Archives for December 2007

070: Happy New Year!

    HAPPY NEW YEAR!
    (And don’t miss the end of today’s story — because it contains a special holiday greeting from an old friend in Switzerland!)

    FIRST, HERE’S THE NEWS: We’re expanding in 2008 in exciting new ways, thanks to the many professional colleagues, everyday readers and kind supporters who’ve linked their growing spiritual networks together through ReadTheSpirit.
    Faith is all about connection — and that’s also the fuel behind new forms of media that are reaching millions of people around the world. So, rather than fearing the turbulent transformation of modern media, the truth is that people of faith are especially gifted at swimming in these stormy seas. We understand connections.
    But faith is also about choices!
    As we round the corner of the calendar into yet another New Year — what doorways lie ahead of you? Which ones will you enter in 2008?

    This month, we hope you’ll open at least 2 doorways with us!
    One doorway into ReadTheSpirit — one “landing page” — will remain these Monday-through-Friday ReadTheSpirit stories, interviews, book and movie reviews, plus our popular quizzes — and, of course, your feedback as readers that we encourage and that we fold back into the creative stories on our Web site! (That’s what the holiday greeting is all about at the end of this story.)

     But a BRAND NEW doorway — a new “landing page” starting today — is Interfaith Heroes. In recent weeks, you’ve probably already heard about this special global project to celebrate men and women throughout history who made new kinds of spiritual connections to  promote peace in the world.
    The “news” of this new observance has been spreading widely, even before this opening day! By New Year’s Eve, more than 2,500 Web pages around the world carried extensive news items or at least some mention of “Interfaith Heroes Month.”
    Click Here and you’ll jump to the new daily landing page to see for yourself. We hope you’ll enjoy those stories, too, each day.

    If you’re a regular reader, please choose which stories interest you most. Jump around the entire ReadTheSpirit site. Some stories will touch you personally — others might seem more remote. When you find a gem, invite friends, neighbors or members of your congregation or book-discussion group to meet you online and read along with you — following your lead through any of our exciting doorways.

    ONE IMPORTANT CLARIFICATION: Many readers prefer to use our free, daily Email or RSS service, which handily delivers our daily stories to your “inbox.” If you already use that service — or care to sign up for it now (on the right-hand side of our page) — then you will ALSO need to sign up for this same service on the new Interfaith Heroes landing page as well. We are not automatically sending the Heroes stories to ReadTheSpirit subscribers — or vice versa. We’re leaving the selection of email and RSS feeds in your hands.

    NOW, we’ve waited long enough for that holiday greeting, so let’s turn to that, shall we?
    This is a wonderful gift, created and sent to us from the Swiss psychologist Ernst Meier, who ReadTheSpirit Editor David Crumm and Publisher John Hile met while covering a pilgrimage to the centuries-old Iona Abbey off the coast of Scotland this autumn.
    The resulting five-part series of stories about the pilgrimage — complete with photos, video, slide shows and reviews of great books about Iona and Celtic spirituality — became one of our highest-readership projects this fall. It also expanded our readership in the UK, Europe and lands often associated with the UK — Australia and even New Zealand.
    What touched readers around the world was the vibrant, honest reflections of ordinary men and women going through a spiritual transformation that has touched thousands of lives over many centuries.
    Read the series, if you missed it — or, perhaps, revisit it again if you don’t recall it. Click Here to jump to the first chapter of the 5-part series, where you’ll find an easily clickable index to the whole series. Ernst appeared in Chapters 2 and 5. Or, you can jump directly to an audio-visual slide show we produced for Chapter 2, featuring an interview with Ernst.

    AFTER THE SERIES APPEARED, it was Ernst’s evocative voice in his slideshow online that touched a good number of our readers.
    In addition to his professional work in Switzerland, Ernst occasionally travels around the world to closely observe traditional spiritual rituals, shrines and pilgrimage routes. One route that he has walked more than once, in his life, is the great medieval pilgrimage road known as The Way of St. James.
    This “route” actually is a network of famous roads, centuries old, that pilgrims walked from many points in Europe to reach the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in northern Spain. Traditional accounts say that St. James, the son of Zebedee and one of Jesus’ disciples, was buried there and that the spot was associated with miracles.
    Ernst loves this particular route and has photographed sections of it in his homeland of Switzerland. As a gift to English-speaking readers, Ernst (whose home language is German) selected a popular English prayer about roads to place into a visual image of the route near his home.
    It’s a gorgeous photo — and, if you click on the smaller version below — a bigger version should pop up on your computer screen. Feel free to share it with friends as a New Year’s prayer for all pilgrims seeking world peace in this new year.
     In sending us all this particular gift in this way — Ernst Meier has demonstrated, again, the core values of this ReadTheSpirit project. May we all follow such roads — and open doorways together in 2008!

.
COME BACK TOMORROW for our first Conversation of 2008 With Edward Beck, the best-selling author whose book, “Soul Provider,” is also a perfect way to spiritually jump-start your new year! You won’t want to miss that story!

PLEASE — Tell us what you think. Click on the “Comment” link at the end of our stories online. Or, Click here to email me, David Crumm.

How Interfaith Heroes Month Came to Be

1st Interfaith Heroes Month runs ’til Jan 31!


