she is nudged to tell impressive tales about her fathers station in life, so that the stock of her in-laws can also rise in tandem. Shocked, Haimanti refuses to oblige on all such requests, often creating consternation over what is widely seen as her stupidity and intransigence.

Soon, her father is no longer welcome in her new home, she herself is subjected to cruel and mean barbs all the while, and her welfare is increasingly neglected. Haimanti pines for her past, wastes away in body and spirit, and soon falls irretrievably ill. Her husband, bound as he is by unyielding ties of a patriarchal family, is unable to stand by her side and merely looks on, resigned, as she is pushed inexorably to her death. Even a companionate marriage between two educated and loving adults thus withers in the wilderness of patriarchy and gender discrimination. The victims acquiesce, for they are powerless to do otherwise.

The 1972 Bangla film Strir Patra by Purnendu Patrea

Dissent eludes Haimanti and her husband, but it is dissent, indeed defiance, which defines Mrinal, the plucky heroine of Strir Patra (A wifes Letter July, 1914). The story unfolds in the shape of Mrinals parting letter to her husband after she has left his home for good. Married into an affluent city-dwelling family at the age of 12 and outwardly conforming to the requirements of a traditional Hindu household at most times, Mrinal has however always lived an inner life of her own also a life untouched by the self-righteous rigidities, parochialism and petty-mindedness of her in-laws hidebound home.

Away from prying eyes, she reads and writes poetry, and she has none of the self-effacing diffidence that characterises her sister-in-law, the wife of her husbands elder brother, who has been conditioned to play second fiddle to the men of the house in everything. Quietly, but firmly, Mrinal stands her ground on matters on which her husbands family scarcely expects her to have an opinion. Into this uneasy equilibrium walks Bindu, Mrinals sister-in-laws unlovely and unwed younger sister, who has been hounded out of her parental home by her cousins after her mothers death. She has nowhere else to go to, but that doesnt seem to make her any less of a burden to everyone in her elder sisters prosperous home. Except to Mrinal, who takes Bindu under her wing and gives the luckless girl unbounded love and affection to everyone elses chagrin. Soon, the family begins to look for a way to get rid of her unwelcome presence.

Also read: How Swadeshi Brands Benefitted From Rabindranath Tagores Iconic Stature

Sure enough, it is decided to marry Bindu off, and an apparently suitable match is soon found. Mrinal is deeply sceptical, but there is precious little she can do: after all, can she stand between Bindu and her chance, however slim, of a decent life? A tearful Bindu is bundled off to her in-laws. It soon turns out that her husband is insane: his periods of relative lucidity are followed by spells of demented fury. Bindu flees from him in terror only to be told that her sisters family cannot offer her shelter any longer, for the only possible place for a married woman to be in is her husbands home.

Mrinal remonstrates with everybody repeatedly, but they are openly dismissive: isnt a husbands right over her wifes body and mind absolute? And how could they possibly face the wrath of the police if a charge was to be brought against them for kidnapping Bindu from her in-laws home? A distraught Bindu knows that all doors are barred to her now. Though Mrinal tries to shield her from impending doom as best she can, Bindu runs away again only to kill herself. At last, she is delivered from her fate of having been born a woman.

A still from the movie Strir Patra by Purnendu Patrea.

It is at this point that Mrinal, married for 15, apparently, happy years, decides to turn her back on her husband, his home, his family, and the way of life they represent. She goes away for good to live in Puri, by the sea, and her last letter to her husband is really her will and testament. She reminds him what a terrible burden it is to be a woman, suffering, day in and day out, the monumental sanctimoniousness of a community that condemns its women to bondage and indignity even as it sings paeans to its numerous goddesses.

She points to the exuberant shamelessness of a society that cites as the apotheosis of womanly virtue the wife who carries in her arms her husband, a leper, to the door of the whorehouse that he may satiate his libido. But she tells him something else as well. That it is yet possible for a woman to be free, to cross the forbidding threshold of phony domestic bliss and take charge of her own destiny. That her soul had been deadened by years of mindless devotion to empty habit, but by her death Bindu had opened her eyes to other possibilities:

And please dont imagine me contemplating death No, I hate to play such stale jokes on you all. Remember Mirabai, a woman like me, shackled by chains quite as heavy as mine, who didnt need to die that she might live?

Like her, I will also live. Indeed, my life begins now.

Strir Patra is a triumph of Tagores narrative art. It is intensely lyrical in tone, but that tonality only helps the story to flow along without let-up; it does not tie it down for a moment:

No, your narrow lane (housing her in-laws home) scares me no more. For today the blue ocean opens out endlessly in front of my eyes, and an abundance of the clouds of July gathers over my head

It is easy to see why Strir Patras scalding indictment of patriarchy got the dyed-in-the-wool social conservatives goat when the avant garde Bengali literary magazine Sabujpatra (The Green Journal) published it first. Here was a story that struck at the very roots of orthodox Hindu society, giving it no quarter, deriding its idiocy, its crazed misogyny and its moral hollowness like it had never been done before. Indeed, the story erupted on Bengals literary firmament with the blinding, if transient, light of a meteorite. For a while, its impact seemed to have been as great as that of the news that a deadly World War had just broken out to engulf all of Europe.

One imagines Rabindranath had conceived of these three stories as a trilogy of sorts, with each part giving the reader a damning new perspective on the overarching problem of patriarchy, opening their eyes to how patriarchy dehumanises both its victims and its upholders. The stories were well ahead of their time, and they continue to unsettle and move us today. For, more than one hundred years after Rabindranath wrote them, these stories hold a mirror to us Indians. And the image we see of ourselves in it is not edifying.

Anjan Basu writes about culture and the politics of culture. He can be reached at basuanjan52@gmail.com

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From Tagore, a Triptych of Absorption, Acquiescence and Defiance - The Wire

23 Best Movies New to Streaming in May: ‘Sonic 2,’ ‘The Matrix Resurrections’ and More – Variety

Once youre done streaming The Batman on HBO Max for the umpteenth time, its time to direct your attention to all of the new offerings on streaming platforms this month. Perhaps the biggest debut is Sonic the Hedgehog 2 on Paramount+, which should keep children and families glued to the television well into the summer. The new 45-day theatrical window means a smaller gap between a films theatrical release and streaming debut, and so the Sonic sequel hits Paramount+ as its still proving to be a box office force. The film recently picked up $11 million in its fourth weekend of release to place No. 2 at the box office.

Elsewhere on streaming in May is the return of The Matrix Resurrections to HBO Max. The fourth installment in the franchise was Warner Bros. final movie in 2021 to get the hybrid-release model, in which films opened in theaters on the same day they became available to stream on HBO Max for 31 days. Now Resurrections is returning to the streamer. Jackass fans will also get to check out the extended edition of Jackass Forever when Jackass 4.5 debuts on Netflix, which is only slightly confusing considering Jackass Forever is streaming on Paramount+.

Check out a roundup below of the best films new to streaming this May.

See the article here:

23 Best Movies New to Streaming in May: 'Sonic 2,' 'The Matrix Resurrections' and More - Variety

Walter Crane Was a Socialist Visionary Who Illustrated the Triumph of Labor – Jacobin magazine

Walter Crane woke up on a spring morning in 1884. He never slept again. As an artist and illustrator, Crane had drawn inspiration from pre-Raphaelite visions of universal brotherhood; as a political activist, he idolized John Stuart Mill and supported the radical, democratic left of the British Liberal Party. But by 1884, thirty-nine years since his birth to a family of Torquay decorators, the artist of enchantment had been thoroughly disillusioned.

The worst thing in the world had happened to Crane: he got what he wanted. Raising illustration to a fine art in the eyes of his peers, Crane saw his groundbreaking book designs warped in crude, commercial reproductions. Successive reform bills enfranchised ever wider circles of the population but in industrial London, he only saw rising poverty and squalor.

As a decade of economic and political crisis began, Cranes sunny Victorian optimism was rapidly clouding over. Looking back years later, he described the dread that crept over him as he realized the real nature of British society:

Under the forms and semblance of political freedom, real economic slavery . . . a grinding commercial system of inhuman competition, threatening to be a worse tyranny that any the world has ever seen, reducing all things to money value, vulgarising life, and ruthlessly destroying natural beauty.

Romantic art had promised to reunite the worlds of artifice and nature; democratic reform to make peace between capital and labor. Both had failed. Or so it seemed to Crane, his vision of the future darkening by the day. But then, in the writings of his friend William Morris, he found a light.

The visionary artist Morris, the founder of modern design, crossed the river of fire to the socialist movement late in life. He brought with him his own heterodox interpretation of communist ideals; a marriage, E.P. Thompson called it between romanticism and Marxism. The promise of the romantic movement could only be realized, Morris argued, through the revolutionary transformation of society. In Art and Socialism, the lecture, that, in the spring of 1884, made Crane a socialist, Morris made his case clear:

One day we shall win back Art, that is to say the pleasure of life; win back Art again to our daily labour . . . now the cause of Art has something else to appeal to: no less than the hope of the people for the happy life which has not yet been granted to them. There is our hope: the cause of Art is the cause of the people.

Morris stood, as Raymond Williams noted, at a crossroads in British intellectual life; proposing a moral and aesthetic transvaluation that would sweep away the dark satanic mills of industrial Britain. And an unlikely cultural revolutionary found an unlikely acolyte in Britains foremost childrens book illustrator. More than any other artist, Walter Crane inherited Morriss vision and fought for his ideals, tangling alike with old reaction and commerant renegades in the Arts and Crafts movement.

Not that Crane was a political neophyte. His commitment to radical, democratic values dated from his apprenticeship amongst old Chartists in the workshops of Hammersmith, veterans of the fight for the vote in Britain. His understanding of art as imbricated with social and moral questions was one borrowed from his mentor John Ruskin. And the words of the radical romantics John Keats, William Blake, Percy Bysshe Shelley were woven through his work and life. Like Morris, Cranes romantic belief in the power of human self-expression, the beauty of the natural world, and the centrality of friendship shaped his whole life: aesthetic judgment implying even demanding political commitments to match.

His private life was no exception, taking hospitality for a way of life. Crane and his wife Marys love of fancy dress and delight in friendship made their parties major events on Londons artistic social calendar.For their son Lionels twenty-first birthday, they invited seven hundred people into their home. Crane dressed up as a crane in beaked hat and triple-toed shoe and Mary as an enormous sunflower. George Bernard Shaw once noted with admiration and surprise just how sociable Crane was. Given how personally unpleasant socialists and artists tended to be as separate phenomena, Shaw reasoned, a socialist artist ought to be entirely unbearable. In and out of season, Walters residence in Kensington teemed with life and noise, not least given their vast menagerie of household pets: cats, dogs, rabbits, guinea pigs, an owl, a jerboa, a golden pheasant, mongooses, marmosets, one shoulder-perching squirrel and an alligator.

Cranes mind, the artist William Rothenstein recalled, like his house, was too full to be kept dusted and tidy; but he had unusually broad sympathies, and while he followed in the footsteps of Morris and [Edward] Burne-Jones, he was free from prejudice his spirit kept open house. The pre-Raphaelite ideal of hospitality found political form in Crane and Morriss commitment to a socialist society; it found practical expression in the ordering of their lives. Fellowship is life, Morris wrote, lack of fellowship is death. Crane, who inscribed that slogan on banners and motifs almost beyond counting, had better claim than most to be the older mans direct successor in politics as well as art.

These two post-pre-Raphaelites embraced a Marxism with romantic characteristics, seeing the society of the future as latent in both ideals of the past and the struggles of the present. The past is not dead, Morris declared, but is living in us, and will be alive in the future which we are now helping to make. Such sentiments led commentators to dismiss Crane and his mentor as medievalist: a label neither unjustified nor entirely accurate. Crane drew on classical and international motifs especially Japanese art far more than the Middle Ages, helping define the transnational style later known as art nouveau. His aesthetic influences revealed a philosophical underpinning spiritual but secular, romanticist but internationalist that Cranes contemporary admirers often overlook.

The universalist humanism to which Crane and many of his cothinkers subscribed was encapsulated by one of his great influences, the critic Walter Pater. The service of philosophy, of speculative culture, towards the human spirit, Pater said in his essays on Renaissance art, is to rouse, to startle it to a life of constant and eager observation. Later art movements most notoriously Oscar Wilde and the aestheticists took Paters vision as a manifesto.

Crane inherited Paters penchant for classicism and the Renaissance, but he was never a wholehearted Epicurean, even before he took up the socialist banner. Tempered by his love for Blake and Shelleys poetry, Crane retained a political edge lacking in many aesthetes. Beauty and use could be reunited; artwork and craftwork made one; the imagination could do more than just dream of a better world. It could create one.

Looking to the past, Crane and Morris sought proof, not solace. Things could be otherwise not because time was empty, but because it wasnt. What was good and valuable in life could die without being destroyed; enduring the ages and redeeming the time in song and story, painting and prose; burning always, as Pater put it, with a hard, gem-like flame.

But although arts flame burned without the permission of gods or kings, in Cranes eyes it didnt burn aimlessly or alone. Art which can lift our souls with large thoughts, or enchant them with a sense of mystery and romance, Crane wrote, can also be a familiar friend at our firesides, and touch each common thing of every day use with beauty, weaving its golden threads into the joys and sorrows of common life, and making happy both young and old.

Well-made and beautiful art could make us happier, more refined, softening and humanising us. Art educated the eye and so the person: in one of Cranes last lectures, he expressed sorrow over the novel use of posters for commercial ends, rather than for the enlivening of human experience. The contemporary commonplace that all art is political hed likely consider unambitious: to Cranes eyes, art was politics: different lenses refracting the same light. Artists were, in a sense, naturally socialistic, he explained in one of his essays: Art itself is essentially a social product, intimately associated with common life, and depending for its vitality upon a co-operation of all workers, upon living traditions and quick and universal sympathies. These are its sunlight and air.

