Friday 28 March 2008

First steps


Today I took the first steps.

Small and faltering steps, but steps along a new path. Steps I've considered for some time now, but taking them moves me from the dream world of wishful thinking into the realm of reality, whatever the outcome.

As yet it's too soon to know where, if anywhere, the path will lead, but it's for certain I'll find out once I round the first bend. And no matter what's there, the future will be different than if I had never taken courage to step out.

Looks like my Viaje Interior is moving me out of myself and into ???

Watch this space

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Tuesday 25 March 2008

It must be a girl thing

I have been looking after my 16 month old Granddaughter since she was a tiny baby.

Her mum drops her off around 7am, then she's mine till after five. Each morning we have breakfast, cereal and fruit, then I dress her for play.

However this morning, just after I had dressed her, she vanished back into her room emerging several minutes later waring only her singlet and nappies and carrying a replacement set of clothing, cloths more to her liking and different shoes.

Shoes that weren't the ones I had chosen.

Although she doesn't talk yet she, never the less, made it abundently clear that this was the outfit she was waring today and that I should re dress her.

Immediately.

Funny how we strive to make children independent then, as soon they are we wish they weren't.

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Sunday 23 March 2008

Five things that made me smile today

1/ My beautiful Easter wife



2/My city on a summers day



3/ Walking on the beach and watching children building sand castles




4/ Seeing happy tourists enjoying the Easter sun





Oh yes and. . . . . . . .

5/ seeing someone with a good sense of direction!




see the compass?

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Monday 17 March 2008

When all else fails, crime pays

Today's BBC website carried yet another story of the humanitarian crisis that has resulted from the blockade of Gaza over the past nine months.

It focused on two stories. Both are tragic but both all too common. The first concerned Nael, a young man with terminal cancer. Despite numerous official appeals to the Israeli authorities for a medical visa to leave Gaza for treatment in Egypt, treatment not available in Gaza, Naels application was continually refused and he eventually died in poverty in Gaza age 21 years. His mother left to harbor the resentment alone.

The second concerned another young man, Samir who had been an employee at Abudan as a garment machinist. The factory were he worked, like many others closed through the strangling effects of the blockade. He said he returned to the factory every day just to check if, by some chance, it was working again and he could have his job back.

He took the BBC reporter to his home: a small, dark construction of breeze-block and corrugated iron.

There his wife held the youngest of their five children as she sat on a thin mattress on the floor. Two other toddlers ran around barefooted while they spoke.

He explained how he managed to make a little money by selling bread from a cart he wheeled through the town. It was not enough, he said, to feed his family.

His eyes welled up as he told the reoprter he had not been able to pay his rent for four months but that his landlord had taken pity on him.

There was an alternative, he said, one which he had refused but which nearly half of his former colleagues had taken up.

It was to join a work-force that was still well paid in spite of the troubles everywhere else: that is, the security forces of Hamas.

The pressure being put on Gaza - not just by Israel but the international community and even the Palestinian government in the West Bank, which is run by the Fatah faction - is seen as a means of weakening Hamas, strengthening the moderates and stopping the rocket fire.

But, in fact, the rockets continue to be launched and mothers like Nael's are calling for revenge while working-age men like Samir are accepting Hamas' offer to pick up arms.

It's the same scenario we saw in Northern Ireland where unemployment and financial hardship left the IRA as the only reliable employer.

When will they ever learn?

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Saturday 15 March 2008

Palm Sunday - a victory for the little people


Today is Palm Sunday. In the secular world perhaps the least publicised of any of the Christian feasts. It doesn't have the commercial pull of Christmas shopping or the warm fuzzies of the Good Friday Easter bunny, but the message of Palm Sunday is perhaps more profound than either.
Jesus enters war torn Jerusalem on a donkey. Pilot, the symbol of Roman authority and might would have pranced in along the same road on a white stallion accompanied by legions of troops and the cheering of the gathered crowds. The comparison presents a satire playing off humility and individual weakness against power and corporate strength. Two thousand years later Jerusalem is still war torn, the Roman empire has vanished into the pages of history but, Jesus lives.