Here’s how BOLD we are in our new approach to faith:
    We’re launching a new global observance! It’s
Interfaith Heroes Month, which will be observed every January for 31
days — expanding upon the U.S. holiday honoring Dr. Martin Luther King
so that we can more broadly highlight the importance of building
bridges as peacemakers in our troubled world.
    How do we
celebrate? By inviting people across the U.S. and around the world to
read 31 daily, inspirational stories about men and women like King and
his mentor Mahatma Gandhi who reached out across religious boundaries
to build stronger communities. ReadTheSpirit is producing the online
home for all of this at a new “landing page” within our family of Web
pages: www.InterfaithHeroes.info
   We have also published the companion book, “Interfaith Heroes,”
written by the Rev. Daniel L. Buttry, an international peace negotiator
for American Baptist Churches. The book is an ongoing extension of this
month — packed with extras, like questions for daily reflection, group
study guides and tips for making interfaith connections where you live.
Click on the book cover or title to buy a copy for use in any season
this year. It’s available through the regular Amazon online store.
    The heart of the celebration is right here
in January: all 31 stories appearing free online day by day — along
with listings of events to attend and invitations to add your voice to
the global conversation!

YOU
are an essential part of this celebration! Each day at our site, we’re
inviting men, women and young people to add their personal reflections.

  AND, we’re inviting YOU — as an individual, a class, a group or a
congregation — to nominate the 31 “heroes” we will honor in January
2009. So, your voice can be heard around the world!   

IN
MICHIGAN, the home state where an array of longstanding peacemakers,
journalists and community leaders joined in launching this new global
observance — excitement is growing.
    By January 1, nearly 2,500
other Web pages around the world carried news items or mentions of this
new observance! That’s an inspiring sign of hope in itself!
    The
major organization behind this new observance and the research that
went into the first 31 inspirational stories is the Michigan Roundtable
for Diversity and Inclusion’s nationally known Interfaith Partners organization.
This pioneering interfaith group sponsors and coordinates a broad array
of diversity programs that are reaching out across the U.S.
    Here
at ReadTheSpirit, we’re partnering to publish these daily stories,
provide the online, interactive experience for all of us — and we’re
publishing the new companion book, too.
    Another major partner is WWJ NewsRadio
950 AM, the giant CBS news-radio station in southeast Michigan, which
plans to highlight these heroes and the ongoing observance throughout
the month of January.
    If you’re a news media professional in another part of the U.S., Email David Crumm
to learn more about the unfolding schedule. This event will spread out
around the world in coming years — as have many other seasonal
observances and holidays that began with grassroots creativity in one
corner of our nation or another.
    Already, this is a
first-of-its-kind partnership between media, educators, religious and
community leaders to make a spiritual difference in the world!
    Don’t miss it — because you’ve got an essential role to play!

Coming in February:

Our Lent: “Things We Carry”

An entirely new approach to inspirational reading in this season
marked by nearly 2 billion Christians around the world. Stay tuned!
We’re organizing diverse Christian voices for this special, brand-new
online project.

Early in 2008:

“The Spiritual Wanderer”

    Who’s HE? He’s a guy just like you and me –– simply
trying to find that first cup of coffee before he can even contemplate
resetting his spiritual bearings for a new day. In early 2008,
ReadTheSpirit will be introducing the delightful new memoirist Rodney
Curtis — who’ll be a fresh shot of Espresso in your spiritual fuel
tank.
    He’s already been described as “a male Anne Lamott” by
other writers who’ve glimpsed his work. Stay tuned for news about his
debut.

ALSO — Early in 2008:

ReadTheSpirit’s Top 10 Lists!

    We’ve heard from so many readers that you need to find great books, films and other media in some very specific categories. SO, we’re
going to launch special new areas of our Web hub, built around our
recommendations of Top 10 titles in 6 categories: Inspirational, Great
with Groups, Scripture Study, Expand Your Horizon, Read the World —
and, finally, for all of those other rapidly expanding resources —
Multimedia Meditations.

069: Make a New Year’s Resolution


H
appy Holidays!
Scroll down to find all of our popular holiday stories to light up December’s final days!

THEN, plan to wake up each day in January with an inspiring story about a faithful hero who helped bring peace to our world! And, join in our online discussion about the importance of such heroes.
    In 2008, we’re EXPANDING with more recommendations of great spiritual books and films, interviews with fascinating people and, of course, our popular quizzes that readers love to pass around. But, we’re also hosting major spiritual events throughout the year!
    In January, we’re linking with a range of groups to present: Interfaith Heroes Month! From Jan 1-31, we’re opening a new area in our online home: www.interfaithheroes.info  Each day, you’ll find an uplifting story of a different international hero, including the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. All 31 crossed religious boundaries to strengthen communities.
    PLUS, we’re publishing a companion book with all 31 stories and loads of extras you’ll find only in the book: study guides and other supplements to help you meet neighbors of other faiths.
    YOU have an essential role to play. This is an annual observance and we want you or your group, class or congregation to nominate the next list of heroes who’ll be featured in 2009.


P
LUS, plan ahead to enjoy all of our seasonal themes in 2008! Starting with Lent on February 6 — and including major Christian, Jewish and Muslim seasons in 2008 — you can “read along” with us each day. On February 6 (and extending through the Orthodox-Christian season), “Our Lent” debuts with free online stories each day. The “Our Lent” devotional book, available on Amazon in coming weeks, is perfect for individuals, groups and congregations.
    In this holiday season, once again — YOU have a major role to play. Help us list major events related to these holidays in your part of the world — and join in our online conversations with a rich array of voices.

FINALLY, even as we branch out into these new seasonal pages — our regular coverage of great new books, films and important new spiritual voices continues at ReadTheSpirit.
    You won’t want to miss our first major “Conversation With” in 2008, featuring David Crumm talking with best-selling author Edward Beck. His timely new book is a great way to start this new year — a day-by-day reflection on spiritually revitalizing your life, linking ancient spiritual reflections with our modern concerns, one step at a time!

    HEY! They is a great time to sign up to get our stories free every day — through RSS feeds to your Web browser — or, even simpler, through a daily Email to your “inbox.” LOOK FOR the “Have our articles set to you daily (for free)” box on the right side of this Web page — and “Enter your email address.” Did we say it’s “FREE”? And, this way, you’ll never miss a daily inspiration.

