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Betting on Helping New Orleans

This story is from the NOLA Times-Picayune. It reminds everyone of the good work still being done by the church in New Orleans.

Heavens! Bishops taking game bets

But proceeds to go to Katrina relief
Friday, January 04, 2008
By Bruce Nolan
The Good Book states the battle is not always to the strong, nor the race always to the swift, but dubious Episcopal bishops in Louisiana and Ohio nonetheless are betting on the power and speed of their opposing Tigers and Buckeyes, inviting their flocks to join in — and promising the proceeds to Hurricane Katrina relief.

That said, there isn’t much smack talk involved — not yet at least, these being Episcopalian clergy.

But there is a promise by Bishop Thomas Breidenthal to put up $250 for every Ohio State touchdown and $100 for every Buckeye field goal in Monday’s Bowl Championship Series game. He is inviting more than 25,000 Episcopalians in his Diocese of Southern Ohio to make similar pledges.

Breidenthal’s call went out Sunday to 82 Episcopal congregations, including those in Columbus, Ohio State’s hometown. Diocesan spokeswoman Richelle Thompson said the invitation likely will be widened in the next few days to target Buckeye Episcopalians wherever they might be found.

In response, Bishop Charles Jenkins of the Diocese of Louisiana has called on Tiger fans to pledge similar dollars for LSU points. That announcement will go out from 54 Episcopal pulpits Sunday, the day before the game, but the call to ante up pledges against Ohio State is posted on the Louisiana diocese Web site now.

The bishops said all the money will go to Katrina relief administered by Jenkins’ diocese in southeastern Louisiana. The Louisiana diocese raises money for Bundles of Hope, with donation levels of $20 to $1,000 that buy goods and relief services in metropolitan New Orleans.

Breidenthal is new to Ohio. His biography suggests a cerebral churchman who last served as a chaplain at Princeton and before that as a seminary professor in New York.

“St. Paul tells us we are called to outdo each other in doing good,” he said. “Competition is sanctified when it does good things for communities and brings people together.”

In truth, though, the idea for the challenge came from a Breidenthal aide “who’s a big Buckeye fan,” Thompson said.

“Clearly, the Buckeyes are going to win. This is just going to make it a little easier for Louisiana to bear,” she said. “If you want smack, we’ll just leave it at that.”

Jenkins, a Louisiana native whose wife, Louise, once taught agronomy at LSU, said he willingly took the bet.

“I am concerned Buckeye fans won’t have to buy very many Bundles of Hope,” the Louisiana bishop said. “We know they will have a hard time scoring any points against our Tiger defense.”

. . . . . . .

The Diocese of Louisiana Web site is www.edola.org. The Diocese of Southern Ohio Web site is www.episcopal-dso.org.

Bruce Nolan can be reached at bnolan@timespicayune.com or (504) 826-3344.

Humor from the CHE: Berkeley Tree-Sitter Falls, Breaks 2Limbs

From CMMB:

The repsonses are great, so I thought I would share the whole thing.

Berkeley Tree-Sitter Falls, Breaks 2 Limbs - Chronicle.com

November 12, 2007

Berkeley Tree-Sitter Falls, Breaks 2 Limbs

A protester broke his arm and leg after plunging at least 30 feet Sunday night while trying to exit a tree in an oak grove that the University of California at Berkeley plans to raze, the San Jose Mercury News reported.

Nathaniel Hill, 24, mistakenly thought he was connected to a cable when he stepped from his perch to see his father, who had stopped by to visit. Mr. Hill was among a group of protesters who are living in the trees in hopes of blocking the university from felling them to make way for a $125-million athletics center. He is not the first protester to take a tumble; a woman broke her wrists in a fall earlier this year.

The university has been sued over the planned tree-cutting, and a court decision is anticipated as early as this week.

Dan Mogulof, a university spokesman, said Mr. Hill’s accident was “very regrettable but to state the obvious, completely avoidable.” —Don Troop

Posted on Monday November 12, 2007 | Permalink |

Comments

The headline (perhaps intentionally) did not say whether the tree-sitter broke his own limbs or the tree’s. Thank you for clarifying in the opening sentence.

— CU Alum    Nov 12, 11:16 PM    #

Sounds like the young man suffered from premature ejection, which can happen when your Dad shows up unexpectedly. Quite embarrassing.

— S. Britchky    Nov 13, 03:29 AM    #

Forget the hippy. Is the tree ok?

— Jones2    Nov 13, 04:03 AM    #

Meh…Just burn the tree’s down with the tree hugging hippies in them, solve two problems at the same time.

— doriangrey    Nov 13, 10:45 AM    #

His dad just “stopped by”? He didn’t say – I don’t pay for college so you can do this crap! Get out of the tree you hippie moron!?

— woodman    Nov 13, 11:17 AM    #

Getting hurt to save oak trees? That’s not even a rare tree. Go camp in a bog or something.

— Chip    Nov 13, 11:29 AM    #

Isn’t he a little old to be climbing trees? At 24, he better have his doctorate by now. When are these hippies going to grow up?

