Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Gone Phishing, Puget Sound style

People in this area, the whole northwest of the country, are absolutely fascinated – no, better “obsessed” – by salmon. And it’s not really hard to understand. Salmon dominate the ecosystem – from environmentalism and agriculture to arts and business – these creatures are the talk of the town, and its bosses too. Now, let’s be clear as well: “salmon” does not refer to a single unique breed of fish; heck, only since moving to greater Seattle last year did I learn that there are no less than seventeen variety of salmon inhabiting the rivers, inlets and tributaries of the Puget sound alone! Coho, Sockeye, Chinook, Chum, Pink, and on and on…
Visiting the Issaquah Salmon Hatchery today (www.issaquahfish.org) just days before the annual Issaquah Salmon Days Festival – yes, this is really a thing, and it’s a really big thing; go to www.salmondays.org – I was delighted to witness zillions of these extra-large aquatic dudes (mainly Coho, which are bred at the hatchery) hanging out, doing their thing, putting on a show. Watching them in the Issaquah Creek, and trying to jump into and over the mini locks that are part of the hatchery, I am reminded of our long-standing and necessary, connection to the natural world. I am certainly no angler; as a matter of fact, I can’t even eat salmon without getting ill (the mere smell of it gets to me). And yet, observing part of its natural life-cycle, and knowing how vital it is to the life of this region, clearly demonstrates something very primal about our historic human symbiosis with the other living things that make up our earth’s system. Unfortunately of course this is something we often overlook.

So these coming days, our little town will be caught up in celebrating the indigenous water-bound master – there will be food and music, arts & crafts galore (how many salmon earrings, statues, batiks, paintings, sculptures and t-shirts does ANYONE really need?), and educational programs on the mating habits of Oncorhynchus kisutch. Our two kids will play in the high school marching band as part of the parade. And I will be there to cheer them on, and to praise the mighty salmon.

Friday, September 11, 2015

Reflections, revisited

Just processing the memories.
The following reflections are based on remarks I originally made on September 17, 2001, just days after the terror attacks, living in greater NYC.
 