And real art, being nothing more than the the expression by man of his pleasure in labour, as Morris put it, was a kind of prefiguration of socialism itself, as a particular expression of a universal impulse towards freedom. Art spoke, Crane later wrote, this universal language, bringing order out of confusion, sweetness out of strength. Just as the Arts and Crafts movement challenged the preeminence of utility over beauty in design, the socialist movement fought for an economy of joy, where price and virtue is not to be counted in, or commanded by, dollars, but lies simply in human and hopeful conditions of the life of a people.

Culture was communism. And vice versa; a comprehensive artistic unity could only be developed among people politically and socially free. A common life and common labor would provide the foundations for a new art as well as a new society. Looking at a world convulsed by economic chaos, staggering on to revolution or disaster, Crane thought he saw the new world arriving on the horizon or at least, at the end of his pen.

In the aftermath of Bloody Sunday a notorious attack by police on unemployed workers in Londons Trafalgar Square he created artwork protesting the police murder of his friend Arthur Linnell. When the veteran of the Paris Commune Louise Michel held an international school for insurrectionists, the soft-spoken West Londoner produced a lavishly illustrated prospectus. Luminaries of the movement from Edward Carpenter to George Bernard Shaw wrote to Crane to ask his help. They almost always got it. Journals, posters, cycling clubs: working long hours, and often for free, Crane defined the look of the socialist movement more than any other artist, according to the Social Democratic Federations founder, Henry Hyndman.

Settling into his new role as agitator-artist, Crane was politically promiscuous, working for most of the socialist movements of his day. Nevertheless, he continued to shadow his mentor closely: following Morris out of the Social Democratic Federation and into the new Socialist League. Like Morris, Crane situated himself on the anarchist-adjacent left of British socialism, celebrating the then recent and deeply controversial Paris Commune. Speaking to refugees from the commune, like Michel or the great realist painter Gustave Courbet, Crane was inspired by their foreshortened experiments in the democratization of art.

Although the fluid, rustic imagery of Cranes designs emanated from a worldview that was anything but conservative, he held no candles for the Victorian cult of science. Crane shared his mentors skepticism of the mechanical utopias then popular on the Left. Reconciliation to the natural world was a hallmark of Cranes politics as well as his art, and while not quite a Luddite he agreed with Morris that as a condition of life, production by machines is altogether evil. Underlying his politics was a belief that revolution meant restoration; the recovery of human capacities and talents warped by an artificial social order.

Artists must become craftsmen, Morris declared, again and again, and craftsmen artists. Socialized humanity would be a commonwealth, a collective: but a collective of individuals. Its an insight immediately obvious in Cranes designs, where groups are common but crowds are rare. Nearly always the features of his characters, however idealized, are picked out in careful detail, neither obscured by distance nor disguised by proximity. Crane allows us to see socialism with a human face. This meld of romantic individualism and humanist technophobia has dated in the century since Cranes death. But his warnings of a world where the human-built world displaces the human and machines master men have a grim resonance today.

Reconciling art and labor was a high ambition, and one Crane bore largely alone after Morriss death in 1894. He didnt confine it to the realm of politics. In art, design, and architecture, Morris and Cranes fulminations against commercialism had struck a chord. A growing number of artists, disenchanted with government-sponsored schools of design and excluded from the emerging professions, sympathized with their radical critiques. Parity between ornamental work and other art; truth to materials, handwork over machinework; the revival of handicraft: even where artists rejected their political activism, Morris and Cranes worldview held a powerful attraction.

Arts and Crafts artists like T.J. Cobden-Sanderson set up guilds and workshops where designers and craftsmen worked as peers rather than servants and masters. One Arts and Crafts thinker, Cranes friend C.R. Ashbee, took this a step further, attempting his own utopian community on the banks of the Thames. The Clarion, a socialist newspaper, set up a national Guild of Handicraft; Crane himself established the Art Workers Guild, aimed at uniting the decorative and fine arts. Unlike the reclusive Morris, Crane threw himself into organizing artists: devising Arts and Crafts contributions to international exhibitions, writing pamphlets, and giving lectures on the meaning of the movement.

Predictably, that meaning was socialism. But Cranes romantic ideals struggled to sink roots in the arid soil of late-Victorian Britain. Arts and Crafts ideals, always vague, were swiftly diluted as the movement won critical acclaim and commercial success. Far from building a new art for a commonwealth of fellowship and service, Morriss epigones helped found modern consumer culture. The revolt of artists against the nascent professional world finally won their entry to it. And a negotiated surrender to mammon was on the cards for all but a few embattled utopians. One firm split the difference and finished machine-made metalware with manually applied hammer marks for a suitably artisanal look.

Dismayed but not defeated, Crane renewed his commitments to the socialist movement as the new century approached. A tour of America saw Crane condemn the United States in self-penned verse as soon as he disembarked and concluded in Cranes ostracism by most of the East Coasts art world after a vehement defense of the Haymarket Eight anarchists convicted of a murder they didnt commit. With Irish home rule on the horizon, Crane threw his weight behind the struggle for independence. And traveling throughout India in 1906, he joined the small number of Western socialists calling attention to the injustice of colonialism.

At a time when many British socialists professed an attachment to the empire or looked for progressive justifications of imperial expansion, Crane was unremitting in his disgust for the Wests domination of Asia both political and economic:

But all over the East, wherever European influence is in the ascendant, the result is disastrous to the arts, and thus the very sources of ornamental design, beauty of colour, and invention are being sullied and despoiled by the sharp practices and villainous dyes of Western commerce.

Art, the universal language, was being forgotten. Religion was defunct, and the romantic ideals that had inspired Crane at the beginning of his career seemed to evaporate by its end. By age or inclination unable to appreciate the impressionist movements sweeping European art, Crane saw the Moloch of capital holding the field. In 1911, he still maintained the socialistic influence of the Arts and Crafts movement but even Crane had to grant it was an influence exercised only indirectly. As the new century wore on, he was a man artistically and politically out of time.

Whether he realized it or not, the political world Crane lived in was created by a confident workers movement united around revolutionary convictions. It was destroyed in 1914 when war revealed that these convictions were nominal. Another casualty of that same cataclysm was Cranes romantic philosophy of art. Postwar artists, jaded by the use of art nouveau in propaganda and deeply alienated from the culture that fed their generation into the meat grinder of the Somme, saw the war in Wyndham Lewiss phrase as a cyclopean dividing wall in time. For Crane, the creative process may have involved struggle but only in the journey toward final aesthetic harmony. For his modernist heirs, an inverse dynamic took hold: the artwork itself became a site of struggle.

The Arthurian idylls of Morriss poetry had been smashed to pieces; the heap of broken images of T.S. Eliots Wasteland remained. Some Arts and Crafts figures struggled on into the interwar years: in a grim irony, they supported themselves by supplying a grieving nations endless demands for war memorials. Crane didnt live to see it; he died in 1915, broken by his wifes unexpected death. Lancelot, his youngest son, followed him to the grave a few years later: one of millions of young men in uniform who never returned home.

Artists continued to rally to socialism in subsequent decades, but never with the same innocent idealism as Crane or Morris. Cranes mixing of the gentleman-artist and the revolutionary was a relic of the past, not a token of the future. Arcadian fantasies of garden utopias and communard-knights had a cooler reception in the century of Auschwitz and Hiroshima.

Yet something about Cranes art still resonates. Every May Day and Christmas, his designs proliferate in postcards and posters and tea towels and the movement to which he dedicated his life renews itself across the world. Insistence on the public, communal character of art continues to be bitterly necessary. Asserting the creative potential of every human being and the creative skill of every worker is something contemporary socialists would do well to emulate. And Cranes appetite for transcendence, seeing in politics and art a disclosure of truths beyond either, is surprisingly well-suited to a world where everything from food to free time is subservient to utility.

In his art and activism, in his writing and speeches, Crane reminds us that, while the injustice of capitalism necessitates the building of a new society, this society must be built on an affirmation of what makes us human.

In one of the last essays published before Cranes death, he wrote, once again, on the congruity of art with socialism; their shared past, their linked future. From ideals in art we are led to ideals in life and to the greatest art of all The art of Life. It is an art we are yet to master. It is a world we have yet to win. Look at a Crane drawing, though, and see what he saw: its closer than we know.

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Walter Crane Was a Socialist Visionary Who Illustrated the Triumph of Labor - Jacobin magazine

Humanism and Its Aspirations: Humanist Manifesto III, a …

Humanism is a progressive philosophy of life that, without supernaturalism, affirms our ability and responsibility to lead ethical lives of personal fulfillment that aspire to the greater good of humanity.

The lifestance of Humanismguided by reason, inspired by compassion, and informed by experienceencourages us to live life well and fully. It evolved through the ages and continues to develop through the efforts of thoughtful people who recognize that values and ideals, however carefully wrought, are subject to change as our knowledge and understandings advance.

This document is part of an ongoing effort to manifest in clear and positive terms the conceptual boundaries of Humanism, not what we must believe but a consensus of what we do believe. It is in this sense that we affirm the following:

Knowledge of the world is derived by observation, experimentation, and rational analysis. Humanists find that science is the best method for determining this knowledge as well as for solving problems and developing beneficial technologies. We also recognize the value of new departures in thought, the arts, and inner experienceeach subject to analysis by critical intelligence.

Humans are an integral part of nature, the result of unguided evolutionary change. Humanists recognize nature as self-existing. We accept our life as all and enough, distinguishing things as they are from things as we might wish or imagine them to be. We welcome the challenges of the future, and are drawn to and undaunted by the yet to be known.

Ethical values are derived from human need and interest as tested by experience. Humanists ground values in human welfare shaped by human circumstances, interests, and concerns and extended to the global ecosystem and beyond. We are committed to treating each person as having inherent worth and dignity, and to making informed choices in a context of freedom consonant with responsibility.

Lifes fulfillment emerges from individual participation in the service of humane ideals. We aim for our fullest possible development and animate our lives with a deep sense of purpose, finding wonder and awe in the joys and beauties of human existence, its challenges and tragedies, and even in the inevitability and finality of death. Humanists rely on the rich heritage of human culture and the lifestance of Humanism to provide comfort in times of want and encouragement in times of plenty.

Humans are social by nature and find meaning in relationships. Humanists long for and strive toward a world of mutual care and concern, free of cruelty and its consequences, where differences are resolved cooperatively without resorting to violence. The joining of individuality with interdependence enriches our lives, encourages us to enrich the lives of others, and inspires hope of attaining peace, justice, and opportunity for all.

Working to benefit society maximizes individual happiness. Progressive cultures have worked to free humanity from the brutalities of mere survival and to reduce suffering, improve society, and develop global community. We seek to minimize the inequities of circumstance and ability, and we support a just distribution of natures resources and the fruits of human effort so that as many as possible can enjoy a good life.

Humanists are concerned for the well being of all, are committed to diversity, and respect those of differing yet humane views. We work to uphold the equal enjoyment of human rights and civil liberties in an open, secular society and maintain it is a civic duty to participate in the democratic process and a planetary duty to protect natures integrity, diversity, and beauty in a secure, sustainable manner.

Thus engaged in the flow of life, we aspire to this vision with the informed conviction that humanity has the ability to progress toward its highest ideals. The responsibility for our lives and the kind of world in which we live is ours and ours alone.

Humanist Manifesto is a trademark of the American Humanist Association 2003 American Humanist Association

The following works have been declared by the AHA board as historic, and are superseded by Humanist Manifesto III:

Additional resources:

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Humanism and Its Aspirations: Humanist Manifesto III, a ...

Our Species’ Success and the Humanist Worldview – The Humanist

Its well documented and very well understood that no species can remain biologically or socially successful if it goes extinct. This seems obvious, at least to me anyway; the only way an organism survives is if it can adapt and protect both itself and its ecological environment.

So heres the thing and probably the core reason as to why I am a humanist. I see humanism as the ultimate acceptance of nature and reality. And because I see it as such, it equally informs my ability to have and lead a just and happy life.

Ive kicked the tires of various religions and have found them wanting. Ive read other spiritual philosophies, and because of my curiosity, still research competing views of how best to be in the world. However, as I look to the history and current actions of organized faith traditions and spiritual movements, I see so much lacking.

While I dont want to paint with too wide a brush, acknowledging that no group is fully monolithic, I conclude that the current state of organized religion continues to be used as a litmus test for the permission to be violent and to create much suffering. Its not like the bad ol days of religious persecution are behind us. In fact, for many true believers such as Christian white nationalists and evangelicals of every faith tradition, the best persecution of others is yet to come.

The normalizing of religious violence is everywhere, but it starts in the core texts of all holy scriptures. Read the Bible and most spiritual texts. Youll find war, slavery, violence against women and children and non-believers, rape and incest and an apathy for the care of our planet. For Bible literalists these books are considered gods infallible thoughts, words and actions. However, for biblical apologists and theologians, they are seen as divine allegory to be interpreted and thus used like reading tea leaves, having their meanings change and contorted to fit the times.

Regardless of how a believer comprehends the Bible, as divine cause or a set of stories and poetics, it is very clear that adherence to scripture has outlasted its relevance. Humanity has moved on since the Bronze Age when those that scribed the Bible and knew so very little about the world and cosmos. Certainly, we can find much better moral teachings other than faith traditions that advocate or collaborate to support misogyny, patriarchy, racism, empire building, and oppression.