A Star to Guide Us by the Rev John Emmert

In this magazine’s first Christmas season, in 2007, we publish this real-life reflection from a writer now living in rural Pennsylvania, the Rev. John Emmert—who uses the end of the Christian Advent season to point us forward.

Of course, that’s one of the greatest gifts of faith, isn’t it? When we wake up each morning, and ask ourselves why we should climb out of bed to face another stressful day—faith is the light that draws us outward toward other people and our community. And, at the end of each day, when we wonder if anything we did truly mattered in the long run—faith is our hope that life is actually heading somewhere.

So John’s story, today, points us forward toward the Christian observance of Epiphany—and beyond.

John is now retired from full-time parish ministry, but he continues his lifelong callings including that of studying and writing. He is a remarkable Episcopal priest, having seen American life from a vast array of perspectives. In addition to his airborne perspectives as a licensed pilot, John has served parishes as far afield as Alaska and, for some years, Old Donation Episcopal Church in Virginia Beach, a congregation that first held services in 1637.

AND NOW, this holiday gift from the Rev. John Emmert …

A Star to Guide Us

SEVERAL YEARS ago we finally put up a big, lighted star on our house.

We live at the end of a cul-de-sac, and my wife and I had been keen on getting one ever since we moved in. We always thought it would be the perfect Christmas decoration for our house, and indeed it has turned out to be.

The truth is, it’s a pretty humble star.

I got the wooden frame with arms about four feet long at the Amish store up the road.  Then I got some of those rope lights to put on it.  The first set I bought was too long, then the second set was too short.  Finally I figured out how to make the longer set fit.  In the meantime, of course, I had seen several other ready-made stars in the store for considerably less money than I had already invested in this one.

Sadly, I next discovered that my ladder was not long enough to get the star hoisted up to the peak of the gable where it needed to be hung.  So I had to improvise by getting up on the garage roof, then climbing from there up to the main roof and making my way across to the other end of the house.

Flying airplanes is my avocation, and I’ve fearlessly flown many thousands of feet in the air, but walking across the top of that roof carrying a star gave me very sweaty palms.

By this time my wife, Kathy, had come out to see how it was going, and alternately urged me to be careful and proclaimed to the whole neighborhood that she thought this was the absolutely stupidest stunt she had ever seen me attempt.  Anyway, I crawled across the peak of the roof—a kind of crab walk with one foot on one side, the other on the other, keeping my center of gravity as low as possible and dragging the star along.

Finally I got to the far end, and lying on my stomach, with my head and hands stretched out beyond the edge, I managed to set the hook in the gable vent and drop the star down into position.  Then I made my way back across roof and down the ladder where Kathy now waited. I got a big hug while listening to admonitions to “act my age and never do anything like that again!”

The last step was to go inside, lean way out the upstairs window, snag the power cord and plug it into the timer so that the star would light up morning and evening.  Thankfully, it worked, turning out pretty much the way I had imagined and hoped.

It was the next morning that I noticed.

I went on an early morning walk, in the dark this time of year.  On my way down the hill back home, I discovered that the star could be seen the whole length of the street. And because of the way our house sits, the star looks like it’s sitting just above the horizon.  It looks very accessible, like maybe you could reach out and touch it.  It looks like a star you might follow, to see where it’s located, to see how it came to be there, to see what’s around and beneath it.

I liked the idea. I always wondered how the Wise Men followed the star, way up in the sky where it’s usually pictured.  Our star is down close.  It gives a direction.  It beckons.  And so, this humble star has become my Christmas/Epiphany icon—and now, I suppose I hope that it will be a little bit yours too.  A big lighted star on my house, pointing to Jesus, to all he was and is and might be, for us who welcome him into our lives.  We Christians believe that God in Jesus comes to us, to our house, in our life, for the life of the world; that’s what we celebrate in Christmas and Epiphany.

I hope that you have seen God’s star beckoning you.  A star which draws you to welcome Jesus to a new place in your life.  A star which points to God’s grace and love and saving power—concrete, active, not just an intellectual possibility.  A star that lights up a dark place in your world.  A star that illuminates new possibilities. A star that points you to the one whose yoke is easy and whose burden is light.

Could it even be a star that draws the leaders of the world from dreams of war and domination to embracing the Prince of Peace and King of Love? Often, it’s a hard stretch to believe in the light and peace of God’s grace in a world so full of nationalistic strivings and terrorist threats. Obviously it is possible to turn away from Jesus’ star, to love darkness more than light, to trust the flash of weapons more than the abiding presence of God’s love in our midst.

The light of my humble star is weak, but it points in the right direction. It is attached to my house, to my life; we yearn for the Light of Christ to be so fixed in our lives.

But the Christmas Star also has an even broader reach:  Its brilliant light has power to draw, to invite, to guide, to raise up, to give warmth, to shed light, to proclaim God’s will to envelope the whole world in his love and peace, to be bathed in his glory.

May God’s light shine upon us this Christmas season, and through all the seasons of our lives to bear witness to our hymn:

“Holy, Holy, Holy Lord,
God of power and might.
Heaven and earth are full of your glory!”

067: Christmas Stories 6: A Year-End Connection with Sun, Earth and People

MERRY CHRISTMAS! This is the 6th of 7 Christmas stories. Click here to read: Part 1. Part 2. Part 3. Part 4. Part 5. Part 6. Part 7.

AND — if in the year-end rush you missed our earlier Hanukkah Week series, you can jump back to enjoy that here: Part 1 of 5 for Hanukkah.

