PutChildrenFirst.org

I’ve been reading about the link between autism and vaccinations lately. It’s alarming and maddening. When I was a kid back in the early 80s, children received around 10 vaccinations. The number of vaccinations today that are recommended is 36–quite a significant increase.

Chad and I have a new hero as of late–RFK Jr. We’ve been admiring the work he does as an Environmental lawyer. It was interesting to discover that he also has spoken out about the harmful levels of mercury in vaccinations. You can access some of his articles through this website that addresses this issue. www.putchildrenfirst.org

 

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Invisible Children

February 1 was the deadline for this year’s Invisible Children fund raising campaign. Our Schools for Schools club at my school ended up raising over 5,500 dollars! We did so through 2 car washes, numerous Chick-Fil-A sales on campus, a change-for-change contest amongst the grades, and a requirement for club members to fill a plastic bottle full of change. I hope and pray this money can be used in a fruitful way for the Ugandan children who attend the Awere school.

What’s even more encouraging is the recent peace talks that have been happening between the Ugandan government and the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA). The LRA is the rebel group responsible for the perpetuation of this 20 year civil war that has victimized so many Ugandan citizens and stolen countless children and forced them to be soldiers. Read the BBC article here to learn about the talks that have been happening in just the past few days.

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Uncle Tom’s Cabin

I read Uncle Tom’s Cabin for the first time three and a half years ago. I started right before I left Amsterdam, and finished it after I returned to the States. It is, to date, my favorite book. I appreciate so much the character Tom who has a walk with God that is extraordinarily exemplary–he is a man, enslaved by whites, who responds to his situation and to his oppressors with compassion, love, and forgiveness. He prays for their souls, and weeps for their brokenness. While I draw strength and inspiration by his witness, this attitude that he portrays did garner criticism from African-Americans who felt that Tom was too passive, and should have shown more dissatisfaction with his position. In fact, to call someone an “Uncle Tom,” is an insult that connotes a black who is submissive and content to be in a subservient position. As I read the book, I don’t see Tom as content with his position in society–he deeply mourns the brokenness of his situation–but his faith allows him to withstand the horrors of slavery as he trusts that his God is preparing a place of peace for him in His heavenly Kingdom. Tom understands that the whites who commit these crimes against Him do so because they do not know the love of Christ and are in spiritual darkness. Ergo, Tom seeks to demonstrate that love to them, and actively chooses to live by the way of the cross, which includes loving those who hatefully persecute him.

When I agreed to teach American Literature this year, I was most excited about teaching this book. We are in the middle of it now. I have had the chance to do some research on the author, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and have really enjoyed learning about this woman of God who responded to the call on her life to use her writing talents to speak God’s truth about the slavery issue that was poisoning the U.S. in the 1800s. I was reading through the book Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Mid-Nineteenth Century United States by Moira Davison Reynolds and was blown away when I read about Harriet’s experience that led to her beginning the book.

“According to members of the Stowe family, at church Harriet had a vision. She saw a Negro being flogged viciously at the order of his master. As the man died, he prayed that those who had wronged him would be forgiven. Harriet participated in the communion service in a mechanical, distracted manner, and afterwards walked home. Later that day she wrote out her vision, using names. The saint-like man was Uncle Tom, the owner was Simon Legree, and his henchmen were Sambo and Quimbo. Then she added something: the Christ-like action of Uncle Tom made converts of Sambo and Quimbo.”

Reading that Harriet, a Christian, received this vision moved my heart to praise God. It may seem odd to think that one way God responded to the slavery issue was by moving one of His children to write a book that would challenge and anger people unto laboring and speaking out for change, but that is exactly what I think He did. Not to say that the book was the one and only thing that caused the end of slavery, but certainly it was used as one way that contributed to the dissolve of slavery. God heard the cries of the slaves and He responded. He demonstrated His faithfulness to justice when He delivered the slaves from the institution of slavery. As Harriet reminded us in her preface,

“…the great cause of human liberty is in the hands of one, of whom it is said:

“He shall not fail nor be discouraged

Till He have set judgment in the earth.

He shall deliver the needy when he crieth,

The poor, and him that hath no helper.

He shall redeem their sould from deceit and violence,

And precious shall their blood be in His sight.”