Add in the idea of an apocalypse and the ongoing work of institutional blood cults, and we give believers the right to glorify destruction, deny humanitys place in nature, and reject science and democracy.

All you need to do is see the handmade signs like Jesus is my vaccine which popped up frequently during the pandemic and you can view modern belief that perpetuates the ancient idea that this world doesnt matter. Those signs and the people who made them demand we all believe that as long as you pray or repent to the right god to bring you into peace and salvation in the afterlife, then you certainly dont have to care about your neighbor or the Earth in this life.

But thank the cosmos for each of us! According to the statistics, atheists, agnostics, and humanists as a group have the highest level of COVID-19 vaccine adoption. Somewhere north of 90 percent. Beating out EVERY other social, ethnic, racial, and religious group category. Perhaps this is why reason matters most and humanism serves as my (and our?) view of how best we should treat ourselves, as well as others and the planet. There are deep moral, social, and evolutionary consequences to our vaccine adoption.

Certainly, weve been doing bad things to each other in the name of faith since humans created these ancient beliefs and tribal identities. The modern iteration of such incivility and violence is the culmination of the worst-case scenario being played out right now through our modern legislative politics and its reliance on social intimidation. The pillars conforming the separation of church and state, as well as our secular democratic freedoms and norms, are indeed in danger of failure.

But contrary to the intimidation mentioned above, the core of the humanist point of view is the acknowledgment that we all have a sell by date. That neither we nor our planet will go on forever. That both science and history have shown when we cooperate, we are capable of great things. And this is, of course, how we counter the threats to secular democracy while remaining politically astute and on guard for any attempted breach of the separation of church and state.

Because of such empathetic acknowledgement of the frailty of the human lifespan, humans have learned to extend life through caring for each other, through science, and technological innovation and invention. Humanists see our place on the planet and cosmos aligned with such rational modernity. Science, secularism, and democracy are indeed intertwined. We humanists gratefully acknowledge that our success as a species depends on each other and how well we care for the planet.

The anthropologist Margaret Mead is quoted as saying, and Im paraphrasing here, that humans gained their humanity when we began caring for the sick. An acknowledgment that each life has value and that we are better people when we help one another.

It makes sense that when we heal the wounds of the injured, we immediately create opportunities for enlivening culture as well as life itself. The golden rule needs no religious indoctrination. It is found deep within our genes and in our social attitudes. Humanists understand that reliance and resilience extend from our bodies to our community as equally as they encompass the conservancy of the planet. We take nothing consciously for granted.

Indeed, for life to continue successfully, it will mean that our conversations and actions will need to grow exponentially. Moving from just supporting the idea that mere existing is living, but shifting to the notion that living is about thriving rather than just getting by day to day. For me, it is almost exclusively in humanism that we get to put these progressive ideas into action.

Those best prepared to lead the expanding conversations are the same people in our diverse movement and community. The non-believers, humanists, and secularists who fight for reason and kindness both in the present and for generations to come.

It is exactly in these hands that I entrust the continuance of our ability to be humane, to move our species biologically forward, and to positively transform our culture well into the future.

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Our Species' Success and the Humanist Worldview - The Humanist

What Is Left Of Being Human? On the Anthropology of Trans- and Posthumanism – Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies

July 13 @ 8:00 am - July 14 @ 5:00 pm

An International and Interdisciplinary ConferenceJuly, 13/14th 2022Groer Senat, Geschwister-Scholl-Platz, Tbingen

We are interested in the intellectual mindset of todays post-human cyberculture which concerns the human being, society, technology and politics. Historically, the rise of this way of thinking is rooted in the emerging technological hub of Silicon Valley with its spread of disruptive technologies in the beginning of the 21st century. Since then, this Silicon Valley metaphysics also unfolded outside the Californian hi-tech industries and gained adherents all over the world.

For our conference What is left of being human? On the Anthropology of Trans- and Posthumanism we are interested in the co-evolution of human and technological development which is one central pillar of the post-human cyberculture. In this regard, we posit the presence of the following three conceptual aspects: There is firstly a libertarian individualism which stresses self-ownership and the exclusive control of ones choices, actions, and body, indedependent of societal contexts. There is secondly a technological optimism suggesting that all human deficiencies can be overcome by continual technical innovations. The justification for this technological optimism is eventually grounded in an utopian pragmatism: Tecnological growth will allow the removal of the diagnosed deficiencies and human fallibility all together.

For all of these three aspects trans- and posthumanist thinking plays an integral role. In this conference we invite both proponents and critics of trans- and posthumanism. Together we aim to unveil its (metaphysical) assumptions and want to shed light on the transhumanist idea of human being from a scientific, philosophical and religious point of view.

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What Is Left Of Being Human? On the Anthropology of Trans- and Posthumanism - Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies

EarlyGame’s Artist of the Day: IOTA PHI – EarlyGame

IOTA PHI is a Greek musician focused on bringing Ancient Greek culture to her art and audience. So, naturally, we asked her about video games. IOTA PHI is bringing the themes of Greek Mythology into her music. | Iota Phi

IOTA PHI is a Greek singer, songwriter, director and record producer. Inspired by ideas of identity, post humanism and Greek mythology, her sound effortlessly brings together a swirling mix of Alternative Electronic, Pop and R&B in a truly original and elegant Art-Pop package.

Having enjoyed major support from the likes of Spin, Rolling Stone India, XS Noize, Purple Melon, Esquire, Vogue, Popjustice, Earmilk and Videostatic, Ilias first studio work, which was released by EMI, topped the Greek charts.

A follow up to the enigmatic Wolves Mate For Life which gained placements on Spotifys New Music Friday among other editorial playlists. After her performance at Pop-Kultur in Berlin, IOTA PHI got mentioned at Musik Express, Spiegel and has earned radio play on Radio1.

So here's the deal: IOTA PHI is a pretty darn successful, and incredibly creative musician. Taking on those themes of identity and post humanism she uses her Greek heritage to create incredibly unique music that pays homage to that same heritage. Thus, you should totally give her a listen, and you can check her out on Spotify and YouTube!

Naturally, we decided to ask them a few questions about music and video games. Here's what she had to say...

What is your favourite video game soundtrack?

Final Fantasy XV.

Who's your favourite video game music composer?

Kow Otani.

Whats your favourite video game?

Fortnite.

What game inspired you to do music?

Fortnite.

What video game are you currently playing?

Fortnite.

Would you ever like to write music for video games? What would it be like?

Absolutely.

How important is music for video games / video games for music?

I feel it is immensely important as it's the soundtrack of the gaming experience.

Continued here:

EarlyGame's Artist of the Day: IOTA PHI - EarlyGame

Great and Holy Pascha in Ukraine: Details matter when war crashes into holiest day of the year – GetReligion

Once a copy-desk fanatic, always a copy-desk fanatic. If you ever get caught up in obscure debates about items in the Associated Press Stylebook, then youre trapped. You see picky style issues all over the place.

This is certainly true on the religion beat. Readers may recall that the AP team recently updated and expanding some of the style bibles references to religious terms, history, etc. See this recent post and podcast: Can the AP Stylebook team slow down the creation of new Godbeat 'F-bombs'?

This brings me to the most important holy day on the Eastern Orthodox Christian calendar its called Pascha and you may have heard that the ancient churches of the East celebrate it according to the older Julian calendar. Its complicated, but there are times when East is East and West is West.

Pascha is certainly one of those times. OrthodoxWiki notes:

Pascha is a transliteration of the Greek word, which is itself a transliteration of the Aramaic pascha, from the Hebrew pesach meaning Passover. A minority of English-speaking Orthodox prefer the English word "Pasch."

Here is the note that Id like the AP style pros to think about. It is also accurate to say that this holy day is, in the West, called Easter. Thus, we frequently see the term Orthodox Easter in the mainstream press. In fact, that is pretty much the only language that we see in news reports about this holy day.

Here me say this: As a journalist who is an Orthodox Christian (and a former copy-desk guy). I get it. I know that Orthodox Easter is a quick way to save some ink that journalists would have to use to offer an explanation of, well, Pascha.

But the word Pascha is real and its ancient and it has great meaning to the second largest Christian communion on the Planet Earth. If you are writing about Orthodox believers at this time of the year, why not use both terms in the story? Why avoid THE WORD. (Oh, and the name of our eucharistic rite is the Divine Liturgy, not Mass.)

This is an important issue, at the moment, because you have a war going on (whatever Vladimir Putin wants to call it) in the season of Pascha between Russia and Ukraine two lands with centuries of shared history rooted in Orthodox Christianity. How would this affect Pascha for believers on both sides, especially since Ukraine has two Orthodox bodies one old, linked to Moscow, and one new, created by the Ecumenical Patriarch (who is not a pope) in Istanbul? Both churches strongly oppose the Russian invasion.

Thus, you had an AP story with this headline: Ukraine marks Orthodox Easter with prayers for those trapped. Here is the overture:

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) The sun came out as Ukrainians marked Orthodox Easter in the capital, Kyiv, on Sunday with prayers for those fighting on the front lines and others trapped beyond them in places like Mariupol.

St. Volodymyrs Cathedral in Kyiv was ringed by hundreds of worshippers with baskets to be blessed. Inside, a woman clutched the arm of a soldier, turning briefly to kiss his elbow. Other soldiers prayed, holding handfuls of candles, then crossed themselves. An older woman slowly made her way through the crowd and stands of flickering candles. One young woman held daffodils.

Outside the cathedral, a soldier who gave only his first name, Mykhailo, used his helmet as an Easter basket. He said he didnt have another.

The word Pascha does not appear in the story and Orthodox Easter is treated as, well, gospel. The story also failed to note that the ownership of St. Volodymyr's Cathedral is disputed and the subject of long, long debates between the new Ukrainian Orthodox Church( Kyiv Patriarchate) and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate).

Just asking: Wouldnt it be interesting to know what Pascha was like for Ukrainians in the older body with ecclesiastical ties to Moscow? What did Metropolitan Onuphry of Kiev and All Ukraine, a native of Western Ukraine, have to say on Pascha? Readers may want to click here: The Doors of Paradise Now Open from Without. Here is how his epistle to his people opened:

The Lord has visited us with a special trial and sorrow this year. The forces of evil have gathered over us. But we neither murmur nor despair, because Christ the Savior has overcome evil by His Resurrection.

The Most Glorious Resurrection of Christ is a celebration of the triumph of good over evil, truth over falsehood, light over darkness. The Resurrection of Christ is the eternal Pascha, in which Christ our Savior and Lord translated us from death to life, from hell to Paradise.

The AP report did note the existence of this body that is linked to Moscow, but continues to defend Ukrainian sovereignty. There was this, which I will salute for its use of holy day instead of simply holiday:

With theOrthodox church split by the tensionsbetween Russia and Ukraine, some worshippers hoped the holy day could inspire gestures of peacemaking. The church can help, said one man who gave only his first name, Serhii, as he came to a church in Kyiv under the Moscow Patriarchate.

He and others brought baskets to be blessed by priests for Easter, with flicks of a brush sprinkling holy water over offerings of home-dyed eggs, lighted candles and even bottles of Jack Daniels.

The non-Pascha Orthodox Easter report was pretty much the same over at Reuters: Convulsed by war, tearful Ukrainians mark Orthodox Easter. Here are two samples from that, with some important details about the threat of Russian missiles on Pascha.

KYIV/KRAMATORSK, April 24 (Reuters) President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Sunday that light would defeat darkness and Kyiv would triumph over Russia as Ukrainians marked a bitterly emotional Orthodox Easter overshadowed by the grinding two-month-old war.

Ukrainians flocked to churches on Sunday morning to mark what they call the Great Day after their centuries-old tradition of midnight Easter services was abandoned the night before over fears of Russian shelling and a nationwide curfew.

Ill ask: What happened to the midnight processions around the churches? Did anyone risk observing this essential part of the Pascha rites?

Below Kyiv's skyline of golden onion domes, hundreds of churchgoers gathered at Volodymyr Cathedral. Some shed tears and prayed for an end to the war. They said the holiday had taken on greater emotional significance because of the national hardship.

While churches used to be full for overnight and morning Easter services, this year churches have been asked not to gather many people, with concerns they could be targets for missiles.

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Great and Holy Pascha in Ukraine: Details matter when war crashes into holiest day of the year - GetReligion

Zama: Fueled by ‘the pursuit of excellence’ – GoErie.com

Nche Zama| Your Turn

The 2020 election raised questions and concerns in the minds of voters ranging from the integrity of election procedures to access to the ballot. What, if any, reforms to election law would you support to ensure all Pennsylvania voters have equal access to free, fair, secure elections?

The right to vote and the power of a persons ballot undergird the fundamental principles of democracy. Any forces or factors that diminish or threaten the sanctity of the electoral process to a point where an individual begins to question the validity of their vote must be addressed urgently and concertedly to protect and save our democracy.

Therefore I support restoring the principles in Pennsylvanias constitution regarding mail-in ballots (prior to Act 77) and I will support repealing Act 77. I will also promote voter ID for all legally qualified voters in Pennsylvania.

How would you position Pennsylvania to be a leader on environmental issues, including climate change?

Environmental issues are multifaceted and policies governing them must be guided by scientific facts, humanism, pragmatism, realism, and with a perspective on domestic and global implications. Therefore I will engage community members, state representatives, industry leaders, farmers, and our engineers and scientists to craft sustainable strategies to protect our environment for future generations.

Some states have acted to restrict the rights of transgender individuals. What is your position on transgender rights?

Gender is biology!