 

    We promised you a wide diversity of Christmas stories in this holiday series and we’re proving our commitment today and tomorrow with our two, final real-life memoirs.
    (Tomorrow, on Christmas, you’ll find a special Christmas-Epiphany story that looks ahead to the traditional visit of the Magi. It’s a story from a writer in Pennsylvania, the Rev. John Emmert. However, if you’re like the staff here at ReadTheSpirit’s Home Office and prefer to keep your computer switched off on Christmas Day, then you’ll be glad to know that we’ll keep this wonderful collection of 7 stories up on the site throughout this Christmas week as our holiday gift to you!)

    TODAY — we move from Friday’s story, which unfolded in the west-African country of Togo — to a story involving native peoples here in the United States.
    Today’s story is brought to us by Pat Chargot, who Michigan readers have known for decades as one of the top reporters and feature writers at the Detroit Free Press. In recent years, though, Pat has switched journalistic genres to become even more widely known across the U.S. as a feature writer for the award-winning children’s newspaper section, The Yak.
    Now, Pat is turning to yet another vocation in her life as a writer: helping to tell the stories of Native Americans. In 2008, you’ll hear more from Pat, via ReadTheSpirit, concerning her Native American friends and colleagues.
    As part of this new personal interest, outside of her regular work for the Yak, Pat has been studying Native American cultures at Eastern Michigan University and has been working on special, personal writing projects in this field.
    Late on Friday, Pat visited a Winter Solstice celebration and, over this weekend, wrote the following story for us.
    AND NOW, this holiday gift from writer Pat Chargot …

A Year-End Connection with Sun, Earth and People

No doubt you missed one of the nicest, most meaningful holidays of the season.

    Not Christmas, Kwanzaa or Hanukkah — the Winter Solstice on
December 21, the shortest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere.
The day on which it is possible to imagine the sun stopping at the end
of a string, like a cosmic yo-yo that’s been thrown down, before
beginning its half-year journey back home from the south.
     “Here
comes the Sun!” the Beatles sang -– years before a type of winter
depression related to a lack of sunlight was acknowledged to be so
common that it officially was recognized as Seasonal Affective
Disorder, or SAD.
    Feeling blue anyone? It would seem that
celebrating the turning of the sun is an idea whose time has come.
But, actually, it’s a very old idea — and one that your own distant
ancestors may very well have celebrated.
    So I felt honored to be
invited to last Friday night’s Winter Solstice Celebration — my first
— at American Indian Health and Family Services in Detroit.
    I
had just finished monitoring a wonderful class on North American Native
Cultures taught by Kay McGowan, a Choctaw anthropologist, at Eastern
Michigan University, and it was Kay who graciously had invited me to
the event, which unlike larger and better-known Native American winter
solstice celebrations in New Mexico and other parts of the Southwest,
is not open to tourists.

    My own Christmas preparations were
sadly in arrears, and part of me wanted to stay home and play carols,
decorate the tree and wrap gifts. But I was too curious to let the
opportunity pass. And so, instead of baking cookies, I tossed together
what I hoped would be an appropriately Native American salad — a dish
to pass — that included three native ingredients (wild rice,
cranberries and walnuts) and drove from my home in Ann Arbor to the
once solidly Polish west side Detroit neighborhood where both my
parents grew up.
    Memories danced in my head of Christmases Past
at my late grandparent’s house — I could have walked there from
American Indian Health, on Lawndale just south of Michigan Avenue.
    Almost immediately upon parking the car, I felt inexplicably alive
with anticipation. It
was the same feeling I often get when I travel alone, particularly when
I find myself in a new place for the first time.
    Impossible to
explain why I felt it here: I was in a poor neighborhood lined cheek-to-jowl with modest
bungalows, some of them run down and only a few strung with lights.

   But a day later as I write this story, I’m still absorbing the evening as it sinks in and
becomes — what? Perhaps just another memory, but possibly a new
holiday tradition, the first of many to come, celebrated with my own
family and friends.
   Why not? No matter what our religion or
spiritual beliefs, the Winter Solstice is a celebration we can all
share, like the Chinese Moon Festival. The sun and moon belong to us
all, even to those who fail to notice the beauty and mystery of their
movements.
    The evening was filled with more surprises than Santa
could pack in his sleigh, not one of them commercially inspired or
shopworn.

   The first was a bonfire on the agency’s snow-laden
lawn. I actually smelled it before I saw it, a scent more heavenly than
incense: cedar burning. Is there a seasonal fragrance more instantly
transporting? I can only think of fresh cut evergreens, and there would
be plenty of those inside.
    The agency is housed in a former
historic Catholic Church: St. Petrus, built in 1905, based
on what I could make out on the cornerstone of the adjacent old school,
which is now a clinic staffed by the most dedicated nurses, doctors and
therapists you could ever hope to meet.
    I passed the fire
on my way up the long walkway to the front door. It crackled rather
than roared shooting tiny star-like embers into the night from a
shallow dirt depression edged with large, evenly spaced stones in the
center of a large circular clearing. There were baskets with the Four
Sacred Plants — tobacco, sweetgrass, cedar and sage — to throw on the
fire as an offering.
    There were even chairs to sit on at the
edge of the circle. Lovely! When’s the last time you stumbled on an
outdoor fire like this in a city in winter?
    The clearing was a symbol of
the Circle of Life, the foundation of Native American spirituality,
inside of which one could pray and pay honor to the Four Sacred
Directions.
    So I said a silent prayer — and why not? As Kay once
reminded her non-native students, and that was most of us in the class, we all are
descended from people who were once indigenous and whose spiritual
practices were intimately tied to the natural world.
    Most of our families severed that connection centuries ago, but here it really did seem to be authentically alive.

