I don't spend ALL my time watching and promoting shows, but there are some great ones that can inspire us to do good, to be grateful, to enjoy life, come what may. The Pianist of Willesden Lane, a one woman show. "Holding fast to the dreams of concert success, a young Jewish pianist escapes Vienna via Kindertransport, arriving in England at the outset of WWII. In a stunning performance, concert pianist Mona Golabek recounts her mother's poignant saga of hope and resilience (also told in her book, which I'm reading), underscored with extraordinary music from Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, Debussy and more. It celebrates the power of music to transcend even the darkest times." |
The Liberation of Auschwitz: January 27, 1945
On January 27, 1945, 75-years ago this month, the Soviet Army pried open the gates of Auschwitz concentration camp in German-occupied Poland and liberated some 7,000 emaciated prisoners. About 58,000 others had been hurriedly marched westward before the Soviet Army approached. Auschwitz, the German word for the Polish town of Oswiecim, was the site of the largest Nazi concentration camp during WWII. It consisted of a concentration camp, a labor camp, and large gas chambers and crematoria. More than 1.3 million people were sent to Auschwitz between 1940-1945. Some 1.1 million of them were killed. Nine in 10 were Jews.
I watched a local production of "Oslo," another powerful play.
JT Rogers’s play, is the story of a peace process; it is almost wall to wall men in suits. But the events it elucidates are riveting. Improbably, the secret talks that led to the 1993 Oslo accords, the first agreement ever struck between the Palestine Liberation Organisation and the state of Israel, were organised not through official channels but by a Norwegian academic and his diplomat wife. The negotiators were served waffles. The US was not told of the encounters. Yet later that year Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin were shaking hands on the lawn of the White House. There were sobs of joyful surprise from witnesses as agreement was reached. The sobs provoked by watching this now are bitter: by the end of the decade the accord was in tatters.
I watched a local production of "Oslo," another powerful play.
JT Rogers’s play, is the story of a peace process; it is almost wall to wall men in suits. But the events it elucidates are riveting. Improbably, the secret talks that led to the 1993 Oslo accords, the first agreement ever struck between the Palestine Liberation Organisation and the state of Israel, were organised not through official channels but by a Norwegian academic and his diplomat wife. The negotiators were served waffles. The US was not told of the encounters. Yet later that year Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin were shaking hands on the lawn of the White House. There were sobs of joyful surprise from witnesses as agreement was reached. The sobs provoked by watching this now are bitter: by the end of the decade the accord was in tatters.
Martin Luther King |
The following (from CNN)
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was barreling toward the climax of his greatest speech (at the 1963 March on Washington) when he made a split-second decision that would seal his place in history. Most people recall what the cameras caught: King declaring "I have a dream!" before 250,000 jubilant supporters at the March on Washington during a muggy, sun-splashed summer day. But there was one crucial exchange that the cameras didn't catch. King had planned to cap his speech by exhorting people "to go back to our communities as members of the international association for the advancement of creative dissatisfaction." Yet he hesitated when he got to that line in the speech because it just didn't feel right. And then he heard a voice from behind him. It was the great gospel singer Mahalia Jackson, who was sitting nearby."Tell them about the dream, Martin! Tell them about the dream," she shouted.
I love these powerful quotes at the National Museum of African American History. My grand-daughter and her family have the opportunity to visit some wonderful places in their few months in Washington DC. I hope to visit them while they are there. Her mom is supervising BYU interns in DC this semester.
Elder Gary E. Stevenson joined the Salt Lake City branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Monday to celebrate the work of civil rights hero Martin Luther King Jr.
In his keynote luncheon address at the Little America Hotel, Apostle Stevenson of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints asked “that we fulfill the invitation of the Savior to love one another, for love is of God. ... May we all strive to be our brother’s keeper, to foster civility and to emulate Christlike love.”
“We are all part of the same divine family,” Elder Stevenson said. “Our well-being is tied to our neighbor’s well-being.”
Elder Stevenson concluded his remarks by reading a Book of Mormon verse that fixes on the fundamental equality of all men and women in the eyes of God: “He inviteth … all to come unto him and partake of his goodness; and he denieth none that come unto him, black and white, bond and free, male and female; … and all are alike unto God” (2 Nephi 26:33).
Our Saturday and Sunday semi-annual stake (several LDS congregations) conference emphasized service. Liz Brimhall, who directed the above community choir, as director of community service for the stake, counseled us to reach out, press forward with love, build long-term and meaningful relationships with a couple organizations; we don't need to add extra activities, just incorporate more service into them. Russ Hancock said accepting and doing hard things for the Lord and for others will often be the source of our greatest blessings. Our wonderful Stake President Dow Wilson (who with his 2 counselors are nearing the conclusion of their 9-year term of service), said that our daily opportunities to interact with others has sacred potential. Sometimes the vertical relationship with God precedes the horizontal relationship with others. Sometimes the horizontal comes first. Our horizontal relationships are better if our life is in order with God. He will save us, bring us comfort and good cheer if we hang in there! Elders Cook and Richards have been serving in our ward/ local congregation, as well as Sister Cariazo and Folkman. We love them and take turns feeding them dinner. These super intelligent elders are also good musicians! How nice to bring talent as well as faith, dedication and hard work to the missionary effort.
Palo Alto friends Ken and Sue Allen are about to embark on a 2-year mission in the mission office of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Durban, South Africa. The new Durban Temple will be dedicated just after they arrive, on February 16, 2020. How grateful I am for our forefathers who established at great cost, an amazing country based on wise principles, with a system of government, with checks and balances, with the possibility of changes as we adapt to new circumstances,. It is now our responsibility to put these principles into practice, as the world continues to change so rapidly. I'm grateful for the Hamiltons and Washingtons, the Lincolns, the Martin Luther Kings, the writers, artists, sculptors, the leaders today, the ordinary citizens like us. May we listen to the spirit of God, who created us all, who loves us all and is no respecter of persons. |