Today, September 17, 2001, we face a very different world than we expected even just a week ago.  Our world, our very sense of security and safety, was shattered by the unimaginable events that took place last Tuesday morning.  I imagine that for many of us, the questions concerning those attacks on our nation and upon our human brothers and sisters keep flowing into our minds and hearts.  I know that my own sense of identity and mortality has come sharply into focus.
At this moment, I would not attempt to discuss the nagging issues of “who did this”, or “why” or “how”…there are many experts at work to resolve those problems.  Rather, I would share with you some thoughts about how the incidents affected me, how I initially responded to them, and perhaps what the message of this episode is for us as individuals and a community, as Americans and Jews.
* * * * *
If you recall, last Tuesday morning, September 11, was an absolutely gorgeous day. The sun was shining, barely a cloud in the sky. My day began as many of yours did: with a million things to do.  Incidentally, my biggest goal for the day was to finish my remarks for this evening.  So much for planning. I had an early appointment. By 10  a.m., I made my way to the cars, hurrying off to other places.  My habit is to listen to the radio even before shifting out of park. As I turned up the volume, I realized this was not regular programming. The station had turned over to NPR for ongoing coverage of breaking events….
I listened to a repeat of what had just occurred:  two planes flown into the World Trade Center towers…a third aircraft struck the Pentagon….and then, reports of a fourth crash outside Pittsburgh. I remember quite distinctly the wave of unsteadiness that overcame my body.  “What’s going on?”  I cried.  Then, “This can’t be true!”
I pulled out of our parking lot, making my way toward the JCC in Bridgewater, where I was due for a meeting.  The true horror had not even yet begun.  On my way over, I started to feel the two emotions that have tugged at me, and all of us, since this began. Desperate sadness. Uncontained fury. This is not supposed to happen to us.  Not here. Not at home.
The TV was on at the JCC, and I joined the small group huddled together.  It seemed that we actually drew close to one another for warmth and protection.  Moments later, we watched in disbelief as the first tower crumbled to the earth. A friend took me aside and asked “how do we respond to this?” Before I could speak, she continued:  “Better yet, now as the parent of two children, what do you say to them?” I’ve been dwelling on that one ever since.
Like everyone else, I spent the next several hours trying to get in touch with the people I love. No matter where they were, I wanted to know first-hand that they were safe.  Sitting on the curb of the JCC, I finally got through to my parents, who live outside Boston. They had been out that morning voting in the local primaries. My dad and I just sat together, over the phone, sharing our anguish. Like some of you who are here with me this evening, he remembers Pearl Harbor as a day of great change for him, for our country, and for the world. Yet, according to him, this most recent attack is of a much different nature. For it struck at the very heart of our society, the very core of our national sense of being. And for us here tonight, it struck too close to home.
From there, I tried to stay tuned to the news while joining Debra for lunch. We sat eating, listening to the continuing accounts of what was happening in New York and D.C. I looked at my daughter Vered, who is only today six weeks old. In my heart, I knew that my world and hers, was changing before our eyes. Growing up, my generation only had vague memories of Cold-War atomic bomb shelters. We’ve never known war as did our older brothers and sisters, and especially not like our parents. Yet even they did not see hostilities on this soil.  Terrorism was a dirty word that happened to other people, in other places. Would Vered and Benjamin know a different America? Will our children grow up without the safety we’ve come to expect? Can we guarantee that they will be secure in body and spirit? What’s happened to our homeland – a land we’ve come to embrace as insulated from such acts of senseless violence and hate? Unfortunately, the answers to these matters, and so many more, will take a lifetime to figure out. Yet I pray that ultimately, and perhaps even soon, we will all be blessed to know a greater measure of well-being than we have in recent days.
By the time I returned home that afternoon, I was exhausted. The constant barrage of new information, images and conjectures wiped me out both physically and emotionally. Though closer to what was going on than friends and colleagues elsewhere in the country, I know that I was lucky to be outside the city itself. So many innocent people have been lost. So many brave and concerned citizens – our fire-fighters, police, medical personnel – have responded to the crisis with selfless zeal. And many of them, too, have paid the ultimate price on behalf of others they never knew, and likely never even reached in the rubble and ruin of lower Manhattan. It is to honor them that we must carry on with dignity and conviction that what is good will yet prevail over evil. More precisely, good people will prevail over those who perpetrate violent acts of hatred upon others.
* * * * *
It was already late into the evening.  I made one final call for the day, to Erie, Pennsylvania.  My best friend had just been married nine days before. Scott and his new wife, Erica, were due to fly back home from Paris that very day. With all the day’s tumult – the grounding of flights, the closing of airports – I wondered where they were, and when they’d return. Anita, Erica’s mom, was relieved that I called.  “The kids are safe,” she told me. “They reported in from Amsterdam a few hours ago.” Their flight from Paris had been aloft for two hours when they received the order to land. Unexpectedly, their honeymoon was extended. And this is only one personal story, one of hundreds and thousands about individuals, real people, who were touched on that day. Thankfully, theirs had a happy ending. Many, of course, did not.
In the end, the whole day was, simply, a big mess. It was beyond surreal. It was more like watching a very expensive Hollywood production – one of those science fiction movies about an alien attack. And that’s just what it was, my friends – and alien attack. The people who planned and executed this monstrous crime are exactly that. No, of course they are not from other planets. But yes, from a different world. We need to recognize this very fact if we are to make sense of what has happened. Their thinking and their behavior is alien to us. They do not share in our understanding of the sanctity of human life.  They do not recognize the kinship of the entire human family. They do not even value their own existence. Not in any way like we do.
And so, I hope that we are able to “hunt down and punish those responsible”, as the President has said. Like so many, my rage burns hot.  Whether it is comfortable or not for us to think about, there are those who are beyond chesed, beyond mercy. There are instances when it is necessary to discipline wrongdoers. And not merely with symbolic acts. It will take time, yet it is upon us to exact justice from anyone who was involved with this whole affair. 
We, however, need also to look beyond this moment, and go forward.  First, we must come to grips with the enormous loss of life. Statistics do not suffice. This is surely a massive tragedy, a disaster without compare in modern history. I reminded myself of one very important teaching: when it comes to such large-scale catastrophe, such uncountable loss of human life, numbers can never be enough. It cannot be that “two hundred and seventy-something people died in the plane crashes.” It cannot be that hundreds are unaccounted for. It is not that X thousand innocent civilians lost their lives. No – we must recall that it was one plus one plus one. Each one precious. The extent of this slaughter can only begin to be fathomed when we start thinking that it was so-and-so, our neighbor, and so-and-so, somebody’s mom or dad, and so-and-so, my friend’s cousin, and so-and-so, someone I knew from work. When we think of the victims in this way, it quickly becomes real to us. The magnitude of this loss begins to take shape.
And yet, let us not despair. 

