Monthly Archives: May 2020

Unsafe In America by Peter Eisenstadt and Ayala Emmett

Justice

Once again we watch with horror as a man begged for his life, handcuffed, face down on his stomach on the ground, as an American police officer, knee on his neck, murdered him in broad daylight.

George Floyd was the latest in a long list of victims of police brutality crying about losing the breath of life.  In 2015 Eric Harris said, “I am losing my breath” after he cried, “Oh God, he shot me.” And the deputy in the video is heard responding “F—your breath.” A year earlier in 2014, Michael Brown, an unarmed 18 year old, shot and killed by a policeman, his body uncovered, exposed to the sun for more than four hours as his mother and this whole nation watched the agony and desecration. read more

The Women of Temple B’rith Kodesh by Marjorie B. Searl

Tbk members, founders of Baden St. Settlement House, Rochester NY

Like most religious congregations founded in America’s first century, Temple B’rith Kodesh was organized by a group of men. And, like most religious congregations, TBK has slowly evolved in its acceptance of women into its leadership ranks. However, women have been the heart of the community from its earliest years through the present day. Both inside the synagogue and out, TBK women have fulfilled the mission of Reform Judaism, “tikkun olam, the repair of our world, to bring about a world of justice, wholeness, and compassion.”[1] While the congregation has only “lived” in Brighton since 1962, its women’s history, rooted in the Gibbs Street years, was firmly transplanted.[2] read more

The Cupboard Is Bare by Susan Riblet

The pandemic is not really the problem. There were already too many people in the Rochester region without enough food to eat. There were already too many people lacking housing, clothing, decent jobs. There was already too much racism and too much political discord to address these issues. There were already too many people without enough food to eat, and now there are more.

I already gave regularly to Foodlink, because I am lucky enough to have the resources to do so, and because I have been impressed by Foodlink’s programs. They not only provide emergency food, but they support community gardens, teach classes on preparing healthy foods, and provide mobile produce markets in some of the city’s food deserts. read more

Let’s Bring Back The Golden Rule by Deborah L R Kornfel

The Golden Rule

May 1, 2020. The news reports that a man shot and killed a security guard after being asked to wear a mask while shopping at a discount store. It is Sunday morning May 10, 2020 and I roll over and turn on the radio. The host is interviewing a covid-19 shut-down protester: “I know how to take care of myself,” he says. I open my phone and see an article about the almost 100 environmental regulations this administration has or proposes to reverse. There is a disconnect between the individual and the communal. There is a disconnect between man and the natural world. When did some Americans stop seeing themselves as part of a larger picture? When did the citizens put their trust in a government that clearly rewards the 1% at the expense of the remaining 99%? When did citizens collectively decide to support policies that spew the air and water with pollutants and endanger human sustainability? read more

Trump, Fascism, and What We Must Do by Ayala Emmett and Peter Eisenstadt

“Nothing is more wonderful than the art of being free,
but nothing is harder to learn how to use than freedom.”
― Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America

The scope of the pandemic, the number of deaths and those infected with the Covid-19, the spatial distancing and the massive loss of jobs, all induce great fear and uncertainty. Trump’s profound inability to understand science, facts, and medical research, has intensified current social, economic and political concerns.

In this coronavirus crisis, as he has done since he emerged as a candidate, Trump is making sure that he has a loud visible following. His faithful foot soldiers are a scary bunch of vigilante who are brazenly breaking the rules of curbing the spread of the virus. They come to public spaces with Trump signs and hats carrying guns using Nazi trope. These includes a held up sign reading: “Arbeit Macht Frei” a Nazi chillingly deceptive phrase that means “work sets you free,” which was posted at the gates of death camps. They bring posters of hanging opponents, “Hang Fauci Hang Gates, Open Up All Our States” (Bill Gates). Confederate flags, swastika facemasks, recall previous terrifying street violence like the Charlottesville march with its sea of swastikas. read more

Meditation by Eleanor Lewin

Edward Hopper, Cape Cod Morning, 1950

Yesterday, a wild turkey spread his glorious crown
To catch a female’s fancy
She walked away, indifferent

I called to the turkey
Stop twirling and follow her
But it was through the glass
And he did not hear

That was morning, a small diversion
Before the long empty day
In the time of Virus

Our farewells are, “Stay Safe”
Six feet apart has replaced arm in arm
In the time of Virus

Hellos through glass
A mask, no smile visible
Gone are our conversation cues
In the time of Virus

Daily temperatures, emails, zoom
TV, reading, walking the rooms
Relentless news, relentless tragedy
In the time of Virus read more

In Three Years by Ayala Emmett

Our Justice of Supreme Valor

Ruth Bader Ginsburg

We the people

Are planning your 90th birthday.

In three years on March 15

This nation will gather

In a festival of gratitude,

Balloons of your wisdom will float

Colorful, soaring, joyous

A special Opera will sing your courage

And she, the American Vice-President

Will offer the first toast.

In our terrifying days of wobbling justice

You are America’s beacon of hope

And we watch you move between home and hospital

Making brilliant legal arguments.

And between now and your 90th birthday read more