    Inside, the old church’s altar, communion rail, pews, statues and
other artifacts had long ago found new homes, leaving a high vaulted
ceiling and rustic wooden beams. In their place were tables and chairs
covered with cloths and sprinkled with pretty, simple seasonal
decorations, all collected from nature: bright red berries, pinecones,
birch bark baskets, greenery. Not a single red velvet bow or
non-Earth-friendly ornament anywhere.
    The church was a kind of
Native American art museum!
    The walls were completely covered with
large, colorful murals depicting various aspects of traditional native
life, which as Kay will tell you is still alive in many places in this
country, in cities as well as on reservations, the tribal homelands of
one or more tribes.

    There were stylized paintings of Indian men,
women and children in their beautiful, hand-made regalia; a Three
Sisters Garden planted with corn, beans and squash, the nutritious,
low-fat diet across much of the continent for thousands of years and
still eaten by many peoples today; and all kinds of Great Lakes
animals, including the eagle, the heron and the wolf.
    I arrived
just in time to behold –- and that is the right word –- a woman with long
graying hair parted in the middle and woven into long, thick braids, a
regal and youthful-looking elder wearing fashionable red-framed
glasses, make her way to the head of the gathering, to a circle of
singers and musicians, and address her native brothers and sisters in
her first tongue, Ojibwe, which also is known as Anishinaabemowin.
    I had no idea what she was saying, but the sound and clarity of her
voice and the words themselves were beautiful, rich and embodied great softness and sensuality, like the earth itself.

    I had heard it once before, on a recent visit to Walpole Island
First Nation, at the far end of Lake St. Clair, where I learned my
first Anishinaabemowin word, “boozhoo,” which means hello –- and sounds
a lot like bonjour. It had also proudly been pointed out to me by Chief
Joseph Gilbert that Anishinaabemowin, not French or English, is the
original language of the Great Lakes Region. Not many residents of the
region speak it anymore, but some still do and more are learning.

    So
I’m standing by myself in a church that isn’t a church, getting my
bearings — I had yet not spotted my friend and teacher Kay. I’m feeling a “foreign language”
that can’t really be called foreign flow through me in waves,
unmistakably communicating pride, hospitality, gratitude and at one
point, anguish.
    I’m a big fan of time-travel fiction, and I
began to feel as if I had stepped back in time –- or out of time — the
way I did one day last summer at a 3-day Civil War encampment at a historical site.
    “Everybody thinks we’re just like everybody
else,” Kay had said near the end of her first lecture, adding: “I hope
maybe you’re seeing that we’re not like everybody else.”
    Later, I
introduced myself to the speaker, Mona Stonefish, 69, a Potawatomi, and
told her how deeply I had been moved by her eloquent speech.
    “I couldn’t speak any language as a child,” she said. “I was non-verbal for eight years.”

    She said she was a survivor of the government’s infamous Indian
boarding-school system. Like thousands of other native children, she was taken
from her parent’s home in an attempt to “kill the Indian, save the
child.”
   The schools existed for decades in both Canada and the United
States, setting off what psychologists have termed an
“intergenerational trauma” that shattered countless families, scarring
the survivors as well their children and even grandchildren. Most of
the survivors never talked about the issue, and even today, those still
alive are just beginning to talk about it.

    But tragedy often
walks in beauty.
    As Kay said in class, “the one thing white people
always respected us for was our artistic talent,” and there were
artists everywhere at the celebration. Women wore earrings and other
jewelry they had either hand-beaded themselves or been given by
friends. Kay (who earned a degree in fine arts at the Center for
Creative Studies before getting her doctorate in anthropology), beads,
embroiders and paints virtually all her clothes. She never wore the
same outfit twice to class, and I have to say: I looked forward to
seeing what she would wear almost as much as to hearing her lectures.

    On Friday night, Kay led me into through the clinic, where the
staff was busy checking blood pressures, into a small room where two
large tables displayed hundreds of pieces of traditional jewelry, dolls
and baskets woven from sweetgrass. 
    She introduced  me a James Aquash,
a shyly reticent elder who lives alone in a rooming house in the Cass
Corridor, working all day every day on his art. Kay calls him, “the
most talented Native American artist in Michigan.”
     “He goes to Walpole Island to pick his own sweetgrass,” Kay said of James, who was born there and is a Potawatomi.

     “He’s a master basket-maker. When I went to the United Nations (to
testify before the body on Indian affairs), he made jewelry for me to
wear so that his spirit was with me.”
     One basket in particular
took my breath away: Asymmetrically designed, it was so delicate it was
hard to believe a man had made it, with a dream-catcher no bigger than
a nickel woven into the lid, like a tiny spider’s web. Beautiful!

     Yvonne Moore, a Seneca Black Foot, a clinical psychologist turned artist, was selling her clothespin “spirit dolls.”

    “I made them so that women don’t loose their dream,” said told me.
“I’m always trying to do positive things for people and that’s how I
came up with it.”
    She clearly had not lost her dream. The dolls
were quirkily charming, as individual as the members of a miniature
tribe. My favorite was one with a cobalt-blue deerskin dress!

    A
number of speakers briefly addressed the gathering, including Kay’s
twin sister, Fay Givens, the director of American Indian Services, one of
the celebration’s three other sponsoring groups in addition to
American Indian Health and Family Services.
It was the first time all four groups –- the other two were the North
American Indian Association and Southeastern Michigan Indians
Incorporated –- jointly hosted an affair, which was seen as a sign
of growing unity in the community.
    “I think of the thousands and thousands of years that our people have celebrated the Winter Solstice,” she said. “For the Choctaw, this is the birthday of the sun.” (The Choctaw are known as “the people of the sun.”)

   The sun’s birthday party was a sunny affair, with hugs, kisses and
more laughter and goodwill in one room than I had felt anywhere in a
long time.
    The buffet groaned with good food, including corn,
black beans, venison stew, an Indian-style ratatouille and several
kinds of Indian fry bread, including Navajo, which is made with whole
wheat.
    “The native veteran’s group cooked the turkeys,” Kay said.
    The elders were served first, then the women got their food, which is customary, said Kay.