I believe all human rights must be protected and respected as long as an individuals actions and activities remain within the confines of his/her birth and biological gender category and do not traverse gender lines in a competitive or social setting to give him or her a competitive advantage or disadvantage or create social discomfort among others of the opposite biological gender group. We must also be cognizant of the myriad of gender-related psychological challenges many of our children are grappling with, and address them.

Experts predict the U.S. Supreme Court could soon overturn Roe v. Wade, which established the constitutional right to abortion. It would then be up to Pennsylvania lawmakers to govern the procedure. What is your position on abortion? Should it be protected or restricted?

When the sperm and the egg merge, it is a point of no return and this is where life begins. Therefore I do not support abortion. I have spent my life saving lives as a cardiothoracic surgeon. All human life is precious. We must protect it and cherish it. God commands us to do this.

What should Pennsylvanias minimum wage, now set at $7.25 an hour, be?

It depends on economic variables, market, and labor forces. Our economy is in a post-pandemic phase and experiencing tremendous fluxes. Therefore determining a numerical wage value at this time would be socioeconomically unjustified and would represent nothing but political expediency.

What makes you tick? What is an example of when your passion and government service worked hand in hand?

A collective pursuit of excellence fuels my motivation in every engagement in my life. When our government promotes social unity and excellence, people feel more psychologically engaged. Promoting uniformity over unity and excellence is destructive of individual drive and social productivity.

What, if anything, would you do to reform Pennsylvanias criminal justice system? Would you support legalization of marijuana for adult recreational use?

I am a scientist with a Ph.D., and a medical doctor. Therefore naturally I am inclined to avoid politically expedient quick fixes to problems and prefer to address the root causes of problems in order to attain sustainable solutions. This is exactly the approach that society needs and that I will use in addressing Pennsylvanias criminal justice system. Social determinants of crime especially among the poor, disadvantaged and economically challenged communities must be addressed before our criminal justice system can realize improvements and sustainable outcomes.

I would support legalization of marijuana only for medical use.

What are the bounds of political rhetoric? What duty do elected leaders have to speak truthfully and communicate fact-based information to voters?

People are tired of lies and empty promises by some politicians. Elected leaders have a moral responsibility to be truthful and serve at the highest level of excellence. Their primary motivation and commitment must be to the ones they serve. As a surgeon, every decision Ive made in my career has hinged on what is in the best interest of the people I am serving. All communication by servant leaders must be transparent, truthful and grounded in reality, social and scientific facts. Any other form of communication is self-serving and betrays the trust of the people in their leaders.

Nche Zama is a cardiothoracic surgeon who completed training at the Cleveland Clinic and Harvard University and holds a Ph.D. in chemistry, and a master's degree in management from Harvard. He is seeking the Republican nomination for governor in the May 17 primary.

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Zama: Fueled by 'the pursuit of excellence' - GoErie.com

SIFF 2022: That’s a Wrap! Roundtable. – The SunBreak

After eleven days of virtual and in-person screenings, partying, and celebrating independent filmmakers, the 48th Seattle International Film Festival closed on Sunday with a morning awards ceremony and an evening gala. In the afterglow of our individual festing, the SunBreaks SIFF team gathered on the internet to debrief on this years event.

Tony: If I had one of those little paper ballots representing my overall SIFF 2022 rating, Id make a solid tear through the 4. I think the hybrid models a great look on the festival, and I hope it was a successful strategy for fest organizers. It helps that I liked/loved pretty much everything I saw.

Josh: I didnt see nearly as much of it as I wanted to but, Im glad to have SIFF back, really appreciated the hybrid approach, and think that the earlier time of year and ten-day running time are as welcome as its long overdue return.

Chris: I agree with what you said, Josh. I didnt catch as many films as I wouldve liked but I really enjoyed the hybrid approach with most of the movies available on streaming throughout the festival. I wouldnt have minded an extra week or two like pre-Covid SIFF but it was enjoyable and well-run.

Morgen: Yes, I definitely would have loved another week to catch a few more in-theater-only screenings but really appreciated that there were so many films with the watch-at-home option. I ended up going to several in-person showings and only one film had more than a half-full theater (and most of the time it was more like one-third), but I kind of loved having all that space. Which film brought out the masses you ask? Marcel the Shell with Shoes On.

Chris: I knew Marcel the Shell with Shoes On was going to be one of my big regrets that I just couldnt fit into my schedule but what Morgen and Josh said afflicted me with massive levels of FOMO. Its two screenings conflicted with the Seattle Storms first preseason game Saturday evening and the Golden Space Needle Awards brunch Sunday morning.

Tony: As per usual, I didnt catch nearly as many films as Id hoped. And while the condensed festival run was appreciated, it also made for fewer weekend binges, which meant fewer opportunities for a working stiff to catch up on sought-after screenings. Im with you regarding the not-capacity audiences at the in-person screenings, Morgen. I do cherish the energy of a full theater, but it was also nice being able to distance myself from the plague-ridden masses in a theater.

Jenn: I ended up prioritizing in-person-only showings with the rationale its streaming so I can watch that anytime later, but with the result that I didnt even log into my virtual streaming account until the last day. Whoops! I heard that the Cleveland International Film Festival recently did a week of in-person screenings, FOLLOWED BY a week of virtual screenings, which feels like a genius idea, rather than forcing the choice. But anyway I had a really great time and was so happy to be back out in the mix with my cinephile pals and seeing so many great movies once again!

Chris: Im going to abstain from giving out my own Golden SunBreak trophy this year only because there were so many gaps of what I could actually get to that it feels woefully incomplete.

Josh: I missed it at a few other festivals, but damn it if that one-eyed, one-inch tall shell didnt get me this time around. Dean Fleischer Camps Marcel the Shell With Shoes On was every bit as cute as advertised, but was also guttingly melancholic. Adorable stop-motion animation as a conduit for meditations on isolation, mortality, abandonment, and balancing the hope of finding more with the fear of winding up with much less. It was almost too intense for ninety minutes.

Tony: Is Marcel the Shell with Shoes On officially fully-SunBreak approved? Because I likewise enjoyed it enormously. That said, there were three movies that rose to the top of a very rewarding SIFF 2022 for me. One of them was a doc (more on that later), but my favorite narrative features of the fest both bowled me over so thoroughly that Id really have to flip a coin to choose the better one.

Morgen: This is actually a tough pick for me this year, there were a few standouts and I was able to see a decent number of films despite the truncated timeframe and my full-time job. I credit the ability to stream many of the features, and Im thankful SIFF offered this option again. But lets get down to business, I can narrow it down to two: Hit The Road and Everybody Hates Johan. Both were quirky and light-hearted with a subtle underlying heaviness that gave each story the gravity to make them memorable. The former was particularly silly and wonderful, as a family takes a roadtrip with a veiled purpose that slowly unravels as they move through the desert to their destination. Tugging at your heartstrings the whole way, a barely-out-of-toddlerdom boy donning a sassy mouth chats, crawls and loves all over his brother and parents while the adults discuss more important matters of which hes utterly oblivious. It doesnt have a happy or sad ending, but life simply moves forward. As an aside, Im completely on-board with Joshs pick as well. I had my doubts, but Marcel ripped my guts out and put them back in a couple times; bravo Jenny Slate.

Tony: Peter Stricklands become one of my favorite modern filmmakers, and to my mind his batting average runs so solid, Id figured his latest, Flux Gourmet, would click for me. But I was not prepared for how great it wassharply satirical (and howlingly funny), visually spellbinding, peerlessly acted by a cast running on all eight comedic cylinders, and packed with symbolism as rich and resonant as it was (occasionally, at least) bluntly gross. My other favorite SIFF 2022 narrative was Warm Blood, Rick Charnoskis narrative fictional feature debut about a teenager living in relative poverty in modern-day Modesto, CA. Its an exhilarating burst of ragged energy that oscillates between verite grittiness, deadpan humor, moments of surprising beauty, and a stinging sociopolitical voice. Hoping to do a deeper dive on these, and the rest of the features I saw for the fest, in a post later this week.

Jenn: Here to add to the avalanche of praise for Marcel the Shell: definitely my favorite feature I watched during this fest. Ive been a fan of that adorable shell since his inception (I even own the book!!), and was a little skeptical about fleshing the hit-Youtube-shorts concept out with a feature-length emotional backstory, but Im totally agreed with the chorus here: they absolutely knocked it out of the park. If Im including films I didnt watch over these past 11 days but had seen in previous fests, theres another clear winner for me, though, which is Cha Cha Real Smooth (previously reviewed by Josh at Sundance). Cooper Raiffs follow-up to Shithouse (one of my honorable mentions among my Best of 2020) builds on that debuts promise to deliver an achingly human story of a twentysomething growing up. It would be easy to make a version of a film thatd fit this ones description which would make my eyes roll so far back into my head that theyd get stuck there (and this guy sure is a master of choosing titles that do not fit the tone of his films), but somehow Raiff avoids those pitfalls to bring a refreshingly, deeply honest and sweet perspective to the screen. Its really lovely.

Josh: Didnt really see enough to have a vote, but Im sure that if I hadnt already seen it elsewhere this would be Navalny for me. I will mention Buffalo Soldiers: Fighting On Two Fronts, which played as part of the Northwest Connections program. The short documentary, illuminating the contradictions and complexities of newly-freed slaves joining the US Army after the Civil War because it provided their most credible shot at pursuing the American Dream, at times felt like concisely produced content that would be at home accompanying a museum exhibit. However, the thorny issues it raised and the groundbreaking characters it introduced were so fascinating that I hope it is spun off into a limited series, with sixty minutes per episode instead of for the whole film, maybe more just for the Seattle-based re-enactors who keep these pieces of American history in living memory.

Chris: I am torn on this between Sweetheart Deal and The Pez Outlaw, because I thought both were well made and compelling but theyre so different from each other. The Pez Outlaw is the one Id rather watch a second time because it isnt quite as heavy but it could be a coin flip.

Tony: I only saw two docs, but because it gives me the opportunity to choose two Personal Bests of the Fest, I shall join Joshs chorus of one in singing the praises of Navalny, a stunningly well-directed and consistently riveting bit of work that felt like a gene-splice of paranoid thriller, Hollywood romance, and historic dramawith hearty snifters of Dr. Strangelove and The Three Stooges spiking the punch. And its all real.

Chris: Im going to offer a slight dissent, but I wasnt as taken with the opening night film Navalny as some of you were. I enjoyed it and respect its mission but I liked it more than I loved it. I really wished I got more of a sense of what Alexei Navalny actually believes, beyond that Putin and corruption are bad. Navalny had some pretty odious political beliefs before becoming such a prominent figure. The documentary brushes aside that he spoke at some extremist marches but I wish there was more of an interrogation of that. Even though I think it was an embarrassing episode for the human rights organization, and my liberalism demands that I not want right-wing dissidents illegally detained any more than I want left-wing dissidents illegally detained, Navalnys past statements and identity as a Russian nationalist caused Amnesty International to temporarily stop referring to him as a Prisoner of Conscience. Would this movie be so well-received if the viewers were told about past statements that could most charitably be called very racist that hes yet to repudiate and continues to host on his YouTube channel?

Josh: All very valid, and thorny points. Its easy to get swept up in the spycraft and image-making in Navalny. I appreciated that the filmmakers hinted at his more controversial positions, but agree that they mightve pushed harder to get at what he really believes and just hoe many compromises hes willing to make in service of the essential goal of shaking his country free from a dictatorship.

Morgen: I was only able to catch one documentary this time, Framing Agnes, so I dont feel qualified to say best. I enjoyed the film, and I liked that they were breaking the fourth wall a lot by re-enacting pivotal moments from a bygone era, but also catching discussion between the director/interviewer and the re-enactors about their personal experiences and thoughts on what happened to the folks they were emulating. It started to fall apart for me a bit about halfway through, but I still enjoyed it.

Jenn: I thought all four of the docs I managed to see were great, but if Im choosing one, its Cat Daddies. Im not sure if Ill be able to step back and assess the objective quality of this documentary about cats and the men that love them, but it just made me feel so good while watching it that I cant help but glow. I dont know if Ive ever so consistently had a smile on my face for a films entire runtime like that. Plus they offered photo opps with a guy in a mascot-style cat head, and I got a free cat mask to take home, so yeah, I loved it.

Chris: I was fond of Maika Monroe in Watcher, a Romanian thriller. The movie wasnt the most unpredictable, but her performance of an American wife newly alone in Bucharest while her husband is away at work is marvelous. She really conveys the paranoia and the loss of herself in a new place while feeling stalked by a creepy neighbor.

Tony: If I could give out a single Golden Sunbreak to Best Ensemble, Id bestow that honor to The Innocents, writer/director Eskil Vogts quiet but very effective slow-burn about psychic kids working out their issues. All four child actors at the center of the movie delivered remarkable, unaffected performances. But for the big prize, Ill single out Laura Galns performance as a put-upon, bullied teenage girl in Piggy, another terrific European indie chiller. The role starts out flirting close to caricature, but by the end, Galns conveyed adolescent longing, petulance, unbridled anger, and conflicted empathy with equal fidelity. Great as it is, the movie wouldnt be 1/100th as effective without her performance at the center.

Josh: Im giving this one to Gwendoline Christie in one of your favorites Flux Gourmet if only for holding it together and relishing an array of increasingly absurd costume decisions. Shes the mad queen at the center of that farce and the whole thing falls apart if she breaks.