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Ash Wednesday

Yesterday was Ash Wednesday. Now that I am part of the Anglican community–a community that observes this day–I, along with millions of other Christians around the world, went to worship God and prepare my heart for the liturgical season of Lent. Receiving the ashes on my forehead was an interesting experience for me. I was taken aback when, as the deacon used his thumb to make a cross of ashes, said, “From dust you came, and to dust you shall return.” It made me instantly uncomfortable to think about becoming dust. This discomfort I felt is related to the general dismay I feel towards death and my own struggle to overcome the fear of death. Ultimately though, this poignant reminder of my mortality was a humbling one. One that reminded me that I have been created miraculously; one that reminded me that despite my flesh one day dying, I belong to a God with the power to resurrect me.

Now that we are in the season of Lent, I feel contented to know that I have set apart these upcoming weeks to be purposefully meditative on the things of God and my relationship with Him.

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In honor

I’ve had the privilege to use some of MLK’s writings in my classroom this year. He is one of the most spiritually lucid men that I’ve ever read.  Here is a quote from his letter from Birmingham Jail that speaks of a standard that, as a Christian, I find myself accountable to uphold.

excerpt from “Letter from Birmingham Jail” by Martin Luther King Junior

Moreover, I am cognizant of the interrelatedness of all communities and states. I cannot sit idly by in Atlanta and not be concerned about what happens in Birmingham. Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. Never again can we afford to live with the narrow, provincial “outside agitator” idea.”

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The Kite Runner

At the urging of my fellow English teacher, Erin, and my student who I adore because she adores English class, I read The Kite Runner. My student, having read and loved the book herself, very much wanted me to read it and brought me in her copy to borrow. It was a really cool experience to have the English student recommending and lending a book to the English teacher. I brought it with me to my parent’s house for the holidays, and engorged its near-400 pages in less than 3 days.

My review of Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner:

The story begins with our protagonist, Amir, a child of ten, living luxuriously in Kabul, Afghanistan circa 1970. These days, I learned, were a fruitful time in Afghan history, the days pre-Taliban. Amir lives with his philanthropic, widely revered father, Baba, and in a hut on their property lives Baba’s lifelong servant, Ali, and Ali’s son, Hassan, who is a year younger than Amir. Hassan is Amir’s best friend, although Amir never quite admits that to himself or to others due to the fact that Hassan is a Hazara, a race of people looked down upon by the Afghans. To the reader, Hassan is immediately adorable–he has an unfettered loyalty to Amir, an infinite propensity to forgive, and he is the fastest “kite runner,” which means that when a kite is brought down during a kiting competition, he can track the falling kite with more success than anyone. As Amir takes the reader into various engaging stories, situations, and recollections of his childhood, we become acutely aware of his shortcomings: his cowardice, which glower in a sharp contrast to Hassan’s endearing qualities, and his insecurities that are constantly triggered by Baba’s near-rejection of him. In Amir’s attempts to be embraced wholly by his distant father, he goes to lengths that are both pitiable, reprehensible, and that ultimately leave him haunted and disgusted by his actions. In his suffering, and as he learns to deal with himself, a self he abhors, I found myself aching with Amir– for who can’t relate and bemoan their past and events that happened that we forever long to go back and change, but tragically can’t?

The story fluidly takes us into Amir’s adulthood where he is living in California after he and Baba escaped the Taliban regime years before. Here, Amir pursues his writing passion, one of his passions that was never quite understood or accepted by Baba. Amir marries, has success in his writing career, but is still unable to free himself from his long-past transgressions. Fortunately, and as with all truly good stories, an opportunity comes for Amir to find redemption when he is phoned back to Afghanistan and he finally finds himself willing to step outside of his weaknesses in order to “be good again.” After years of living in shame and self-contempt, Amir willingly enters into multiple dangerous and sacrificial situations in order to be a man that he can live with. In one scene, Amir comes face to face with his and Hassan’s childhood tormentor, a neo-Nazi maniac, named Assef, and is able to conjure up the courage to make a moral–and violent– stand against Assef’s torturous actions against Hassan’s son.There are ways that the idealistic reader will be left disappointed: Hassan and Amir don’t get the chance to meet as adults, and the while the novel ends with hope, it does not evade the reality that life does not always leave relationships squarely worked out. A deeply visceral, emotive novel, The Kite Runner adeptly accomplishes multiple tasks: it exposes the foreign reader to the Afghan world, it connects the reader with their own nagging sins and their consequences, and it leaves the reader hopeful that, within a lifetime, God will give us opportunities to transcend our shortcomings and become someone better.