In this coming year, we will journey together, continuing the sacred path of life. May the words of our mouths and the deeds of our hands always be blessed. And may we find the strength not only to carry on, but to do all that it takes to make the world a better place –simply for our having been here.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Tenor Madness - Sonny Rollins turns 85

At some point during grad school, we finally decided to get a CD player. We decided on some fancy new-fangled “shelf unit” that had all the components stacked in one fairly compact piece (and I think it cost more than our first two cars put together). I remember the first disc I played on the machine – a copy of Sonny Rollins’ The Bridge (one of the first three albums we received from BMG Music Club, no less!). Though already listening to jazz for several years at the time, I wasn’t yet too familiar with his work. And from the first notes of “Without a Song,” I was hooked. Something sweet, complex and emotional always came from Sonny’s horn. As my love for his music grew – from that first album to Way out West and Saxophone Colossus to This is What I Do, Road Shows and Sonny, Please – I have cherished what feels like a personal connection also to the greats whose legacy he carries on: Bird and Diz, Lester Young, Coleman Hawkins and Miles himself.
As Sonny turns 85 today, I admire his unflagging energy and spirit, his indomitable talent, and especially his love for the history and impact of his genre. Just listening to him speak so lovingly of the jazz past assures me that his present will long continue to carry us into a future of sublime and significant art.

Happy birthday Sonny Rollins – a colossus among giants.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Filthy McNasty


Today is the anniversary of the birth of Horace Silver (b. 1928, d. June 28 2014), who has remained one of my all-time favorite musicians. He had a long, illustrious, productive career, and played with most of the giants of the genre. I came late to the party - only really learning of him when "Hardbop Grandpop" came out in 1996. I remember the moment - seeing the very cool looking Horace, wearing black suit, purple shirt and awesome hat - staring back at me from the front of a CD rack at Borders Books and Music (in White Plains, no less). The rainbow lettering drew me over; I asked the nearest clerk what he knew about the album, which wasn't much. "He's some old jazz dude." Thanks I replied. I thought I'd give it a try, so I bought the CD, brought it out to the car (my oh so hip '96 Saturn), popped it into the deck...and WOW. I think I grooved to that album for the next 3 weeks straight.
Now there's a whole lot of musicians I love - Oscar Peterson, Sonny Rollins, Ron Carter, Hank Mobley, Lee Morgan, Charlie Parker, Lester Young, and of course Miles Davis (how I love me some Miles!). And yet there's something particularly magical in my ear and heart about Horace. The composition...the virtuoso playing...the collaboration...it all adds up to be one of the more creative inspirations I've ever enjoyed. Whether writing, event planning, consulting with others and even playing music on my own - a little something extra seems to pump the blood and brain if Horace is on in the background. 
He's been gone just more than a year. Thankfully his musical genius lives every time we hit "play."

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Happy birthday dear friend, for the 30th time!

