Got MLK?
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 01/19/2009 - 21:22Martin Luther King, Jr Day, 2009. It has been a good day, a busy day. I haven’t gotten much time for reflection or writing, but I’ve been productive nonetheless. I had a medical appointment in the morning, did some chores around the house and set out for National Service Day with my daughter.
On the way to my medical appointment, I listened to National Public Radio as they reflected on some of the great unsung heroes of past. There was a wonderful piece about Georgia Gilmore and The Club for Nowhere as they sold pies and other goods to help fund the Montgomery bus boycott. It was great to hear a little bit of the history of our country that is different than that which I read in school, written by old white men. It was great to hear the stories of simple, unknown people, helping shape a more perfect union.
In the afternoon, I took Fiona to a senior center in town. It is a senior center that Fiona has been to in the past. We walked up to the receptionist and she said that she wanted to visit with some of the people there. The receptionist welcomed us and pointed us to the common area where we should feel free to go talk to whomever we felt like. Fiona did very well. She speaks loudly and clearly, although at times she gets excited and talks too quickly. Some of the older people would then have problems understanding her, and I would slow her down and explain what she was talking about.
While some of this may be seen as service to elderly people that don’t get enough visitors, it could as much be seen as a service to Fiona as she gained more insights into the lives of the people around her, and the importance of lending a hand to them.
After our brief visit, and promises to return soon, we headed home to get together for heading over to Papa and Nanas. I’ve been engaging in some discussions online with people all concerned about the amount of money being spent on the inauguration, and my gathering at my in-laws house helped further shape some of my opinions.
Back in 2004, various people criticized the Bush administration for the amount of money being spent on that inauguration, and now, others are criticizing the Obama administration on what is going into the Obama inauguration.
Yes, it would be nice if more of the money spent on celebrating were to go to helping the poor, but those suggesting that now seem to be the same people that don’t want to see defense spending being redirected to help the poor.
It reminds me of the story from the Gospel of John where Judas criticizes Mary for anointing Jesus’ feet with oil. “Why wasn’t this perfume sold for a high price and the money given to the poor?” he asks. It sounds a little bit like sour grapes. Why didn’t five times as many people pour out for President Bush’s second inauguration?
Yet when you dig a little deeper, you find that much of the money being spent is on security. It strikes me odd that these pro-security conservatives are less concerned about security if it isn’t for one of their own.
According to the New York Times, “the federal government and the District of Columbia spent a combined $115.5 million, most of it for security” for the Bush inauguration in 2005. This year’s inauguration is expected to draw five times as many people as Bush’s inauguration in 2005. It seems like the government is doing a good job of keeping the costs under control.
This is where my visit to my father-in-law’s house comes in. You see, he is a retired U.S. Treasury agent. Both he, and his wife frequently pulled Secret Service duty when a President visited Connecticut. It is great to listen to them talking about their experiences protecting our country on the front line, here at home.
Between Washington DC police, Parks police, Secret Service, and many others, it is expected that at least 25,000 people will be protecting our outgoing and incoming Presidents and all that have come to wish them the best. I hope that my friends in Washington find time to say a kind word to these men and women as they pass security checkpoints tomorrow.
With that, we get to my thoughts about the inauguration itself. As I’ve often noted, President-Elect Obama was not my first choice. I do not agree with him on policy issues as closely as I did with some of the other candidates. Yet I was very happy to hear discussions about the National Day of Service on the radio as I drove to my father-in-law’s house, and then later, see reports of the same on the evening news.
I am concerned by those who feel that we most not criticize the incoming President. I believe that if we respect him, then we must be willing to criticize him when we disagree. It is this ability to criticize whomever our current leader is, and to celebrate the peaceful transition of power that has helped make our country great.
Yet inauguration day will not be the day for the criticisms. That will come soon enough. Inauguration day is the day to celebrate a peaceful transition of power and the hope that a new leader brings.
As to the criticisms, well, there is one final thought I like to keep in mind. President Bush, in his farewell news conference made a comment about that moment when President Obama will fully feel the weight of the office on his shoulders. I don’t often agree with the outgoing President, but I think he has said something very important here.
There is an old discussion about whether the man makes the times, or the times make the man. I suspect that there is a bit of both in there. The images of Bush as a cowboy, or Obama fulfilling the dreams of President Lincoln and Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. are just images. They may partially be created by the spinmasters. They may partially be created by the men themselves. They may partially be created by the times.
And so, back to channeling Joni Mitchell, “it’s clouds illusions I recall”. However much all the pomp and circumstance being created around President Elect Obama, it is pomp and circumstance that is calling us to serve as part of National Service Day. It is pomp and circumstance that calls us to reach for something better, higher. It is pomp and circumstance that brings us back to a nation of hope, hope for all its people. If this is all just an illusion, I just hope that we can keep up the illusion long enough to change the lives of people around us.
The Ordination and the Inauguration
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 01/18/2009 - 11:23The small old clock radio on the bed stand showed 5:00 AM as it jarred me awake with “NPR News Headlines”. The news of the hour didn’t register. All that I was aware of was how warm and snugly it was in the bed and how cold and dark it was in the bedroom. Kim rolled over long enough to ask if she could sleep a little bit more as I took my shower.