— BW    Nov 13, 11:37 AM    #

For the the hippie-haters in the crowd who rejoice in the suffering of others, trees do have functions aside from being places to hang nooses.

— coal_train    Nov 13, 12:15 PM    #

coal_train:

Obviously they have more uses…. dog toilets, carbon-credits, nailing posters to… or, in your case, barking up the wrong one.

— practical_joe    Nov 13, 12:27 PM    #

If a tree-hugger falls in a forest…

— beefeater    Nov 13, 12:41 PM    #

How do you get a tree-hugger down from a tree? Wave to him.

— beefeater    Nov 13, 12:46 PM    #

…re-pave paradise, put up a wealthy donor’s wishes.

— marci    Nov 13, 02:39 PM    #

Since the injury was suffered on the job, can he apply for disability insurance?

— Lawrence S. Lerner    Nov 13, 03:29 PM    #

CU Alum:

The San Jose Mercury News did report this as “breaking news.”

— ironmite    Nov 13, 03:43 PM    #

Preparing for a sacramental day

In Forward’s “Day by Day” Flannery O’Connor is attributed with saying that “when we know the truth it will make us odd.”

Well, my husband is going to be ordained on Saturday. And, that truth makes us odd.

But, I’m okay with that. As the sacramental moment approaches I have found myself more and more nervous. I don’t know why? This process has been bubbling along for years but now the day has arrived and I am afraid.

In our 14 years of married life we have shared sacramental moments. The first, our wedding. Most couples’ first lesson in that a wedding is a community event, that it is larger than ourselves. Also, the birth of a child and the death of a loved one, adds legs to the stool and kicks others out. But, their mark remains. The stool is always wobbley when someone leaves. They are always there in spirit.

The ordination is another sacrament. It is the larger church community coming together to affirm the gifts of this person.

Marriage has been under fire for years, but people still get married. The Episcopal Church is aching under its own weight, and yet people are still called. It says to me that there is still hope, hope in the best and for the best.

‘2 Years On’ and who can stand it?

I spoke to a friend in New Orleans this afternoon who left work early to go home and drink. She was so overwhelmed and depressed by the relentless “2 Years On” footage and anger she couldn’t function anymore.

What are we remembering by watching the footage, the trauma of that time? When a loved one passes away do we remember them by watching tapes of their bypass surgery? Or, do we watch video of the beautiful times? Photos of them healthy and alive, the way they would want to be remembered.

For me, I remember the strangest most exotic sensation of sitting in the French Quarter watching the tops of the cruise ships glide by. Because, lest we should forget, the city is 20 feet below sea level you actually have to walk up a few flight of stairs to see the Mississippi River. Once you are up on the River Walk there is usually a solo sax player and if you look to the right, the Crescent City Connection is lit up and there might even be a breeze along the river.

Just remembering you today, New Orleans.

Dated perceptions don’t just plague Africa

In this article from the Washington Post online Ms.Uzodinma Iwela writes from an African’s perspective on the disdainful idea that the West wants to “Save Africa.” It is an important reminder to us who have a “heart for Africa” (as people say) that we are reminded that Africa is full of real people living daily lives.

But, I would say to Ms. Iwela that this simplified perception of Africa is no different than other causes that make its way through the glamour pages of popular culture and society. The media perception that develops is often completely disconnected from the reality, but it is the perception that sticks and somehow moves people more effectively than the reality.

Another excellent case in point: New Orleans. The city continues to struggle to come out from under a persistent perception of decay and racism, particularly since Katrina. But many of us know of the bridges that have been built across ecumenical and racial lines since the storm, which would have never happened before.

There have been many people who have looked at me, shrugged their shoulders and asked, “But why should we rebuild New Orleans? It’s just going to flood again.”

“Well,” I normally respond, “The New Orleanians will rebuild New Orleans because it’s their home and they love it. They will come back. They will rebuild.” And so they are.

Others say that it’s not the role of the federal government to rebuild New Orleans. And, I say, that’s good because the checks that the federal government have sent are sitting in Baton Rouge because the legislation doesn’t know how to begin to spend the money.

So, the recovery in New Orleans is happening by New Orleanians. And, volunteers from across the country, mainly through their churches, who come and help out. I have seen sweaty college students with dust masks and sawzalls take three houses down to the studs in one day.

The contents of the house is then tossed into a 15 foot pile on the curb, and most of those piles are still sitting there because there is no one to pick it up. And, so it goes.

The people of New Orleans - and many other cities around the world for that matter - are fighting against the same frustrations that Ms. Iweala has voiced. Unfortunately, the true poverty of the situation is the people working in refugee camps in Nigeria or the relief centers in New Orleans are dependent on the help the “outside” world can give them and resign themselves to the continued misperception and true misunderstanding of their situation.

The local workers roll their eyes, accept the aid, and wave as the planes fly away with the generous donors so they can all get back to work.

Back in Oxford!