Thirty years ago this week, I entered as a freshman at the American University. Following yet another summer as a camp counselor, I hopped in the car with mom and dad to drive from Boston to DC. I don’t remember much about the trip, except we stopped in Brooklyn to visit my grandmother who was in the hospital (and then dad showed me the location of the family bakery – building still intact – at Coney Island and O). We made our way to the nation’s capitol, and stayed overnight in nearby suburban Virginia. We spent time with my aunt Enid, visiting her son Tommy who lived and worked locally, and spent an eve celebrating her birthday at a French dinner-burlesque show (only slightly awkward for an eighteen year-old with his parents). Of course most important was finally moving onto campus, finding my way to my room in Letts Hall, the dorm – oops, I mean “residence hall” – that I would call home for my first three years at school.
Mixing and mingling with the other new and returning students, I was introduced to one fellow freshman whose friendship I cannot overemphasize to this day. Scott and I met as (myopic yet) wide-eyed newbies at the introductory meeting led by the RA on our floor. We hit it off right away, and now seem to have accomplished a great majority of life’s deeds together: from intramural soccer and softball and student activities to movie nights with Armand’s Pizza and pining over girls, and yes even successfully navigating our course work – I had a friend and partner through the ups and downs of college life. We’ve shared holidays and family time, both as young adult sons in our families of origin as well as being husbands and fathers ourselves. Scott schlepped to Minnesota for our wedding at the end of one very cold December; I had the privilege of officiating at his wedding another memorable weekend in Erie, PA. We’ve visited and shared, watched (and marveled) as we became parents, and our children continue to grow…
And yes, that week we met, also coincided with Scott’s birthday – which he’ll again celebrate this week. So we celebrate 30 years since first meeting that fateful day at AU – I wish you all the best now and always. Happy birthday Scotty – you’ll always be Senor Smoke.

Friday, August 21, 2015

If I were a bell...

What's your favorite single note in any song?

What? What kind of question is that? It's hard enough to think about favorite single musicians, or songs, or even genres. Favorite single note?

Well, for me, at least at the moment, my favorite single note is the ringing guitar chime at the opening of "The Kids are Alright." It's just so filled with energy, possibility, and the appropriate amount of angst. One resounding blast, followed by the plaintive lyrics...

I don't mind other guys dancing with my girl
That's fine, I know them all pretty well
But I know sometimes I must get out in the light
Better leave her behind with the kids, they're alright
The kids are alright

Sometimes, I feel I gotta get away
Bells chime, I know I gotta get away
And I know if I don't, I'll go out of my mind
Better leave her behind with the kids, they're alright
The kids are alright

I guess just another way to say, well, if I were a bell I'd go ding dong, ding dong ding.



Friday, August 7, 2015

Consuming our fill

Toward the opening of this week’s passage, we find the verse that is customarily held to be the basis for reciting birkat hamazon – the traditional blessing after meals:
For the Lord your God is bringing you into a good land, a land with streams and springs and fountains issuing from plain and hill; a land of wheat and barley, of vines, figs, and pomegranates, a land of olive trees and honey; a land where you may eat food without stint, where you will lack nothing; a land whose rocks are iron and from whose hills you can mine copper. When you have eaten your fill, give thanks to the Lord your God for the good land which He has given you (Deuteronomy 8:7-10, JPS translation).
Usually we pay most attention only to the last line – v’achalta v’savata uveyrachta et Adonai elohekha – “When you have eaten your fill, give thanks to the Lord your God…” If this were only to indicate our obligation to recite thanks for our dietary sustenance, our understanding is insufficient; the paragraph refers to ALL the bounty of the Promised Land – natural resources, nourishing foods, precious metals – that is, the entire range of what we need to flourish and succeed. This in mind, we should read the passage as “when you have *consumed* your fill,” as consumption is much broader than eating alone. Consequently, this also broadens our responsibility to express gratitude for what we have. It is not merely following meals that we give thanks; it is for each and every time we “consume,” make use of, that which is provided for us. Imagine – an even greater prompt to utter praise for the things we have and what we do with them.
Soon after, recounting Moses’ need to create a second set of tablets (the Ten Commandments) following the Israelites’ episode with the golden calf, the text goes on:
And now, O Israel, what does the Lord you God demand of you? Only this: to revere the Lord your God, to walk only in His paths, to love Him, and to serve the Lord your god with all your heart and soul, keeping the Lord’s commandments and laws, which I enjoin upon you today, for your good (Deut. 10:12-13).
Only this?!?!? Well, at least this easy listing is meant for our good. Modern commentator Jeffrey Tigay suggests that “’And now’” means ‘Now, then.’ In other words, ‘Your history of rebellion shows that you lack the following qualities, to which you must dedicate yourselves in the future’” (JPS Torah Commentary – Deuteronomy, p. 107).
So how do we begin (or continue) to tackle this “mere” listing of virtues that enable us to overcome our past foibles? The answer is already given in the earlier part of the text: by always cultivating an “attitude of gratitude”, in giving thanks for what we have, our ability to use them for good, and our opportunity to share our advantage with those around us.

And now, it remains our turn.