The lesson of Palm Sunday is the message of David & Goliath: that we, the little people, week and powerless as we seem, have the ability through that weakness, like Jesus, to effect enormous change on the world around us. More even than the Goliath oil barons and coprorate giants!

Yea, the little people!

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One picture is worth a thousand words










Brazilian cartoonist Carlos Latuff reflects upon the ongoing conditions in Gaza and the middle east.

He titles this carton The Mother of all Wars

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Tuesday 11 March 2008

New Horizons


Today I took my 16mth old granddaughter to her first play group.

Since she has discovered walking, only a few weeks ago, the boundaries of her old world have dissolved and new horizons have become the order of the day. Life is BIG and big is good.

Her eyes grew as large as saucers as she spied the vast array of play equipment, then settled immediately upon a small dolls pram (and doll) which she proceeded to push at 'top speed' around the room, knocking into walls, doors or children: what ever got in her way, going wherever the speeding pram took her.

It reminded me that no matter how much energy or enthusiasm we have, if we don't know where we're going we'll just go through life bouncing off the nearest wall.

Hopefully over the next few months she will discover this truth for herself and learn how to be in control of her own destination.

It's something I've known for some years now but still need to remind myself of. It's just so easy to let the momentum of life direct our path.

But is it taking us where we want to go?

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Thursday 6 March 2008

Terrible things are happening in Gaza



Terrible things are happening in Gaza.

Civilians, including women and children are being shot and killed by Israeli soldiers; the supply of adequate drinking water, sewage treatment, supplies of oil, gas and food are not being allowed through the Israeli controlled border. Helicopter gun-ships hover continually overhead and supersonic fighter planes swoop low over populated civilian areas at night.

Any yet, western press, especially here in New Zealand say little or nothing about this humanitarian disaster that looks more like controlled genocide or at best, ethnic cleansing of a democratically elected government and it's people.

If you want first hand civilian accounts of what is actually happening on the ground read what local bloggers Heba and Laila have to say or read some of the in-depth editorials of the BBC or other reliable sources such as the Independent.

And it's not a new phenomena.

When I visited this part of the world in 2000 as a 'Christian Pilgrim' I was horrified to see the plight of Palestinians who were robed of their lands, left stateless, economically trampled and forced to live as refugees wherever they could. More than 6 million of them with many still living in temporary camps through out the middle east.

You'd have to ask if Israel was serious about wanting peace with Palestine, to hand back the land it creased during the 6 day war and having a viable Palestinian Nation as its neighbor?

Well, wouldn't you?

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Monday 3 March 2008

Congratulations Gina & Martin

(Gina, John & Anthea)

Weddings are a big event in anyones life, particularly the brides and especially the parents.

Congratulations to you both and happiness always.

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Sunday 2 March 2008

Ethnic Cleansing in Gaza?


It's an impassioned term, but on reflection. the only one I can find that adequately describes Israels current military assult on Gaza. The term in ethnic cleansing.

A recent report published by the Israeli human rights organization B'Tselem highlights Israeli atrocities in the occupied territories. Israeli forces killed this last year six hundred and sixty citizens. The number of Palestinians killed by Israel last year tripled in comparison to the previous year (around two hundred). According to B'Tselem, the Israelis killed one hundred and forty one children in the last year. Most of the dead are from the Gaza Strip, where the Israeli forces demolished almost 300 houses and slew entire families. This means that since 2000, Israeli forces killed almost four thousand Palestinians, half of them children; more than twenty thousand were wounded.

I am the first to admit that the launching of Palestinian rockets in to Israel from Gaza must stop, but is Israel's current arsenal of responses helping or inflaming the situation?

And does Israel really want to eliminate the rocket attacks or just eliminate Gaza?

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