Archive for February, 2007

Learning from Origami

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

I’m on the road a lot these days (catch me in Philadelphia next month), which gives me the opportunity to consume media products I don’t seem to have time (or appetite) for at home.
Last week at the University of Oregon I watched “The Today Show” each morning as I dressed. The entire time I [...]

Remembering Rene Cassin

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

On the Gregorian calendar, today is the yahrtzeit (the anniversary) of the passing in 1976 of Rene Cassin, a French human rights activist and an author of the UN’s masterpiece, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
That noble document contains a single line articulating the right to culture:

Loving Witness

Tuesday, February 13th, 2007

What does it take to heal social trauma?
Like a lot of Jews of her generation, my maternal grandmother (may she rest in peace) was so repelled by all things German that she refused even to ride in a Volkswagen. She’d emigrated to this country long before World War II, but when that war was over, [...]

Enough

Friday, February 9th, 2007

Life brings me many opportunities to talk with people who are serious about their work in the world, work that almost always involves some form of healing. Their lives are very different, but their dilemmas are often the same. Almost all of the teachers, therapists, community artists and activists I meet torture themselves about whether [...]

Human Nature

Wednesday, February 7th, 2007

More and more, the things I care about seem to turn on a single question: can we human beings choose our actions, or are we in some very real sense controlled by other forces (whether our own brain chemicals or the commands of those in authority)?
The oft-cited behavorial studies of Stanley Milgram in the [...]