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advent

 

Imagine perfection and He is there

 

It has been a blessed Advent season for me as I have been reminded again and again about the wonder of Christ’s arrival on earth. What has been even more exciting is to ponder His second coming. What a gift God has given us–the ability to imagine what it will look like and feel like when He returns and establishes His eternal Kingdom. To be able to go to that place and think of all the wondrous possibilities is truly a deep source of hope and comfort. He has not abandoned us. He will deliver us from evil. We will not always hurt and long and suffer.

He is coming again.

 

Maranatha…..Our Lord come

 

 

 

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power to the people

The Just $6 Campaign has a great idea to allow voters to regain the power, and take it away from the private interest groups who end up “buying” our elected officials. Here’s an article about the nonpartisan movement:

Just $6 Campaign Announces Support for Fair Elections Now Act
Nonpartisan Organization Says Bill Upholds Free Speech
Concord, NH. – Americans for Campaign Reform (ACR), who launched the “Just $6” grassroots movement for public funding, has announced its support for the Fair Elections Now Act that proposes voluntary public funding for all Senate races. Senators Dick Durbin (D-IL) and Arlen Specter (R-PA) introduced the bipartisan legislation as a way to restore public confidence in the election process.

The legislation would create a voluntary system through which participating Senate candidates––those who establish their credibility by collecting enough qualifying contributions and who then pledge not to accept private contributions ––would receive public funds for primary and general elections. Participants would also be eligible for free media vouchers and discounted commercial advertising rates.

John Rauh, ACR’s founder and president, believes the bill is a well-crafted and common sense approach to returning control of our national agenda to voters. “Imagine how much stronger our democracy will be when we eliminate the influence of big money on our government. It’s high time that we fix the most fundamental flaw in the way we pick our leaders and enact voluntary public funding,” Rauh said.

Read the rest of the article on the Just $6 website.

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Mark Twain

Today I began to prepare lessons for The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Somehow I have managed to get this far in life without ever having read this classic. From my cursory study today, my interest has been piqued. Here is a quote of Mark Twain’s that I read today that contributed to my excitement to learn more about him and read his book.

Patriotism “is a word which always commemorates a robbery. There isn’t a foot of land in the world which doesn’t represent the ousting and re-ousting of a long line of successive ‘owners’ who each in turn, as ‘patriots,’ with proud swelling hearts defended it against the next gang of ‘robbers’ who came to steal it and did—and became swelling-hearted patriots in their turn.”

“I have no race prejudices… All that I care to know is that a man is a human being – that is enough for me; he can’t be any worse.”

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The Scarlet Letter

My 11th grade American Literature students just finished The Scarlet Letter. Overall, I would say that they didn’t enjoy it. The language obscured the meaning for them, and I would compensate for this with in-depth class discussions. They were slightly taken in by the scandalous love affair. I read it in high school, but as I approached the book 10 years later as a teacher, I had no expectations, no memories, and no real associations with the book. At the tail end of teaching it, I can say assuredly that I loved the book this time around. Reading it as an adult was a much more meaningful experience than when I had read it in high school. I’ve found this concept to be true many a time while teaching, and while it makes my job more fulfilling and exciting for me, it also leaves me with a somewhat defeatist attitude in terms of what I’m actually bestowing upon my students. Here’s my logic: I don’t remember much of what I learned in high school–I feel that it is only as a result of teaching that I’ve been forced to internalize the ideas and knowledge that I must have only committed to short term memory in high school. So if this is my case, I assume that this will be the case for my students, and this line of thinking is discouraging. I find some semblance of peace in the refuge of this thought: While they may not remember exactly what they learned or what a book was about, I’m involved in training their brains in how to learn, and how to think critically.

So if any of you read The Scarlet Letter in high school and hated it or don’t remember it, may I suggest revisiting it as an adult.

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