Cross-Posted from Targuman.org.
In the airWe are back in England! We arrived yesterday morning at 8:40 am, 20 minutes early thanks to a 100 knot tail wind. After an hour or so in line for passport control and 40 minutes waiting for a very confused woman to finish her non-order (how do you come to a rental car place, argue for 40 minutes about a car and then leave without one?) we got into our Vauxhall Vectra with a Tom Tom and we were on our way! The Bodley

Along the M25 our son Mack was ecstatic to see Thomas the Tank Engine. He was life-size and up on a lorry. (Which was a relief to me. I had promised him he would see Thomas, since we were in England, etc. but wasn’t sure how or where. Now I was able to show him Thomas and obviously he was off to get a new paint job.) We arrived in Oxford by noon with a stop at Sainsbury for some essentials (McVities Digestive biscuits!).

After a short nap we headed downtown, I registered with the Bodleian Library (very quick since I had been a doctoral student they simply reactivated my status; because I was here on the cusp of digitization, 1993-1997, they already had my picture in the computer and just printed out the card, good through 2011), and we walked around the town taking some pictures (see our Flickr account and look for my daughter’s version of “Where’s Waldo”) and ended with dinner at the Bishop’s Mitre.

Today I am off to do some research for the paper I am presenting next week in Slovenia. I will meet with the representative of an undergraduate college for lunch to try and develop a study abroad programme in Oxford. So, for now, this is Oxford out!

In the Bishop's Mitre

We have success!

We journeyed down to Philadelphia on Friday to the passport office. We arrived at
8:45 a.m. and the line was already across the front of the building and down a full city block.

Everybody in line was leaving the country within three days and everyone had an 8:30 a.m. appointment. There was some security and a jovial worker came wheeling out a little trolley to have everyone write down their names and birthdays on it.
Luckily, by the time we made it to the front of the line they had already confirmed that all of our paperwork was in fact in Philadelphia and we were asked to return at 2:30. (We had applied for passports on April 1)

The passport office sits next to the historic district. We went to the relatively new Liberty Museum which has an interactive section on tolerance. It also has three Marc Chagall’s in the religion section. We also visited the Ben Franklin museum and watched the short film of his life.

When we returned to the passport office and waited in line on the opposite side of the building I felt a little like I had done standing in line to receive my degrees. That suddenly, at the last moment, someone would pull me out of line and explain that there had been a problem and I needed one more course before I could receive my degree.

Thankfully, we received our passports by 3:30 in the afternoon. As long as you had all of your documents it was relatively painless, and surprisingly organized.

Preparing to leave

Like millions of other Americans, we haven’t received our passports yet and we are set to leave on Tuesday! I have spent late evenings on the phone with the passport operators trying to make sure we have the golden booklets before Tuesday.

Tonight we have to phone to see if they have been processed yet. If they haven’t they will schedule an appointment for us to go in person, but they can only schedule an appointment if you are leaving within three days and have proof of your airline ticket.

I can only imagine how it is to work for the passport agency right now!

World Vision Jerusalem: News Alert

This is a news alert that came from the World Vision Jerusalem office:

World Vision Jerusalem-West Bank-Gaza

News Alert – 13 June, 2007

Is Gaza heading towards civil war?

By Wadi Razzouk – Communications Officer

More than 55 people have been killed and close to 200 have been wounded in the fiercest and latest round of clashes between Fatah and Hamas that broke out three days ago. However, this time it seems that Hamas is trying to achieve a decisive military victory that would leave the Gaza Strip under its control.

The World Vision offices in Jabaliya (North Gaza) and Rafah (South Gaza) have been closed due to the ferocious fighting. The staff of the northern office said that a man was shot just outside the office by a sniper. All World Vision projects in the Gaza Strip have been put on hold, hoping that the fighting will subside soon.

Hamas seems to be in control of most of the parts in the Gaza Strip and has issued an ultimatum to Fatah and the Palestinian Authority security apparatus loyal to President Mahmoud Abbas to surrender their weapons by Friday afternoon.

Many of the victims killed in the past days were innocent civilians, including women and children.

There were reports about battles for control of hospitals throughout the Gaza Strip. Al-Awdah hospital in the northern town of Beit Hanoun was occupied two days ago by Hamas militants. Four people were killed in that battle. World Vision supplied medicines and medical supplies to this private hospital last year.

There is deep concern that these clashes might be a prelude to a civil war, which forebodes a worsening in the humanitarian crisis for the 1.5 million people living in the Gaza Strip. Their suffering is immense even without the infighting with 80 percent of the population dependent on food aid for daily survival.

Please join us in praying for peace in the Gaza Strip, in an area that seems to have seen all possible kinds of suffering.

One and the Presidential Campaign

Are Americans becoming more “green” and world aware in general? I hope so. I think we’re seeing a change in our awareness of the impact for good or bad that we can have on other countries, particularly those in need of our help.

The One campaign weighed into the presidential campaign on Monday, June 11th, when it hosted a press conference at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in D.C. Senators and others gathered to push poverty up the agenda in the election process.

Here is a link to the Episcopal New Service coverage of that event:
http://www.episcopalchurch.org/79901_86790_ENG_HTM.htm
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