    I met Native Americans from many different tribes across the United
States and Canada.
    A young man stopped by, a social worker named Randy who works with Kay. He was carrying his six-week-old son, Dylan, who had been passed from person to person and admired.
    “He just got his Indian name today from Jose,” Fay said of the baby.

    Neither Randy nor the baby are Native-American, but Randy said he
felt honored that Jose Marcus, 74, a Taos Pueblo elder at our table and
a master drum maker, had just minutes earlier observed the baby tilt his
head to the ceiling and bequeathed him a traditional name, “Sky.”
    “I feel closer to the native community than to any other community,” Randy said.

    There was intermittent drumming and singing honoring various elders
and others who had served the community with distinction, including a
19-year-old Marine who had just arrived home that day for a 7-month
leave.
    The drums were like a heart beating, the pulse of a long
chant that included a refrain of only two distinguishable words:
soldier body, soldier boy.
    I talked to him later, at the buffet table.
    “It felt like they really appreciated what I’ve been doing,” said Travis Williams, an Odawa.
    It was his first Winter Solstice celebration.
    “It’s awesome,” he said. “The music, the people -– it’s a really good atmosphere. I feel really welcome here.”

    Someone gave Fay an eagle feather, which only native people legally
can obtain, in tribute to her tireless efforts to help the local Indian
community. In the native community, there is no greater symbol of
respect.
     I felt embraced, too, a stranger in a warm and welcoming family.

    It was Tom Lowler’s third celebration. The retired owner of a firm
that sells industrial instruments, Tom described himself as “very
non-traditional.” His mother was Wyandot and his father was Dutch and Irish, “but I’ve always known I’m an Indian,” he said.
     “I’ve always been proud of it. But I ran a big company, and I only got involved when I was semi-retired.”
    He had on his beige Wyandot tribal sweatshirt with a patch bearing a green turtle, the tribe’s symbol.

    The various Wyandot tribes are known collectively as the Turtle
people, and historically have lived in both the United States and
Canada. The Wyandot Nation of Anderdon are still concentrated in southwest
Detroit and its downriver suburbs.
    “Our tribal roll has in excess of 1,000 members,” he said.
    About 200 of them live on Grosse Isle just south of Detroit, where Tom grew up and developed a strong connection to the Detroit River.

   “We used to sit on the riverbank and talk about how our ancestors
used to run back and forth in canoes to Canada,” he said, remembering. “Wouldn’t it have been wonderful to live back then?”

    There was a lot of heartfelt concern expressed for the planet.

    “There were once wild rice fields everywhere in Michigan,” said Ray
St. Clair, 39, an Ojibwe language student at UM and EMU who returns to
his reservation in White Earth, Minn., “The Place of the White Clay,”
to harvest wild rice from a canoe.
    (Wild rice isn’t really rice;
it’s a marsh grass that still grows naturally in a few places, where it
is harvested and sold by Native Americans. The wild rice sold at
supermarkets typically is farm grown.)
    Ray, a Gaawaabaabignikaag –- I
had him write it down for me –- said he was working with the Michigan
Department of Natural Resources to reseed some of the state’s lakes
with wild rice.
     He had on a handmade green-and-brown cotton
shirt decorated with gold metallic leaf appliqués, my favorite shirt of
the evening.
     “My auntie made it,” he said. Ray said he was on his way to Mt. Pleasant to Saginaw Chippewa Winter Solstice celebration on Saturday. “Mother Earth is going to cleanse herself with snow, so it’s time to get ready for next year,” he said.

     “I have so much to be thankful for –- my language and my culture.
You can’t take anything with you, so I’ve decided to give back to my
community, to my culture.
     “It’s such a beautiful, beautiful
culture. We have to leave something for our kids. Who are we if we’re
destroying everything?”

    Many who attended on Friday evening repeatedly thanked the Creator “for bringing us together on this beautiful night.”
    Lisa Parrish, 45, a former Detroit police officer and now an
American Indian Health nurse, said she was sorry to see it end.
   
“I love it,” she said. “There’s this feeling of connection. That’s the
basis our community. I wish the rest of the world could live like
this.
     “It’s hard to go back to the outside, everyday life. It’s often so cold.”
     She said she was half French and German, and didn’t look obviously Native American, with pale skin and brunette hair. “I’m Cheyenne and Cherokee and I’ve been adopted by the Shawnee,”
she said.
     Lisa “always had a hole” in her heart before attending her first powwow in the early 1990s, she said. Then, “when I walked in and heard the drums for the first time, that hole
I could never fill was filled up and I balled like a baby.”

     I followed Jose outside. He was carrying his two drums, and on the way I asked him about the fire.
     “The fire is our life,” he said. “The fire and the water are our main sources of survival.”

     I watched him walk into the circle and stop for a minute, his long
thin braids and brown face barely illumined by the dying fire.
     When he came back, I asked him to share his private thoughts.
     “I said goodnight to the fire,” he said. “And my drums were blessed, too, by the smoke.”
     He gave me a wide smile. Then he said, “Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, and I want a hug, too!”

COME BACK TOMORROW — or anytime this week — for our final Christmas story, which looks ahead to Epiphany. Feel free to share these stories with friends and invite others to visit this site and enjoy your favorite holiday story with you.

TELL US WHAT YOU THINK, please. Click on the “Comment” link at the end
of this story online to leave a comment for other readers. Or, you can
always Email me, ReadTheSpirit Editor David Crumm, by clicking here.

066: Christmas Stories 5: A Christmas Tree in Africa

MERRY CHRISTMAS! This is the 5th of 7 Christmas stories. Click here to read: Part 1. Part 2. Part 3. Part 4. Part 5. Part 6. Part 7.