Morgen: I have two for this as well. Marina Redepovi of The Staffroom was engrossing. As the newly-hired high school counselor Anamarija, she subtly and slowly succumbed to the tension and stress building in her over the entire film, grinding away at her positivity like sandpaper. Caring too much can be painful, but in the end you find a reason to stay. The other has to be Adle Exarchopoulos of Zero Fucks Given. While the film was in the middle of the pack otherwise, Adle was mesmerizing as a young stewardess Cassandre living the life, jet setting from one town to the next. As we got to know her and see the slow vice that closes in from little-to-no sleep, a lot of alcohol and stress from home, the burn-out was inevitable. Party girl may be what she wants for now, but we find out that all the traveling is just Cassandre running from something that will always haunt her until she faces it. Working toward a better life is only possible if she faces her past.

Jenn: I was also particularly impressed by Laura Galn, Maika Monroe, and Gwendoline Christie. But to throw my attention on a film we havent mentioned yet in this piece, I loved Karen Gillan in Riley Stearns Dual (previously reviewed by Chase at Sundance). She plays two different roles Sarah and Sarahs Double and manages to make them feel like very different people, even though theyre a person and that persons clone. That takes an admirable level of talent, and she pulls it off.

Documentary: Radiograph of a Family (Firouzeh Khosrovani)

New Directors: Lonely Voices (Andrea Brusa, Marco Scotuzzi)

New American Cinema: Know Your Place ( Zia Mohajerjasbi)

Ibero-American: Sublime (Mariano Biasin)

Documentary1. The Territory (Alex Pritz)2. Sweetheart Deal (Elisa Levine and Gabriel Miller)*3. Kaepernick & America (Tommy Walker and Ross Hockrow)4. Skate Dreams (Jessica Edwards)5. Daughter of a Lost Bird (Brooke Pepion Swaney)

* Lena Sharpe Persistence of Vision Award

Top Documentaries1. Jazz Fest: A New Orleans Story (Frank Marshall, Ryan Suffern)2. Navalny (Daniel Roher)3. Young Plato (Neasa N Chianin, Declan McGrath)4. Sweetheart Deal (Elisa Levine and Gabriel Miller)5. The Territory (Alex Pritz)

Josh: Not sure whether its meaningful, but only one of each of the top five audience favorites were from outside the USA. Maybe this means a good crop of American films, locals boosting locals, or people not being in the mood for subtitles at home. Either way, its great to see some of the local films getting recognition! Nothing wrong with a little hometown pride, particularly when its for Zia Mohajerjasbis gorgeously photographed and insightful odyssey set in Seattle. I caught The Territory at Sundance and am not at all surprised that Alex Pritzs story, made in collaboration with indigenous people in the disappearing Amazon rainforest, also connected with SIFF audiences.

And as always, the overlaps between the marathon film-goers, the juries, and the general public are interesting maybe were not so different after all!

Tony: Whether its some strange superpower/curse or not, I very seldom end up seeing movies that become the winners of the SIFF/Golden Space Needle/Audience Awards during the festival. That means I have very little skin in the game here. But Ill go out on a limb and say that the Fool Serious voters anointing Jazz Fest: A New Orleans Story with the Best Documentary award over Navalny has me scratching my head. Im sure Jazz Fest is a perfectly serviceable music doc (no, I havent seen it), but I cant comprehend it holding a candle to Daniel Rohers absorbing study of Alexei Navalnys battle of words and images against the current Russian regime.

Josh: My guess is that its a matter of access and priorities. Navalny screened only on opening night, to people with a special gala ticket; so its possible that passholders and audiences alike waited for it to come to CNN. With so many options available only during the festival, I cant say that I blame people for waiting a bit longer.

Along those lines, I thought I had covered my bases by seeing almost all of the Official Competition. That program always hits a nice balance of challenging and rewarding while giving a survey of the breadth of the festival as a whole, but I admit a personal failing in procrastinating and never watching the jurys pick: Klondike. I have no doubt about the jurys assessment: For a work both tragically prophetic and universal in its impact, a ferocious and formalist vision of war that fuses humanism, black comedy and horror into a searing and original vision. Still, film festivals are a matter of timing and serendipity, and I confess that I was never quite in the right frame of mind to sit down for two hours of Maryna Er Gorbachs raw and current tale set on the lonely border of Ukraine and Russia in the natural resource-rich Donetsk District, following pregnant Irka and her husband as their self-sufficient life is threatened by encroaching civil war.

Morgen: I didnt end up reviewing it for SXSW, but The Blind Man Who Didnt Want to See Titanic was a great story. The cinematography was wonderful, using camera angles, focus and lighting to put the viewer in the shoes of the main character. You wanted it to be more heartwarming, but being sequestered to a wheelchair, stuck in your house and the vulnerability of being blind arent a walk in the park individually, much less all together. Im actually on board with the top narratives in the Golden Space Needle competition which almost never happens. As for the passholders I agree with a couple of their choices but otherwise theyre middle of the road at best. Im still annoyed that both SIFF and SXSW Film viewers have all but ignored Linoleum. Jim Gaffigan is stellar, but the entire cast really meshes with a unique, heartfelt and thoughtful script to lead the way and Im disappointed no one else is saying so.

Josh: I suppose thats the great and frustrating thing about film festivals. Everyones on their own journey, sometimes great things get missed, and consensus forms unexpectedly. But theyre also an opportunity to find something great and advocate for your favorites throughout the year.

With that in mind, lets bring another season of SIFF to a close. I know we have some more reviews to roll out in the afterglow; so we can look forward to hearing about other gems (or duds, it happens!) discovered during this years festivities!

Keep up with us during the Seattle International Film Festival on Twitter (@thesunbreak) and follow all of our ongoing coverage via our SIFF 2022 Index andour SIFF 2022 posts

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SIFF 2022: That's a Wrap! Roundtable. - The SunBreak

‘The Rose Maker’ is a crowd-pleasing bagatelle. And so what? Borneo Bulletin Online – Borneo Bulletin

Ann Hornaday

THE WASHINGTON POST The Rose Maker, a winsome, undemanding dramedy by Pierre Pinaud, opens with an extravagantly staged sequence in the rose garden of Pariss Parc de Bagatelle, a pilgrimage destination for worldwide rosarians and the people who love them.

That setting turns out to be an apt one for a film thats something of a cinematic bagatelle viewers looking for novelty, thematic heft and edgy plot twists are advised to skip this wispy audience-pleaser, which strains for credulity as it goes for the sentimental jugular.

But you know what? Its spring, were exhausted, and the gentle humanism at the heart of The Rose Makers most shameless manipulations might be just what more than a few cynicism-drenched audiences need.

The Bagatelle scene features Eve Vernet (Catherine Frot), who with her faithful assistant Vra (Olivia Cte) is bringing her latest hybrid to the Parcs annual rose contest.

Eve inherited her vast rose farm from her father and continues to follow his punctilious artisanal breeding procedures, delicately cross-pollinating her plants, saving the seeds and babying along the new flowers in the hopes that theyll become bestsellers.

Eve is being aggressively courted by a brash young businessman (Vincent Dedienne) who wants to absorb her operation into his own global conglomerate, but shes determined to stay independent, while the bills pile up and her beloved creations fail to ignite the market.

Recognising Eves need for cheap labour, Vra enlists the services of three ex-convicts mild-mannered Samir (Fatsah Bouyahmed), shy Nadge (Marie Petiot) and surly Fred (rapper Melan Omerta). Once these three erstwhile miscreants are on the scene, the plot points unfold with metronomic predictability, from the inevitable personality conflicts, life lessons, revelations and seemingly catastrophic setbacks to the zany scheme Eve comes up with to save her lifes work.

Although The Rose Maker is ostensibly about how Eve and her ragtag group of misfits pull together, Pinaud focusses on her relationship with Fred, at the expense of Samir and Nadge, who recede into the background, popping out for comic relief from time to time.

Narrative tension is virtually nonexistent in a story animated by stakes that couldnt be lower, or more formulaic; the plot hums along smoothly, much like Vra s battered VW that runs right on cue, no matter what misadventures befall it.

The Rose Maker, which was filmed in Frances picturesque Roanne hills, is undeniably pretty to look at production designer Philippe Chiffre appoints Eves isolated farm house in romantic swaths of rich-looking fabrics and floral-themed objets, and the flowers themselves are given pride of place in adoring close-ups.

From a distance, the rows and rows of abundant blooms are so vividly hued that they look colour-corrected to within an inch of their lives; squint and The Rose Maker becomes a poppy field worth of Monet in Argenteuil.

The Rose Maker is so frictionless and adamantly easygoing that its most genuine moments arrive as a shock Frot and Omerta have managed to develop real chemistry amid the cliches, and the films climactic scenes are tear-jerkers that actually feel earned.

Top it off with Pinauds final dedication, and The Rose Maker turns into a film that wears its emotions lightly but generously, like dew on a blush-coloured petal.

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'The Rose Maker' is a crowd-pleasing bagatelle. And so what? Borneo Bulletin Online - Borneo Bulletin

Salvation Army’s Donors Withdraw Support in Response to Racial ‘Wokeness’ Initiative – Newsweek

As The Salvation Army launches its Red Kettle Campaign this holiday season, some of its long-time donors are withdrawing their support from the 156-year old charitable organization citing its newly embraced "woke" ideology as the reason.

Of great concern to loyal supporters and faithful Salvationists is the initiative dubbed "Let's Talk About Racism." In a nutshell, its curriculum outlines the Christian church's alleged racial collusion and provides action steps to analyze and combat racism through an "anti-racist" lens while incorporating Critical Race Theory.

Definitions of institutional and systemic racism are included while real or perceived differences in life outcomes ("inequities") are attributable not to individual effort and other circumstances, but to discrimination. Sections address topics including police brutality, health care and Black unemployment linking such topics to "racial inequity."

That's troublesome for those who note The Salvation Army has been a leader in confronting racism long before the rest of the country and over five decades before the civil rights movement. And they're asking why then should members of an organization built by the Christian faith to actually assist people of all races in need, be repentant of behavior they never perpetuated?

"In my estimation, CRT is a Trojan horse taking in well-intentioned Christian enterprises thatbecause they care about justice and oppose oppressionnaively promote the most serious threat to biblical Christianity I have seen in 50 years," wrote Christian apologist and radio talk show host Greg Koukl in a Facebook post earlier this month.

Entitled An Open Letter to The Salvation Army, Koukl prefaces the post by informing TSA that he is terminating his monthly donations and directing them to another organization. Koukl is also the founder and president of the Stand to Reason, a non-profit religious organization that "trains Christians to think more clearly about their faith and to make an even-handed defense for classical Christianity."

"There is a massive number of academicsBlack and white, Christian and non-Christian, atheist and theistwho have raised the alarm against the aggressive indoctrination and, frankly, bullying of CRTnot to mention the racial essentialism inherent in the view, the false witness it bears against virtuous people, and the general destruction it continues to wreak on race relations in this country. CRT has set us back 50 years," he continued.

Koukl isn't the only one that's voiced his concerns over the new training created through TSA's International Social Justice Commission. It was last July that it was disseminated through emails, videos, devotionals and other materials to field officers serving poor communities across the U.S. by the organization's four territorial commanders.

Active officers in the Salvation Army's western territory were trained in matters of racial equity in a compulsory manner in January. The agenda for the Territorial Virtual Officers' Councils on Racial Equity workshop mirrored the "Let's Talk About Racism" resource put out by the Commission and was required of current officers.

General Brian Peddle, CEO of The Salvation Army announced the initiative in February through a video in which he said "it examines racism through the lens of scripture, church and world history and guides gracious discussions about overcoming the damage racism has inflicted upon our world and yes, on our Salvation Army."

"As we anticipate having courageous conversations about race please join me in working toward a world in which all people feel included, valued and loved on Earth just as they are in heaven," Peddle stated in the one-minute video.

But a commentary by author Kenny Xu published on the conservative news website The Daily Signal last month addressed what he described as the Commission "unhealthily mixing admirable human rights works with politically charged advocacy based in politics."

Xu, who is also the president of Color Us Unitedan organization that advocates for a race-blind Americanoted terms that "echo both radical 'anti-racism' jargon and divisive teachings of critical race theory" in the materials prepared for The Salvation Army's more than 1.7 million members. It's terminology that Xu notes, "divides people into two camps: the oppressors and the oppressed."

"In some aspects, the materials are indistinguishable from the 'anti-racist' programs of any multinational corporation, or the expounding of critical race theory at a major university," wrote Xu, noting that "Let's Talk About Racism" accuses white Salvationists of being unable or unwilling to acknowledge their racism. He also noted its encouragement for whites to read Robin DiAngelo's White Fragility and Ibram X. Kendi's How to Be an Antiracist.

But as Xu reminds readers in his piece, "the Gospel itself is colorblind."

"Despite what the church's International Social Justice Commission says, ordinary members of The Salvation Army are committed to a colorblind perspective, and admirably so," he wrote, noting that faithful Salvationists recognize this. Xu also contends that an individual's perspective of social justice analysis doesn't necessarily correspond to the Christian ethic of individual salvation.

Xu questioned why the traditionally a-political Salvation Army would begin to promote such political and racial ideologies to begin with, which led him to organize a petition, co-written by Salvation Army captains and sponsored through Color Us United. It asks those to "stand against the insertion of politically charged racial ideologies into The Salvation Army's good work."

The appeal, calling for a revocation of the "Let's Talk About Racism" curriculum, currently has 12,200 signatures from members and donors rejecting what they consider a "woke script."

Originally founded in London in 1865 by one-time Methodist preacher William Booth and his wife Catherine, TSA is both a Christian church and an international charitable organization. Organized in an "army" structure with officers, soldiers and volunteers, collectively they are referred to as Salvationists who are called to serve both the physical and spiritual needs of the impoverished as their Christian faith dictates.