Slowly, I climbed out of bed and downstairs to turn up the heat in the house. Outside, it was three degrees. I took a little longer in the shower than usual as I tried to wake up. As soon as everyone was showered and dressed, we would be hitting the road for Manchester, NH to attend the ordination of an old friend.
As Kim showered, I briefly checked my email and a few blogs. The Speaker of the Connecticut House had recently appointed his predecessor to a $120,000 senior advisory role and the previous nights discussion about politics as usual had continued on long past when I went to bed.
Soon, we were all showered and out the door. Traveling up to New Hampshire in sub-zero weather in January was nothing new for us. We had done it in 2004 and in 2008 in an effort to make our voices heard in the Presidential Primaries. Today, we were going up in a different way, to make our voices heard in celebration, affirmation and support of our friend’s ordination.
Despite the cold, it was an uneventful trip north, stopping only for gas, coffee and bacon, egg and cheese sandwiches on rolls. The town of Manchester, NH looked pretty much the same as it had a year earlier, the only notable difference being a for sale sign on a diner which had hosted many presidential candidates.
While we had never been to Grace Episcopal Church in Manchester, it felt even more familiar. A bright red door greeted us as we arrived and the stained glass and deeper red cushions all reminded me of so many Episcopal churches I’ve visited in the past.
Yet what was even more familiar looking were the faces. Yes, a few of them were mutual friends of our friend being ordained. Yet what was more familiar to me were the faces of the common man. It was almost as if strains of Aaron Copeland’s famous composition had followed these sturdy New Englanders and omnipresent church ladies in from the bitter cold of their daily lives.
My ancestors had scratched a living out of the rock strewn farms of New England and I suspect with a little genealogical investigation, I could of have found at least one distant relative sitting in a pew near me.
This sense of my historical roots was mingled with another sense of history. The old Anglican service, complete with incense, reminded me of the great Christian traditions that have sustained so many of my ancestors as the lowly farmer took comfort from the words of his Priests and Bishops.
The processional hymn was a favorite of mine, “Saint Patrick’s Breastplate”. It is a very long hymn that seems to be rarely sung in its entirety except for very special occasions. This was a very special occasion, and I was glad to add my voice.
I bind unto myself today
The strong Name of the Trinity,
By invocation of the same
The Three in One and One in Three.
The bishop celebrating the ordination was The Right Reverend V. Gene Robinson. Bishop Robinson came from farmers that worked the land in Kentucky and he seemed the perfect Bishop for the occasion, bringing together the fanfare for the common man with the fanfare for church celebrations.
Yet Bishop Robinson faces a much more daunting task. As the first openly gay priest to be ordained a Bishop in the Episcopal Church, or in any denomination, he has become the center for the Church’s struggle with the role of homosexuals in the Church. Perhaps some of this is why he is providing the invocation at the Inaugural Celebration at the Lincoln Memorial. He had to rush off to catch a plane to Washington part way through the service.
One of the questions during the ordination was whether Grace felt “called” to be a priest. At times, I’ve considered becoming a priest, or even a monk, yet I’ve never had a clear sense of calling. As I struggle with my own career, I’ve often wondered about being called. Are we all called to do something? If so, what is my calling? How many people have a clear sense of calling? How many people get a chance to celebrate their calling the way Grace and all of us gathered to celebrate her calling?
My mind wandered to President-Elect Obama. Does he have a sense of being called to his role? Does Bishop Robinson have a sense of his calling going beyond the calling of being a Priest and a Bishop to being the focal point of an important discussion in the Church? The Old Testament Lesson was the section from Isaiah where Isaiah says, “Here am I; send me”.
Another important aspect of the service, which is common to so many Episcopal services, is when the celebrant turns to the congregation and asks if everyone will do all in their power to support the person being ordained in their commitment.
I wish that the swearing-in of the elected officials had a similar selection. Chief Justice Roberts, after swearing-in President Obama would then turn to everyone attending the Inauguration and say, “Will you who witness these vows do all in your power to support this person in upholding the Constitution?”
At Grace’s ordination, we all loudly proclaimed that we would support her, and I hope that all American’s will support President Obama in upholding the Constitution. Yes, we can, and should argue about what it really means to uphold the Constitution, but we should all be engaged in that discussion.
As an aside, through Grace, I’ve met Thomas Beasley on Facebook. Thomas describes himself as a ‘Prison Missioner for the Diocese of Florida and Interim Chaplin at Baker Correctional Work Camp”. Rev. Beasley recently joined Born Again American which seems to be the closest I’ve found to answering that question that I wish Chief Justice Roberts would ask all of us.
This leads to the sermon during Grace’s ordination. The Reverend Matthew R. Lincoln exhorted Grace to “Keep finding new ways to listen”. It seemed like an appropriate quote to Twitter. Kim and I first met online. Kim first met Grace online. Through Grace, I’ve met Rev. Beasley online. The Internet can be a powerful new way to listen.