AND — if in the year-end rush you missed our earlier Hanukkah Week series, you can jump back to enjoy that here: Part 1 of 5 for Hanukkah.

    On our 5th Day of Christmas, we travel far from the United States for a story by writer Joel Thurtell.

    For several decades, Joel has written in many formats — although he is best known as a regional, roving feature writer for the Detroit Free Press. Joel got hooked on traveling and meeting people, many years ago, during a Peace Corps tour in Africa, which is the setting of today’s Christmas story. His interests now range from restoring antique wooden boats to repairing and operating vintage ham-radio equipment. He also is the author of the definitive book on southeast Michigan’s most important waterway, the Rouge River, due out next year from Wayne State University Press.
    After retiring from the Free Press this autumn, Joel’s love of writing, people and places is spilling over into the online world. He’s just launching a new online series of stories and essays at www.JoelontheRoad.com
    Yes, he’s still married to Karen, now Dr. Karen Fonde, a family physician in southeast Michigan.
    And, yes, this photograph — at right — does show Joel and Karen at the time of this story with Seydou, the young man in the lower left corner of the photo. The woman behind Karen is Seydou’s mother and the two little girls are Seydou’s sisters.

    AND NOW, this holiday gift from writer Joel Thurtell …

A Christmas Tree in Africa

    I think of Seydou’s tree every year in the final countdown to December 25.
    The story is true—as real as the Christmas tree we found in the dry savannah of Africa during Advent, 1973. It was the extraordinary gift of a Muslim boy to his two Christian friends.
    Recently, I was remembering Seydou while my wife, two sons and I were frantically executing our annual quest at the local nursery. You know what I mean—the  perfect-Christmas-tree-at-a-price-we-can-afford search.
    As we checked this year’s stock, straightening trees, standing back to gauge their bare spots, I noticed that many of these all-natural trees had a uniformly dark cast to them. Looking closer, I could see why. The blue-green color wasn’t just confined to the needles, but had been painted onto twigs, branches and trunks.
    I stared at the dark patina of paint and declared, “This is NOT a Christmas tree!”
    The statement, once out of my mouth, had a familiar sound to it. Where had I heard — no, where had I said that before?

    IT WAS ONCE upon a time, quite a few years ago in a country far, far from the chill evergreen farms and Christmas tree sales lots of Michigan. We — my wife, Karen Fonde, and I — were Peace Corps volunteers in Togo, a tiny West African country, a narrow sliver, from the Atlantic to the incredibly hot, dry, windy savannahs that blend into the nation then known as Upper Volta.
    Karen and I were stationed in a big market town called Dapango, in the far north of Togo. She taught health education in public schools and hospitals. I was building a three-room school in an outlying village.
    Seydou Boukari was 13, an amazingly adaptable, inventive kid who was nevertheless flunking out of the rigid, French-style Togolese elementary school he attended.
    In all matters that fell outside the classroom, however, Seydou was an expert. At the height of the dry season, for example, when there had been no rain for six or seven months and most of the residential wells were dry, local authorities occasionally, without announcement, allowed families in our neighborhood to tap water from municipal pumps.
    The faucets were never open long, because the city wells were nearly dry. So, if you missed it, you were out of luck — no water for cooking, bathing, drinking.
    Somehow, Seydou always found out when the pumps were open. He’d come bounding up to our door, rubbing his hand over his head and face slowly in his unique mannerism of pubescent self-consciousness, and proclaim that, if we gave him our buckets, he’d get them filled.

… …

NEWS FROM NOVEMBER 2009 …

    Joel Thurtell’s story of Seydou has been published and now is available on Amazon. To aid in promotion of the book, we have taken down the full version of Seydou’s Christmas Tree, which readers have enjoyed here since 2007. A fuller version with an array of wonderful photographs now is for sale—in time for the holiday season.

COME BACK on MONDAY for our final Christmas stories.

TELL US WHAT YOU THINK, please. Click on the “Comment” link at the end
of this story online to leave a comment for other readers. Or, you can
always Email me, ReadTheSpirit Editor David Crumm, by clicking here.

065: Christmas Stories 4: Cancer Claus


MERRY CHRISTMAS!
This is the 4th of 7 Christmas stories. Click here to read: Part 1. Part 2. Part 3. Part 4. Part 5Part 6. Part 7.

AND — if in the year-end rush you missed our earlier Hanukkah Week series, you can jump back to enjoy that here: Part 1 of 5 for Hanukkah.

    On our 4th Day of Christmas, we turn to the somber side of the holiday season for many people, each year. Like everything in this series, the following story comes from the writer’s real life — written years ago as this particular writer wrestled with his tough situation as a young patient in a cancer ward, facing an unexpectedly urgent date with a surgeon.
    At that time, this writer struggled spiritually.
    Now, he’s known in many parts of the world as the Rev. Rod Reinhart, a Chicago-area Episcopal priest who co-founded the World Sabbath of Religious Reconciliation. (That’s Rod in the photo at right.)
    He co-founded this observance some years ago with the Rev. Ed Mullins of Christ Church Cranbrook in Michigan. Working together, these priests have carried their creative ideas about annual liturgies devoted to global healing to conferences around the world. Click here to jump to the World Sabbath site to read more about the movement they sparked, which many other people, now, are carrying forward.
    In addition, Rod is a poet and a promoter of regional events for poets in the Midwest.