"Repentance solely for the fact that you're white, we don't think that's very productive," Xu told Newsweek, who also noted that 60 percent of those served by The Salvation Army are from ethnic minority communities. That's a statistic he told Newsweek he discovered by talking to Commissioner and TSA National Commander Kenneth G. Hodder.

"Here's the thing with the SA that's so crazythese people spend their entire lives serving the poor," said Xu. "There is absolutely no reason to even suggest or insinuate repentance for their supposed complicity in racism."

Xu noted that after he spoke to Hodder about his concerns and current petition, the extensive "Let's Talk About Racism" guide (along with its diversity, equity and inclusion trainings) was moved from the first page of The Salvation Army's International Social Justice Commission site to a less visible page. In a November 4 Facebook post by Koukl, he noted it was now listed as a guide on the site's "Resources" page.

While Newsweek reached out to both Peddle and Hodder, External Communications Manager Joseph Cohen responded to questions regarding the initiative and corresponding petition.

Cohen said The Salvation Army has in no way changed its views or adopted any new ideology, like CRT.

"Our beliefs have always been rooted in scripture, and they still are. That includes our complete rejection of racism, which is in stark contrast to the biblical principle that we're all created in the image of God. We believe that, as God loves us all, so we should all love one another," said Cohen, noting the organization's international positional statement on the issue, which was created in 2017.

Cohen did recognize that TSA occasionally provides voluntary discussion guides to its people to prepare them to engage with others on various topics. In terms of racism, two such guides have been prepared through the International Social Justice Commission, he explained.

"But these voluntary discussion guides certainly are not required, and they never take the place of our Positional Statements," said Cohen. "For us, the Truth in scripture is always supreme."

Additionally, Cohen noted that The Salvation Army has gifted more than $200 million in direct financial assistance to help people stay in their homes in 2021. Since the beginning of the pandemic, the non-profit has provided more than $225 million meals, $81 million in utility assistance and $111 million in rent and mortgage assistance.

A Newsweek story published earlier this month noted that Americans gave more charitable donations to the United Way Worldwide and the Salvation Army in 2020 than to any other nonprofit focusing on direct aid, as reported by the Associated Press. Specifically, the SA raised $1.8 billion in 2020, an increase of 31 percent from the previous year.

Still, there are those inside the organization that are finding it challenging to accept the incongruence between the organization's new initiative and its historically non-political stance.

"As so many oppose this within and without our ranks, why are we clinging onto it so tightly?" wrote active officer Captain Charles DeJesus of the Salvation Army's western territory, in a public Facebook post that he has since taken down.

In it, DeJesus, who is Black, asked Salvation Army leaders and influencers to get the organization back to being apolitical.

"I am directly calling upon you, without equivocation, to restore The Salvation Army's purely apolitical position and spirit of Blood and Fire/World for God Salvationism," DeJesus wrote in the preface of his post. "There are countless individuals who are working angles and schemes of racial justice and unity. For that reason alone, why are we so fixated on this, the environment, DEI initiatives, and other things that make us indistinguishable from academia, humanism, and other things that appear partisan?"

DeJesus also removed a corresponding follow-up video message he made to his initial post.

Meanwhile, Newsweek talked to other donors, who are at the very least questioning the Salvation Army's entree into "woke" territory with some, like Koukl, going so far as to pull their support entirely.

One such concerned donor is a longtime former chairman of the organization's advisory board and current national board advisory member Mary Theroux.

"I have a real problem with that website and the resources that are suggested readingsto my mind they do not accord with what I've seen at the SA," said Theroux, who has spent more than 25 years in a governing role.

"They're silly notions that are not going to resolve the disparate conditions of people." Rather, Theroux said there are concerted actions people can take rather than "spending a lot of time and effort in training or gnashing of teeth."

"I don't think it advances real solutions and real solutions are needed," added Theroux. "Jargon like systemic racism and whiteness being a sin is a smokescreen for correctly diagnosing the problems and addressing them in a meaningful way that will resolve them."

That's while another long-time supporter expressed his dismay in an email thanking Xu for his recent piece and sharing his own letter to Salvation Army leaders.

"I have been a faithful supporter of The Salvation Army for many years. My parents were supporters when they were alive, and they passed that down to me and my siblings. It was always a joy to see the red kettles around the holidays, as well as to hear of the efforts of TSA in helping the poor and those affected by disasters," wrote Richard N. Nakano. "Now I have noticed TSA has taken a turn to the far left politically, championing and virtue signaling such 'woke' policies as LGBTQ 'rights' and CRT. I am very disappointed the TSA has turned away from its Christ-centered mission, and is now embracing such un-Christian, world-centered views."

Nakano went on to write, "Until the TSA admits its error, denounces these woke views and turns back to its original foundations, I will NOT support itfinancially or otherwise. There are other Christian organizations I can send my donations to, just as deserving and NOT politically subservient to the woke mob."

Xu, who re-iterated that his goal is for the Salvation Army to release a statement renouncing CRT in its racial equity push, said he felt a duty to speak out against it and for those who otherwise couldn't speak for themselves.

"If you truly believe that racism is evilyou need to get rid of CRT, which is a racist ideology, assigning certain characteristics to one race and some to others," said Xu.

Added Theroux, who noted the most valuable thing to her while working with the Salvation Army is the learning she's seen "on the ground" by the officers who model Christ's love and action all the time.

"They look at individuals and truly see every one of us, whether you're a board member or someone in needthey do not see the difference between us. That's what's been so personally valuable to me," said Theroux, noting she doesn't see "wokeness" at the level she's working at. "What I see are people who have dedicated their lives."

"The Salvation Army I know is doing extremely good work, given that I do have concerns about this messaging I see," she added. "Again, I love the Army and I don't want to see it hurt. It's like when you have a friend and they're doing something sillyyou feel the need to correct them."

Go here to see the original:

Salvation Army's Donors Withdraw Support in Response to Racial 'Wokeness' Initiative - Newsweek

Interested in Blogging? | Bradley Bowen – Patheos

It looks like The Secular Outpost blog will be retired in December.

My understanding is that previously published posts on The Secular Outpost will be archived and available through The Secular Web after this blog is retired.

However, a new site for multiple skeptical/secular blogs might be created by the Internet Infidels in 2022, so another skeptical/secular blog might be created to replace The Secular Outpost.

If you are interested in contributing posts to a new skeptical/secular blog that might be created to replace The Secular Outpost, then please send me an email (to: bbowen737@msn.com) with answers to the following questions:

What topics would you be likely to write about? (select all that apply)

__atheism__agnosticism__naturalism__secularism__supernaturalism/miracles__theism/God__humanism__critical thinking/rationality__religion__Christianity__Islam__Judaism__Hinduism__Buddhism__life after death/souls__faith vs. reason__philosophy of religion__ethics__science vs. religion__current events__other topics (please specify)

How often do you think you would write a post in 2022 if you become a contributor to a new skeptical/secular blog?

__ times per week

OR

__times per month

OR

__times per year

What sort of approach(es) would you generally take in your blog posts? (select all that apply)

__scientific or empirical facts and evidence for atheism/naturalism/skepticism/secularism

__philosophical/logical arguments for atheism/naturalism/skepticism/secularism

__scientific or empirical facts and evidence against theism/religion/supernaturalism

__philosophical/logical arguments against theism/religion/supernaturalism

__critique of scientific or empirical facts and evidence against atheism/naturalism/skepticism/secularism

__critique of scientific or empirical facts and evidence for theism/religion/supernaturalism

__critique of philosophical/logical arguments against atheism/naturalism/skepticism/secularism

__critique of philosophical/logical arguments for theism/religion/supernaturalism

__ some other approach (please provide a brief description)

What education and/or experience do you have thinking and writing about the topics that you would be likely to blog about?

[Just write a paragraph or two responding to this question].

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Interested in Blogging? | Bradley Bowen - Patheos

Party workers need to make people aware about developmental schemes of Modi Govt : Nadda – United News of India

Shimla, Nov 26 (UNI) BJP National president Jagat Prakash Nadda while addressing party state executive meeting appealed to the party workers to educate the masses about the various developmental schemes started by the party in the state.Nadda who was addressing party state executive meeting at Peterhof virtually from north east India said that BJP is a lone cadre based party in the country which was not being governed by any single man or family. Lashing out at other parties Nadda said that all political parties either revolve around a family or a person including the Indian National Congress and PDP of Jammu and Kashmir, BJP's political adversaries in Uttar Pradesh and in south India. He added that it is only the BJP where a common man like Jai Ram Thakur coming from no political ground could become CM, Suresh Kashayap could be president of the state unit of the party and he himself also not belonging to a non political family could become the national president."It is not BJP culture that one came to public life to have a chair or occupy coveted post, but we came here to change the picture of the nation at large. Party believes in the principle of Integeral humanism, happiness of every being. Former Rajasthan party CM Bharav Singh Shekhawat came up with the new concept of Antyodaya to provide food for everyone. This was further propagated by the former BJP CMs like Shanta Kumar and Kalyan Singh government in the eighties and nineties of 20th centuries."Reacting to the party brainstorming session of the debacle in the bye elections the BJP leader said that they have to introspect what they are doing or test their strength and capabilities while sitting together. He said that party strength has increased to 7792 booths panna pramukh in the state as the state has members in around 10400 booths including eight lakh booths in the country.Organisation has done good work, Pana committee has done a commendable job, in the state vistar and e-vistar yojana is doing good work in Himachal as it became the model state for the party in the country.The victory and loss goes together sometime there are set back or you would be elated by victory, the double engine government in Himachal, party workers should propagate this minutely among the people that party has a double engine for the development and members of the Working committee should also carry this message among lakhs of party cadres down to last person, he said.BJP president took the credit for the Kold dam and Atal tunnel project and said that it was prime minister Atal Bihari Vajapyee who laid the foundation stone for these projects when Modi came in power in 2014 he dedicated both the project to the people in 2021. He said that Luhri power project, Dhaulsidh power projects are under construction.The Modi government is doing every effort to bring the benefits of development to this hill state as it provided a special grant to Rs 533 cr in 2020-21 and Rs 400 cr in 2019-29. The state also got soft loans during the BJP Government. There was a time when the Railway health and Education budget was very low. Nine districts of Himachal were added to the universal water mission 'Harjal Ghar' which include Lahaul Spiti district. Longest eight kilometer ropeway Rs 450 cr scheme in the state have been given FCA clearance and environment clearances would be obtained shortly.Taking credit for announcing AIIMS at Bilaspur, health minister Mr Nadda said that a grand building is coming up in his home district. Party president said that he is coming to Bilaspur to inspect the progress of AIIMS construction along with the Union Health Minister on Dec 5. The OPD would be dedicated on the same day, he added. Now four medical colleges are coming up in the state, ESI Medical college became functional in Mandi, six trauma centres are coming up in the state. Four lane work is going with great speed, Chandigarh- Shimla and Sawarghat to Mandi, he added.UNI ML RKM 1339

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Party workers need to make people aware about developmental schemes of Modi Govt : Nadda - United News of India

UFOs Topic of Nov. 9 fall 2021 Philosophy and Religion Forum Presentation – Southern Miss Now

Wed, 10/27/2021 - 09:50am | By: David Tisdale

The final presentation for the fall 2021 Philosophy & Religion Forum series at The University of Southern Mississippi (USM) is set for Tuesday, Nov. 9 at 6:30 p.m. online via Zoom featuring Dr. Diana Walsh Pasulka, professor of religion at the University of North Carolina, Wilmington, who will present UFOs and UAPs: Military and Civilian Testimonies of UFO Events."

Dr. Pasulkas research focuses on religions and technology, including supernatural belief and connections to digital technologies and environments. She is the author of American Cosmic: UFOs, Religion, Technology (Oxford University Press). Her other projects include two edited volumes: Believing in Bits: New Media and the Supernatural, co-edited with Simone Natalie (Oxford University Press) and Post Humanism: The Future of Homo Sapiens, co-edited with Michael Bess (Palgrave MacMillian Reference).

Fall Philosophy & Religion Forum talks are hosted on Zoom, and preregistration is required. All program times are CST. The meetings are available at the following link:

*Topic: Philosophy & Religion Forum

*Zoom Meeting Link

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/87320470024?pwd=WmJZUGo4eEhHNWd1cjJLeEN5ZG9nUT09

*Meeting ID: 873 2047 0024

*Passcode: Forum

The Philosophy & Religion Forum is presented by the USM Philosophy program, which is housed in the USM College of Arts and Sciences School of Humanities. For more information, contact Dr. Amy Slagle ata.slagleFREEMississippi.

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UFOs Topic of Nov. 9 fall 2021 Philosophy and Religion Forum Presentation - Southern Miss Now

When the Bones of our Ancestors Speak to Us: A Fugitive Conversation with Bayo Akomolafe – Resilience

Earlier this year I interviewed the postactivist philosopher Bayo Akomolafe forDark Mountain: Issue 19,our spring collection of art and writing on death, loss and renewal. I had just completed his innovative online courseWe Will Dance with Mountainswhich has just begun again this month.

I am preparing to leave a house I have lived in for 18 years. A gathering of starlings loopand swerve overhead in the falling light, and in the distance you can hear the grind and thump of the sugar beet harvesters in the winter-flooded fields. For the last two months, as we pack up, I have been focused on a task with four strangers from different places and ports of origin (Manchester, Holland, Nigeria, Germany, Jamaica and London): to consider the fate and future inscribed in the bones of an unknown slave woman, unearthed from a burial site in the Port of Rio de Janeiro in 1996.

The archaeologists named her Bakhita (after the Sudanese slave turned Catholic saint) and all we know of her life is that she did not survive the Atlantic crossing to work in the sugar cane fields of Brazil alongside an estimated five million of her compatriots from West Africa. Our task is to rebuild the slave ship, set by the philosopher, writer and recovering psychologist, Bayo Akomolafe, as part of an online course he has been spearheading called We Will Dance With Mountains.

