Monday, January 19, 2015
Open Season for Intolerance: How Russia's Anti-Gay Propaganda Laws are Destroying Lives
by Nomad
A Russian newspaper article provides an example of how discriminatory anti-gay propaganda laws have become for Russia's gay citizens. In fact, it has become a tool for hunting down individuals and destroying their careers.
Last month a music teacher at a school for disabled children in Saint Petersburg was fired for "an amoral action."
The crime?
The crime?
Her identity. Her sexual orientation.
According to the news report, the teacher was outed by an anti-gay crusader, Timur
Bulatov, who then wrote a letter of complaint to the school authorities. In a private meeting, the administrators told her that because she was a lesbian, she would no longer be allowed to work with
students. For a dedicated teacher, this decision was heart-breaking.
She told one reporter:"During all the years of my work at the school I gave all I had to my favorite profession, developing a love for arts, music among the children. ..Considering the capabilities of our children with moderate to severe developmental disabilities, I tried to make every lesson interesting, educational and fun."
What's important to understand
here is that the teacher was not openly gay to her students. The anti-propaganda laws do not, it would seem, apply in this case. The incident shows the predictable outcome of the Russian duma's 2013 passage of new laws banning the “propaganda of non-traditional sexual relationships to minors.
Sunday, January 18, 2015
Believe It Can Be Done
by Nomad
At first people refuse to believe that a strange new thing can be done, then they begin to hope that it can be done, then they see that it can be done--then it is done and all the world wonders why it was not done centuries ago. – Francis Eliza Hodgson Burnett
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Vancouver Restaurant Offers Free Meals to 50 Needy Residents
by Nomad
Matthew Robinson, reporter for the Vancouver Sun, tells us how the owner of one waterfront restaurant has decided to open his doors to the most needy in the community.
Now he is encouraging other restaurants to do the same.
Last Wednesday, Derek Oelmann and his staff at Vancouver's False Creek restaurant, Ten Ten Tapas, hosted 50 low income and homeless people who live in the neighborhood. It was not the first time. Oelmann opened his doors twice since last December.
In an interview, Oelmann said:
“What I’d like to see is this replicated by other restaurants...We did this relatively easily and inexpensively and could you (restaurateurs), once a month, open up your doors to the community?”
The idea is the flip side to new laws in the US against private
citizens feeding the homeless. Oelmann admits that there were some residents who were not exactly pleased. Homeless
shelters have also had some of the locals upset apparently. However, other restaurant owners and private citizens have offered to help.
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
The Tragic Murder of Yoav Hattab and The Chain of Sorrow
by Nomad
A look at one of the victims of the Paris terrorist attacks and how his life connects three cultures.
The name, Yoav Hattab, might not be familiar to you. He happened to be one of the four murdered hostages at the kosher supermarket, Hyper Cacher, (The other victims were Yohan Cohen, Philippe Braham, and François-Michel Saada.)
That attack was connected with earlier carnage on the offices of a satirical magazine which left 12 people dead and 11 others wounded.
When terrorist Amedy Coulibaly stormed into the suburban market, he knew only that it was a Jewish-owned. That was enough of a target as far as he was concerned. In his mind, as in the minds of all terrorists, his victims had no families, no friends, and no histories.
So. like the priest in The Bridge of San Louis Rey, I wanted to take a moment to look at the life and the death of this stranger who became a victim.
The most tragic aspect of the supermarket attacks- as with terrorism in general- was its random nature. The fact that location was a target was random. The victims too were random. The only real linkage, from the attackers' point of view, was that the workers and the customers were most likely to be Jewish.
In Hattab's case, that's only half of the story. This 21-year-old man was not French but from the predominantly Muslim Tunisia. He had been living in Paris while completing his graduate degree in international business studies. He was clearly not afraid of life and was preparing himself for an interesting productive life.
Moshe Uzan, a 25-year-old friend, told one reporter that Yoav's character set him apart."There are those who stand back and watch their lives. But he, he played an active role."
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