    So, many readers already know the “good news” at the end of this true story.
    But that doesn’t diminish the harshness of Christmas Eve 1970, when Rod was a senior in college, lying in a hospital bed.
    AND NOW, this holiday gift from writer Rod Reinhart …


Cancer Claus

    It’s Christmas Eve, 1970, and the world seems filled with joy — at least for other people.
    Every time I went to the mall this year, a million people were rushing — dragging around their holy secrets in shopping bags, getting ready for the big day. Wherever I go, I’m hit with a riot of lights on every window, store and tree. It feels like angels are about to burst out in song.
    Now, it’s Christmas Eve and I know that even my family is running around our house stringing lights, hiding presents and baking pies.
    Not me.
    I’m here.
    I have Cancer.
    I’m having surgery on Christmas Day. They might have to do chemo and radiation, too.
    Can you believe it? At Christmas!
    My doctor says he has never seen a lung so bad in someone so young.
    But, I’ve never smoked!
    The doctor just shakes his head and says I have to go through this right away, if I hope to save my life.
    So here I am — in the hospital on Christmas Eve.
    The room is very nice, filled with sterile hospital light. Out in the hall, I can hear machines and see people charging around, but no one comes in to talk to me. That’s OK.
    But, really, the place has this strange smell. Even the tree in the lounge smells more like death than holidays. I always liked Christmas. I used to go to church. I just wish I didn’t have to be here facing surgery when everyone else is out singing carols and getting ready to open gifts.

    Why did all of this happen now?
    I was doing pretty well. I thought my symptoms were under control. After all, I had told all these different doctors I was coughing up blood. They shook their heads and said it was some kind of allergy or maybe an old football injury. Maybe something had happened when I worked at General Motors for a while. I had suffered like this all through college and nobody knew what caused it.
    Then, I went to this last dumb doctor in early December and he saw a tumor on an x-ray. He wanted to take out the lung the very next day, but I wouldn’t let him. I wanted to spend the holidays with my family, then I would finish up the semester. He let me go, but a few weeks later, my lung collapsed. That’s when he told me the choice was simple: lose the lung or die.
    And here I am on Christmas Eve, waiting for my turn under the knife.   

    Lights blaze everywhere, red and green, but for me, everything is a blank wall. Nurses smile and doctors laugh but it’s all phony. Behind all their sympathy, I know they’re thinking: “Better you in here than me.”
    I keep thinking: How am I going to survive on only one lung?

    Bells.
    I hear bells jingling in the hall.
    Oh, No! Santa Claus is coming to see me. Just what I need — especially now!
    I don’t want some bearded stranger trying to cheer me up. I will feel as bad as I want to, thank you!
    Then this Santa fills up the door, and he’s the strangest looking Santa I’ve ever seen. His beard is scraggly and falling apart. He’s thin, much too thin for Santa Claus. I can tell he’s pretty young but he looks older and more worn out than any Santa I’ve ever seen.
    His eyes don’t twinkle right. They water and look out of focus. He looks like he’s hurting.
    “Listen kid,” he says, “I know you’re in here for cancer. It’s terrible. This is my fifth time through chemo and radiation. I’ve had it since I was about your age. Each time, it’s just as bad as the last.
    “But you can make it. Sure, they’ll cut you open and take out that lung. And if they have to do chemo and radiation, you’ll make it through that too. You’re going to go through a lot of pain, and it’s going to take a long, long time, but you’re young and you’re going to recover.”
    He’s not done!
    “You’ve got a right to feel bad,” he continues. “It’s Christmas Eve. But, hey, count yourself lucky. You came in just in time. I’ve buried a lot of friends who didn’t make it. You’ve got other Christmases in your life. You’re going to survive. So get the surgery. Stay alive, and remember, people need you.”
    Then, before turning away, he adds, “Listen kid, I’ll be praying for you. You’re going to come out of this OK.”
    Then, he gives me a candy cane and walks out the door.

    I think about this a long time. He’s the weirdest Santa I’ve ever seen. He didn’t try to make me laugh or promise me presents. He didn’t even try to cheer me up. He was in worse pain than I was.
    I didn’t know if I should thank him or kick him. What right did he have telling me how sick he is, when I’m facing cancer on my own? I didn’t need to hear him telling me how bad this was all going to be.

    Later on, though, I decide this Santa Claus was all right, after all.
    He was honest with me and that’s more than I can say about these doctors. Even my family and friends keep telling me to smile. They say this operation won’t hurt too much and I’m going to come out feeling just fine.
    Yeah, this Santa Claus is OK.
    So what if I’m in a lot of pain? I’m going to survive. So what if they have to do chemo and my hair falls out? It’ll grow back. Even if I have to go around looking like a billiard ball, I can handle it. Besides, I have Santa Claus praying for me.
    So, I can face losing a lung at Christmas. It might hurt, but I got hurt bad playing football, so what’s the difference? If Santa Claus has the guts to face years of chemo and radiation, then I have the guts to face it, too.
    After all, it’s Christmas.
    The truth is — these people in the hospital and all of my family and friends are doing their best to be nice to me and it’s better to be here than dead. Sure, I’ll miss out on some of the Christmas parties, but I’m missing the bad weather, too. I’m glad to know that, at least, I won’t be coughing up any more blood.

     Earlier, Mom asked me if I would go with her to the hospital chapel for Christmas Eve services. Actually, I haven’t gone to church in quite a long time. But, thinking about everything that’s happened, I decide: I’m going with her tonight.
    After all, this Santa Claus needs my prayers as much as I need his.

    A nurse stops by to check on me.
    “Hey, who’s the Santa Claus who came by to see me today?” I ask.
    She shakes her head. Looks like I’m kidding her. “No,” she says, “not today. We don’t have a Santa Claus visiting this floor today. But, don’t worry. He’ll show up tomorrow.”

.

COME BACK TOMORROW for another Christmas story.

TELL US WHAT YOU THINK, please. Click on the “Comment” link at the end
of this story online to leave a comment for other readers. Or, you can
always Email me, ReadTheSpirit Editor David Crumm, by clicking here.