I wanted to speak with Bayo because this issues contemplation of death and dying also revolves around change; how, in times of fall, we allow a known world to collapse and reform from within. In no other modern thinker have I come across such a dynamic approach to undertaking that radical act of consciousness, embedded as it is in the startling imagery of the transatlantic slave trade.

Bayo works in intense metaphor, using metaphysical infrastructure to enable us to perceive how we are kept trapped by civilisation and how we might liberate ourselves from its invisible manacles. The building blocks of his lexicon include the slave ship (with three decks of colonisers, slaves, and Earth resources); the plantation, where we are set to work; and the fugitive who escapes the capture of both. Sanctuary is a gathering place where fugitives might flock and find other ways of being together.

Charlotte Du Cann: In the Bakhita Project, we have been meeting in the transformative space of sanctuary to consider the ancestral consequences of the colonial slave trade. Do you feel our legacies can ever be resolved?

Bayo Akomolafe: The legacies of the slave ship are yet-to-come. Modernity captures the slave ship in the same way it captures black bodies, white bodies, all kinds of bodies, and allots them prescribed ways of behaving and responding to crisis events, like the idea of racial injustice and climate chaos. It looks at the white body and says you are the enemy, and to black and brown bodies it says you are the victim here. Sanctuary is this emergent space which might be tethered to a post-modernist escape from modernity.

The slave ship was an instrument of oppression and capture, an instrument of horror, but when I lean into my traditions, when I listen to the tale of the trickster and the tricksters of other cultures, such as Pan or Loki, the boundaries of what is supposedly horrific and evil, it is also shape-shifting. It is moving, productive, generative, and escapes our modern gaze. Our elders are asking us to look at the slave ship, not as a thing that is gone and done with but as a thing that is energetically present, right now.

We are all in a slave ship: capitalism is a form of slave-shipping and we are captured here, ontologically incarcerated master and slave. The very architecture of the slave ship is hinted at in the ways we perform hierarchy and order bodies on a scale of worthiness with the other-than-human world being below black bodies.

So, you might say that the invitation to rebuild the slave ship is to revisit the conditions of our incarceration, to look around us, to look again, and to see that these boundaries are never still, always movable. So I dont want to make the legacies of the slave ship OK. I want to make it sensuous, inviting, I want the wall to be porous, olfactory, membranous, I want it to be exposed and open, experimental, diffracting one thing into another. This is how new things are born.

I refuse to categorise artifacts of history as evil or good, because we do away with a lot of resources when we stabilise these things in those ways. When we name their colours too soon. So, to step into a space that is as troublesome as the slave ship is the tricksters way, to play with trouble, and that might help us to transform.

CDC This books theme is centered on death, dying and change. Is that collective space of sanctuary also where things can die and provide energy, or compost, for transformation?

BA We think of death too strictly I think, as this absolute terminal point. I am interested in spaces in culture, for gatherings, where we touch the traces of our unbecoming and notice where we are falling apart. Where we reimagine death not as something down the line, but a paradigm, a thick now, an immanent field of loss and creativity that is entangled with what we rudely tease out as life. Modernity is about putting things together neatly, proliferating still images, being coherent, noble, independent. Consider what might be produced if, instead of thinking of death strictly as a firm line or an isolated event, we find ways to experiment with how we are already falling away, and how, for example, your identity is dying, how you are nomadic, diasporic, constantly moving, even when the habits of my perceiving you compel me to see you as a white woman. If we had practices to notice the ways where our names, our bodies are changing and giving way to something else. How we are actually ghosts.1

I think dying well is about becoming with our traces and learning to touch the traces of our falling away. In a literal sense, I am leaving my cells here and there, I am less or more than I was a few minutes ago. Maybe a practice like this is the urgency of the hour. This is what I mean by fugitive exile, about leaving the plantation which reproduces images and instead helping us to see we are beyond static images. We are not as photographic as we think we are. We are abroad in ways that escape the Man, the head of the pyramid, of the capitalist structure. And that is the invitation of a constellation, of processional relational ontologies.

CDC Your teaching of ways of being and becoming in many ways echoes one of the principles of Dark Mountains Uncivilisation: taking that Man out of the centre and letting life be in the centre. You have called it a constellation of fugitive technologies that allows us to meet the world differently. Could you name a few of those that most urgently need paying attention to?

BA By fugitive technologies, I refer to sites of encounter where we might be met by the world in return, where we might learn to listen and cultivate humility in the face of a world that exceeds us, a world that never receded to the background of human ascension, even when we pretend that it did. And it is very difficult to talk out of context about what this constellation of practices might mean for different communities, which is why I have hesitated to frame making sanctuary as a universal, ahistorical process that I can plant anywhere I want.

Someone told me that poetry doesnt appeal to this moment and that we need facts. And I countered by saying: poetry is the spirituality of fact. Facts vibrate at the speed of mystery and poets are attuned to that, that facts are not as stable as you think. When people hear about fugitive technologies, they say: well, here is a practice that if I do, I might be saved. Here is a product, lets call it racial healing system, here is an app for emancipation, here is an idea, a concept that is already neatly packaged. The very presence of the word fugitive dismantles that. The fugitive is a figure that is constantly moving, so I am not talking about the arrival state, the Coca-Cola at the end of the factory line. I am talking about the methods of dis/inquiry; I call it dis/inquiry to remove ourselves from the centre of the inquiry. The inquiry is how to get lost. The question of the fugitive is how do I lose my way? How do I lose this plantation? How do we get as far away as possible? So, these technologies I speak of are not fixed products one can scale up; they are cartographies of lostness, rehearsals in losing ones way in order to meet the world anew.

Making sanctuary is a gathering place, a village of these technologies. The Bakhita Project is premised on post-qualitative/post-anthropocentric research, decentring the anthropological figure as the central researcher and storyteller and learning to listen to the world. What might that do to us? The idea of becoming lost is to become otherwise by virtue of encounters with the more-than-human world. This is not research that is intended for us to be better, or to get back to business, to our shiny ivory towers.

I might ask, right now, for the purposes of our conversation: how is Charlotte learning to trace her ghostliness, the legacies made in her name? What are the recipes for your undoing? How are you noticing the extraordinary that is packed within the ordinary? How are you sharing these recipes of your undoing around you so that we form a politics of mutual undoing?

So, my sister, it has to do with dis/inquiry, the methodologies of exile.

CDC You talk about a state of betweenness, finding the cracks, a state that is neither inclusive nor exclusive. Is this engaged with by oneself or with others or both?

BA I am very wary of individual journeys of salvation or emancipation, of personal enlightenment workshops. I am not sure what the individual is anyway anymore, when we find microbial communities living in our guts, and viruses living within bacteria. Post-humanist processes are always involved. Even if you deem it fit to focus on yourself as a separate entity, you would need physical resources to do that. Thought is not always as internal as cognitive scientists would have us believe. I feel it is environmental and ecological and that you are pulling on outside resources, even as you turn to your navel.

The basis of a fugitive politics-to-come always involves an irreducible collective of bodies, humans and more-than-humans, even when a single individual is in focus. I am interested in framing a project that does not privilege humans as the starting point, how bodies are forced to think by the environment, by happenings in the world. So for me the instigator of thought isnt human. A virus has forced India to rethink education. Because of the pandemic we are forced to go in a different direction.

I think making sanctuary is gathering those who have been disarticulated by cracks in the environment to work with those cracks, rather than patching them up and returning to normal. Are things awkward for you? You dont know how to proceed with work? You have existential questions with politics? If you feel that despair, you are not alone. Lets gather here and instead of trying to run away and fix the problem, lets move away from those solutionisms and stay with the trouble with our dis/inquiry. Lets do research which might be ecologically framed and culturally framed as katabasis. Going under and finding ways to go deep into the ground and honour ancestors, to listen beyond ourselves. We can call it individual or collective work, or human and non-human. But I just feel nothing is as isolated as we think it is. Sanctuary is making space for the world to exist.

CDC I feel civilisation has held us in a fixed grip for thousands of years, beyond even those centuries of the transatlantic slave trade, and when you consider this and the fact that slavery still exists widely in the world, you ask yourself the bigger question: why have human beings been slaves, or commanded them, for so long?

BA Im very shy about responding to why questions! The standard official explanation for what happened over 400 years to black bodies is that it was due to (human) evil or wickedness. I understand the legacies of such responses, but it does not feel generative for me. Its a conversation-stopper and doesnt do anything except label people, and might perpetuate the dynamics of the slave ship that feels so horrific to the imagination.

But if we consider that things are assemblages, acting upon other assemblages, suddenly theres somewhere to go that does not necessarily terminate prematurely at a moral judgment. When I touch the assemblage of the transatlantic slave trade that features heavily in my work, if you look at the ingredients that made it possible the Catholic enterprise of rationality that emerged from the Enlightenment, its ideologies and philosophies; sugar cane and its metabolism within human white European bodies; the climate that drove people away from chilly Europe to the sunny Caribbean and how assembling the pieces together and noticing how those ingredients interacted together became the conditions for slavery, it might free us and liberate us in ways that go beyond just answering why.

It helps to ask: if sugar was an active non-human agent in the proliferation of that economy, that arrangement of master and slave, then what kind of moves can we make today to make sure that doesnt happen? Then we talk beyond just active legislation, or healing people of their evil. We talk about meeting sugar cane, the idea that we are framed in unmasterable fields and forces that go beyond the liberal humanist project.

We need to create rituals of humility to know we are not masters of ourselves. Just framing it as something beyond us, without belittling accountability. Framing it as something that is more than human. That is what I am interested in as postactivism.

CDC It could be said that Dark Mountain was founded as a postactivist project, in that the art and writing it hosts is created by sitting with the trouble rather than fighting it. How do you define postactivism and how do you see it as a force within culture?

BA Its a pervasive myth that we are independent thinkers, that I think my thoughts, Charlotte thinks her thoughts, and that there are as many thoughts as there are people on the planet and that we all have our separate thoughts, that we act from some volitional force or agency that comes from within.

What escapes that analysis is that we are connected in very sticky ways. We actually think territorially, ecologically, we run, we hide, we look at people like us and we congregate together. And patterns and sticky formulas are at work that are occluded when we think of ourselves as individual activists. I bring that up because when we talk about activism today, it seems activism is colluding conspiratorially with the world it is trying to change. The way we tend to see it in the developing world, in the Global South, is that the very solutions passed down to us only deepen the problem we want to get rid of, so we tend to be stuck in a cycle of repeatability. The IMF comes down and says here is a structural readjustment programme, here is austerity, something to help your people, lets buy laptops for African children, so they can learn. And the laptops come and introduce new problems of their own.

I read somewhere that the West exports psychological and pathological categories. As a clinical psychologist I have gone into villages in Nigeria and been told: you are the expert, tell me whats wrong with me. What they were in fact saying was that since I was trained in Western psychology, I was superior to them, and their own indigenous experiments with being and becoming were discardable. The solution of my discipline and my expertise was supposed to cancel out the problem. It was just an allopathic response that compressed the problems and left the sickness intact.

I think activism is as materially complicit in the problems we are trying to solve, and as entangled as anything else. Postactivism is not a superior, spiritual way of responding. It is not saying here is a stream of thinking and acting, a way of behaving that will guarantee you utopia or a place of arrival. Postactivism is a democratising of responsivity. Its saying we have been stuck on a highway of responding but there are other ways that are not tethered to this highway, where we can investigate and which might lead to another kind of transformation.

So postactivism is in alliance with a different theory of change. We have thought change is what humans do. We are burdened with the idea of change, and feel we need to change the world. Posthumanism comes into the picture and tells us humans are not central to the world, we have never been central to the world, we did not create the world. We are always immersed in a field of differential becomings, what Deleuze would call transcendental materialism. We are not stable things. We are diffracted, porous and transcorporeal.

Postactivism is based on posthumanism. It is my way of saying that change is not human, it is not our work. We can only ally and build stronger coalitions for change with the world around us (and not just with humans). Postactivism is the opening to this. It is about cracks and faultlines and fissures. It is like a hungry teenager, who asks: what can we do with this crack? How might this help us to build a partnership with this alien over there, in order to ask complex and new questions about the world we are in? It is not about solutions, though solutions are welcome. It is about wonder, building new alliances for becoming different. Touching the material body of activism and allowing it to shudder.

CDC You said at the beginning of your course you deliberately pivoted its enquiry not within the United States, but in Africa. What was the reasoning behind this?

BA Empires colonise conversations about change. They capture conversations that might redeem it from what you call the holding station, and then take these conversations and put them in the family way. Soon the ways we speak about decolonisation and racial justice, which might otherwise ring true for other people and cultures and lead to new sites of shared power, become about how do we appeal to the powers that be, or use certain languages or phrases to signal I am woke, or woke enough. Soon, the nuances and complexities of navigating a difficult world are reduced to a few codes, a few linguistic choices, which Empire selects, and which others must adhere to in order to be righteous. So it becomes very territorial.

I am looking for conversations that are fugitive, that escape, that grant themselves permission to do what they want to do, and do not look towards the plantation, saying can you allow me to be seen? The fugitive does not want to be seen. And America is the most visible trope.

As such, I did this decentring for me, and to let our brothers and sisters in America know that they are not central to the world. You are not carrying the burden of change, you dont have to change us. The boundaries of America are not the boundaries of the world, you are just a small aspect of what is happening. That should be liberating. So I think I am being hospitable when I say it is not about you.