Grace captured some of this is a beautiful response to an online community that both she and Kim are part of,
I said to my very Jewish best-old-friend-from-middle-school when she called to congratulate me the instant Shabbat was over and she could use the phone, one of the things I love about the 21st century is being told "Mazel tov!" on my ordination as a female Episcopal priest by a gay bishop who's about to go to the inauguration of the biracial President whose middle name is Hussein.
This would be a great summary of the ordination, in and of itself. However, we Episcopalians are used to an exhortation at the end of the service to go forth in the world in peace to do the work God has given us to do. The words of traditional Zimbabwe song that we sang at the end of the Communion brought in some of this sense of going beyond Manchester and beyond our country, out into the whole world.
If you believe, and I believe and we together pray,
The Holy Spirit must come down and set God’s people free.
Getting up at 5:00 AM to drive to New Hampshire, either for political campaigns or to celebrate the ordination of a friend can be difficult, but it can also be very rewarding.
Update:
For those who watched the "We Are One" concert, and didn't see Bishop Robinson, here are a few posts about him not being on HBO:
The invisible, inaudible Bishop Gene Robinson and
We Are (Minus) One.
The Ordination
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 01/17/2009 - 10:36What’s Online Near Woodbridge, CT?
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 01/16/2009 - 10:55Amidst all the stories of troubles in the news industry, the one hope always seems to be that somehow online news will take up the slack. Yet most of the time, while everyone talks about how it would be great if online news would take up the slack, few seem to do anything about actually bringing higher quality local news online.
Wednesday, the Knight Foundation announced the the first winners of the Knight Community Information Challenge. At the top of the list comes “A hyperlocal news site staffed by professional journalists and citizen contributors in the five ethnically diverse towns of Connecticut's Lower Naugatuck Valley”.
The Valley Independent Sentinel proposal was submitted by the The Community Foundation for Greater New Haven. The Foundation works with the Online Journalism Project to support of the New Haven Independent. The Knight Foundation grant will be used to support an affiliated organization, the Valley Community Foundation which will create the Valley Independent Sentinel.
Paul Bass, the executive director of the Online Journalism Project says that the Valley Foundation is contracting with OJP to produce the new site. It will launch in mid-2009, following a model similar to the New Haven Independent. It will be an online only site, publishing multiple stories daily, five days a week. It will be staffed by professional journalists with heavy reader interaction and strong use of multimedia.
Here in Woodbridge, we are fairly fortunate to have sites like the Amity Observer and the Orange Bulletin covering local events, although I would love to see much more coverage in Woodbridge. However, as you get deeper into the valley, there is even more of a need of good, in depth local coverage.
For other online developments, I was recently contacted by ‘Roxy’ of Roxiticus Desperate Housewives. She has set up a set of websites, Roxy’s Best Of.... She’s from New Jersey so most of her sites so far have been centered on the Garden State. However, she is expanding into Connecticut and has set up Roxy’s Best Of ... Connecticut.
Roxy’s Best Of ... seems to reside somewhere between the hyperlocal journalism of sites like the New Haven Independent, reviews on sites like Yelp and the community of bloggers on sites like MyBlogLog, EntreCard and Adgitize. My sense is that it is a set of sites for fun narrative reviews of really good local places.
As a supporter of local companies and of positive news stories, I think Roxy has a good idea. She’s asked me to write for the Best Of sites in Connecticut. She has said that it is fine if I cross-post material to my own blog, that there is no pressure on posting according to any deadlines, and that if it turns into something that produces revenue, she will be sharing revenue with her writers. While it probably won’t be producing the hard journalism that the New Haven Independent does, it will be a valuable additional to local information.
On a more family oriented basis, @jcnork, whom I met through Twitter and lives in the next town over has a new blog post up about the State of the Norkosphere. He mentions the blog that his brother keeps about being in the Peace Corp in Romania, and a blog that his son has set up. Jack hasn’t been blogging much as he spends more and more time on Twitter, but it would be great to see him doing more long form writing.
Whether you are looking for good journalism, stories about good people to do business with around Connecticut, or simply good family stories, things look like they are moving in a good direction online around Woodbridge, CT.
Can I come home?
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 01/15/2009 - 11:40Help me find a forever home instead of being forced across the rainbow bridge.
Call Sherry, 860-305-6764
Sherry, an animal control officer (aco) in Hartford wrote:
LAST DAY IS 1-17-09(SATURDAY)
THIS SWEET PUP NEEDS A WARM PLACE TO CALL HOME.. SHE WAS FOUND CHAINED WITH A FOUR FOOT CHAIN TO A PORCH WITH NO FOOD, WATER, OR SHELTER.. WHEN I FOUND HER AND FREED HER FROM HER HELL, SHE JUMPED UP, HUGGED ME AND GAVE ME A KISS..(priceless moment as an aco)
She is extremely friendly, very playful, affectionate, great with other dogs.. She will jump into your arms like a small dog if given the chance.. She actually loves to be held. She walks great on leash and has an eager to please attitiude..