CDC What often happens regarding any conversation about race, or slavery or emancipation, is that it centres on the United States and thus limits our imagination and allows people to say in Europe, for example, well it didnt happen here, it happened in the colonies. As a result we dont get to look at this properly. So having the pivot of inquiry in Africa allows other kinds of knowing and awareness to happen. Which wouldnt have happened within a North American frame it would have become stuck in what you call the ethical monoculture, a Christian duality of right and wrong.

BA I dont think the pivot is even in Africa. Its off the coast of Africa, maybe somewhere off the Bight of Benin, in the Atlantic Ocean. Its definitely in the waters, where things are rippling and diffracting. Thats the site of the course, where there is no land yet.

The kings in Africa also sold the slaves; we also sold our brothers and sisters into slavery. That is one part of the conversation we need to have not that I am trying to create an equal culpability situation here. We are entangled in this as well.

CDC I sometimes find writers shy away from metaphysics or the work of transformation while those who are focused on consciousness work resist putting it into a creative or physical form, holding their knowing in a kind of abstract cloud. I feel everything needs to be spoken out loud, or danced, or cooked, earthed in some kind of way to be effective, to let these approaches become entangled as you say. Do you ever feel hemmed into a role of spiritual teacher?

BA I think people use me, as you use the future or food or a pen. The people that I sometimes work with use me as a magical Negro (laughs) because of the way I appear and because of my experiences as a black person. There is often a sense of just listen to what Bayo says which could be patronising. I dont want to be trapped there, into being a spiritual guru. I like to have a conversation, pose questions of my own. This is not a transmission from some ancestor, or angel, or alien, but a diffracted meeting of each other in the middle.

We are all on this slave ship. You might be on the upper deck but we are all in this holding station that pegs our bodies in place. The gift of this paradigm of diffraction, or this idea that things lose their edges, this relational ontology, is that it allows us to meet each other. As I said earlier, activism can become very industrial. The way we think about transformation is very categorical. You are an artist, you do artist stuff; you are a dancer, you dance into oblivion; you write about this and that, and it becomes an industry in itself, and modernity is quite happy with that. Its not scandalised about you doing your work.

CDC Mostly, it doesnt take any notice of it, Bayo!

BA It doesnt care, so long as you stay in your place. What scandalises modernity is when things spill. And facilitating spillage is good work. Diffraction allows me to read myth, through quantum dynamics, through performativity. When we see things through each other, that is when the new has a chance to emerge. So that is what we need to learn today, to become citizens of diffraction, to become fugitives.

CDC One aspect of the sanctuary which really grabbed me is that the site of transformation is where the real power is, where the change can happen, rather than dominating forces of civilisation which activism is always trying to defuse or stop or take over from. It explained to me why writers have always had a very bad deal, because they bring that to the fore, that change is always possible in any moment, the fact you can change, or that you are porous, or that something can come out of nothing, or that the immanent god you spoke of is always becoming, is always creating within us. Which is why writers are silenced and flung into gaol, because they are trying to stop that change from disrupting the fixed control of Empire.

BA In this quest to be seen, to be noticed, which in the Deleuzio-Guattarian literature might be indexed as the politics of recognition, can be found a different power that isnt tethered to being seen. There is historical precedent for this. When the slaves were crammed into a tight space, they tried to escape. There are accounts of their efforts to take over the ship and wrest power away from the captain, but the ships themselves were designed to keep them at bay; certain structures would demarcate where the non-citizens were, and those who needed rehabilitation and those who were embodiments of purity.

The slave ship worked against them. Its almost as if their efforts to escape only enforced the trade, it made it stronger, because the slavers could get together and say, why dont we make the space smaller, dehumanise them further? To keep their property busy and sellable, they even invented practices like dancing the slave. The slavers did this both for entertainment and to keep these appropriated bodieseconomically viable.

The beautiful tradition of capoeira, the dance encoded with martial arts, which is famous in Brazil, could not have happened without the boot of the oppressor on the necks of the slave. The limbo dance is the slave trying to navigate the structure of the slave ship. And I can give many more examples of how oppression became the alchemy for transformation. How disarticulated bodies became portals for other ways of being: in dance, music, rituals, ways of interacting with the world, religions, spiritual systems.

This is why the elders said the trickster, travelled with them. The trickster works in places you do not expect generativity. You expect death and dismal silence, but there life springs. So to go back to our original conversation about death and dying, modernity has framed death and dying as eternal silence. But through the eyes of the glitch, the eyes of the trickster, death is an invitation, a lively vocation to recreate, reformulate and use our porous skins, our disarticulated bodies, to become different.

Bayo Akomolafe is one of the keynote speakers for the upcomingBorrowed Time summiton death, dying and change,hosted by art.earth on 31st October 2021

Dark Mountain: Issue 19 is available from the online shop here

Teaser photo credit: Painting of the slave deck of theMarie Sraphique. By Desertarun1 Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=108838114

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When the Bones of our Ancestors Speak to Us: A Fugitive Conversation with Bayo Akomolafe - Resilience

Medical student connects with dying patient, chronicles the experience – UC Davis Health

(SACRAMENTO)

Ross Perry grew up determined to become a politician.

I was always a pretty gregarious child, and I didnt mind public speaking, he recalled of his middle- and high-school years in leadership roles and drama. So I thought I would go into politics for that reason.

But after he left his hometown of Santa Rosa and took political science courses at UCLA, he changed his mind. His impression was that politics was a morally complicated field full of opinions. Instead, he majored in psychology, taught English in South Korea, and worked for a chiropractor.

A few years after college, he decided he wanted to become a doctor and studied in a pre-medical post-baccalaureate program at Mills College in Oakland. He then found his way to UC Davis, where he expects to graduate from medical school next spring.

He doesnt regret dropping his political pursuit.

Because now, at the end of the day, I dont have to sell an opinion, Perry said. I just have to sell people on the importance of their own health goals and how we can together help them achieve those goals.

During his four years at the UC Davis School of Medicine, Perry has been a fervent supporter of promoting wellness among his classmates and the community.

That passion earned him distinction as a Blum Fellow in 2019, a UC Davis humanitarian award. The fellows program granted Perry $2,000, which he used to start a walking program to help prevent diabetes among patients of Paul Hom student-run clinic. Perry has spent many hours at the clinic volunteering.

At the programs first meeting in pre-COVID 2019, dozens of Walk with a Doc participants exercised as a group, watched a healthy cooking demonstration, and received $20 grocery vouchers to use at the Oak Park Farmers Market. The grant also paid for exercise equipment for patients.

Honestly, the reason I felt inspired to do these things at Davis is, in part, because Im just surrounded by the amazing diversity of students who are doing these amazing things; theres so much advocacy, Perry said. He then quipped: Its a wonder any of them have time to study.

In the past two years, Perry has earned a much-deserved reputation for providing compassionate care to his patients.

In fact, this past summer, the Arnold P. Gold Foundation awarded Perry the top prize in a national essay contest for his poignant account of caring for an oncology patient who later died.

Perry, a childhood cancer survivor who aspires to specialize in pediatrics and palliative care, won the foundations 2021 Hope Babette Tang Humanism in Healthcare Essay Contest for his paper, Dear Reader. The contest asked medical and nursing students to engage in a reflective writing exercise that illustrates an experience in which they or a team member worked to ensure humanistic care. It is named for Hope Babette Tang-Goodwin, who was an assistant professor of pediatrics at Columbia University.

Perrys 850-word essay recounts his interaction with a 32-year-old man who lacks family support and is being treated at UC Davis Medical Center for a recurrence of cancer.

Perry starts the essay pleading with the reader to walk a mile in the shoes of his patient, who at one point gets discharged with a urine collection bag and a colostomy bag. You are complicated now. You are messy. But you are alive, Perry writes.

Perry tells how he met the patient as a third-year medical student and felt ill-prepared to provide care.

It is day two of my six weeks on the wards, and you are far too complicated for me. I am a deer in the headlights, and you are a sixteen-wheeler with the brakes cut loose. Still, they put me on your case, Perry writes.

Perry starts to bond with the patient.

We talk through many afternoons. You are hungry to be heard, and so I listen. I hear about your travels. Your jobs. Your regrets. Your mistakes. Your fears. Your hopes. Your plans. Slowly, your humanity unfolds itself, and I begin to see a side of you no scan could ever capture.

Even after Perrys six-week rotation ends, he occasionally visits his former patient. He writes him a card, tells him it was my greatest privilege to take care of him.

You were my first real teacher, Perry states. And in the end, although I could not save you, I think I made you realize how much you matter. And I think that might be enough.

Perry thanks the patient and calls him his friend.

To you I dedicate this essay, he writes. Even in the age of medical miracles, Perry emphasizes, there is still no intervention more powerful than a genuine human connection.

He concludes that the soul, heals not by human medicine, but by human kindness. When a patient passes away, Perry declares, we often wish we had practiced a little bit less of the former and a whole lot more of the latter. May I never forget that. May I never forget you.

The essay will be published in an upcoming edition of Academic Medicine, the journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges. Perry also received $1,000.

He said he was surprised and honored to win the contest and hopes readers can learn from his challenging experience.

One of his mentors can relate.

Ross seems drawn to difficult situations, in a positive way, said Internal Medicine Clinical Professor Rachel Lucatorto.

The first day Lucatorto and Perry worked together, the professor took him to a comfort care patient whose condition was deteriorating. Perry and Lucatorto stayed until the patient died an hour later. Perry then stayed longer, after the patients wife and daughter arrived.

It meant everything to Perry to enter the familys emotional space, Lucatorto said.

While his behavior and presence were remarkable in this situation, it was also his reflection after the experience that impressed me, Lucatorto said. He completely appreciated what a big deal and even an honor it was to be present.

In addition to volunteering at Paul Hom Clinic, Perry helped found the School of Medicines Academic Medicine student interest group. He was also elected to the position of co-wellness chair of his class, a four-year responsibility.

Perry is also is known for organizing a popular ping pong tournament and other wellness activities at the School of Medicine, along with Sharad Jain, the associate dean for students, and Maggie Rea, a clinical psychologist who is director of student and resident wellness.

Focusing attention on student wellness, Jain said, shows that Perry is thinking of the future: Theres a lot of literature thats coming out on physician burnout, and it leads to depression and dissatisfaction with jobs and medication errors.

Jain added: We want our students to learn good habits now that theyre going to carry forth.

When Perry spends time away from his fourth-year clinical duties he enjoys writing poetry, playing sports, and backpacking with his wife Alyssa. Lately, hes getting extra exercise by frequently running after the couples 15-month-old daughter, Frances.

In less than five months, Perry will know which residency program hell join to continue his dream of becoming a pediatrician and a physician dedicated to helping patients deal with their serious illnesses.

And although hes done with the notion of entering politics, he doesnt completely dismiss the idea. Like any good politician, hell never say never to future possibilities.

"I may go back into politics one day, Perry said, but I hope it's after many years of direct patient care and community advocacy."

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Medical student connects with dying patient, chronicles the experience - UC Davis Health

International Symposium on Sorgner’s "We Have Always Been Cyborgs"Back to Events – Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies

Organized by JCUsGuarini Institute for Public Affairs(in cooperation with theHistory and Humanities Department), the InternationalSymposium on SorgnersWe Have Always Been Cyborgswill bring together a group of internationally renowned thinkers, academics, and intellectualsto discuss, analyze and reflect upon suggestions about values, norms, and utopia, as they were presented inProfessor Stefan Lorenz Sorgners latest monograph entitledWe Have Always Been Cyborgs(Bristol University Press 2022).

According to Julian Savulescu from the University of Oxford,We Have Always Been Cyborgsis an eye-opening, wide-ranging and all-inclusive study of transhumanism. Sorgners account avoids both the utopian trap and the bogeyman spectre. He makes a compelling case for placing ourselves on the transhuman spectrum. How we continue to use technologies is in our hands. Sorgners book is both a comprehensive introduction to transhumanist thought and a clear-sighted vision for its future realization. N. Katherine Hayles from the University of California, Los Angeles adds further that With an encyclopedic knowledge of transhumanism and a deep philosophical grounding, especially in Nietzschean thought, Stefan Sorgner tackles some of the most challenging ethical issues currently discussed, including gene editing, digital data collection, and life extension, with uncommon good sense and incisive conclusions. This study is one of the most detailed and comprehensive analyses available today. Highly recommended for anyone interested in transhumanist/posthumanist ideas and in these issues generally.

The blurbs by Katherine Hayles and Julian Savulescu provide an excellent summary of the myriad of topics, which will be analysed, discussed, and reflected upon in this ground-breaking international symposium. The discussants, who agreed to respond to Sorgners reflections are world-leading academics in the fields of political sciences, applied ethics, theology, as well as philosophy, i.e. Jennifer Merchant from the University of Paris 2, Benedikt Paul Gcke from the University of Bochum, Fr. Philip Larrey from the Pontifica Univerity Lateranense in Rome, Sarah Chan from the University of Edinburgh, Maurizio Balistreri from theUniversity of Turin, and Piergiorgio Donatelli from the Sapienza in Rome. Thus, the state of the arts of intellectual exchanges on transhumanism, critical posthumanism, and the ethics of gene technologies, digitalisation, and human-machine-interfaces will be critically dealt with during this event.

Program

You can access to more detailed information about the speakers in the file Speakers Biographies file located in the Additional Info tab down below.

Please send an email to reserve your spot and use your John Cabot University email address. If you are part of our study abroad programs, please state your university.

For those who cannot attend in person, the event will be streamed live onMetahumanities YouTube channel.

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International Symposium on Sorgner's "We Have Always Been Cyborgs"Back to Events - Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies