REMEMBERING THE RWANDAN GENOCIDE

timothy longman

Dr. Timothy Longman will speak about the role of the Christian church in the genocide that wracked the tiny African state of Rwanda 20 years ago and the importance of memory in the ongoing process of national reconciliation there on Sunday, November 17 at 7 p.m. at the Rocky Neck Cultural Center, 6 Wonson Street, Gloucester. The event is free and open to the public.

Over four months in 1994, the small East African state of Rwanda experienced one of the most intense waves of violence in modern history. In the two decades since, a regime dominated by the main targets of the genocide—the minority Tutsis—has undertaken an impressive program of national reconciliation. But it’s also been criticized for its own human rights abuses and for war-making in neighboring Congo.

Professor Longman will talk about the complex relationship between the church in Rwanda and the violence and how the government has tried to preserve the memory of the genocide among Rwandans both as a means of reconciliation and a defense against a repeat of it, even as it has acted to suppress memories of other types of political violence, especially its own.

Timothy Longman is the director of the African Studies Center at Boston University and assistant professor of political science. He has been conducting research in Rwanda since 1992. His book, ”Commanded by the Devil: Christianity and Genocide in Rwanda”, will be published by Cambridge University Press.

Longman argues that Rwanda’s churches became implicated in the 1994 Rwandan genocide because of their historic links with the state, their active engagement in ethnic politics, and the ongoing cooperative ties between leaders of the churches and the state.

His current research focuses on state-society relations in Africa, looking particularly at human rights, transitional justice, democratization, civil society, the politics of race and ethnicity, religion and politics, and women and politics.

Longman earned a doctorate in political science at the University of Wisconsin in 1995. He was the director of the Human Rights Watch field office in Rwanda in 1995-96 and director of Rwanda research for the Human Rights Center of the University of California Berkeley in 2001-2006. He has also conducted fieldwork in Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Tanzania, and South Africa. He has previously taught at Vassar College, Columbia University, the National University of Rwanda, and the University of the Witswatersrand (South Africa).

This will be the second event of the Cape Ann Forum’s 2013/2014 season and the 79th since the organization was established in 2001. The last event of the fall will feature Middle East expert Omar Dahi on what is behind the conflict in Syria on Sunday, December 8 at the Gloucester City Hall. 2014 speakers will include Gloucester filmmakers Nubar and Abby Alexanian in February, human trafficking expert Paulette Lloyd in March and popular radio commentator Christopher Lydon in May.

For more information on the event go to the Forum’s Web site at http://www.capeannforum.org.

Manchester Essex Falls to Northeast in Semi-Final Football Action

A tough day on Saturday for the Hornets as they fell in semi-final action to Northeast Metropolitan 38-12. Behind 14-6 at the half, the defense played long and hard in the second half and held for several exciting stops but the offensive team could only find the end zone one more time. A good season for the Hornets comes to an end, but memories of how far they got in the tournament should be an inspiration at the start of next season!

Click on photos to see larger format

“FEAST” from; Deb Clarke

“FEAST” from; Deb Clarke

attached is the email invite with artists and information about “FEAST!”  the holiday show at The Flatrocks Gallery.  The show will be up through December 29 and lots of great art from our art community.  The gallery is located near Folly Cove on Langsford Street.  opening reception is Saturday November 9, 4-6pm.

Gallery is open Thursday- Sunday 12-5 or by appointment.

emailFeast

next 4 attachments are selections from my Family Heirloom series.  verre eglomise and mixed media on glass.  all work is for sale.

here’s the link to my blog where i finally updated my blog with more info.

http://www.debbieclarke.blogspot.com

Feast!  Nov. 7- Dec. 29
Nov. 9   6-8p  An Opening reception
Nov. 21  7:30 pm  “A Look at Some Grand Meals”- talk by Don Lindgren
Dec. 14 &15  A Fundraising weekend
Dec. 22  4-6  Songs of Joy & Peace

Flatrocks Gallery 77 Langsford St/Rt 127  Gloucester, MA
Open Thu-Sun 12-5pm (& by appt) 978-879-4683

Sista’s Helpful Tips

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It’s time to start prepare our homes for the holiday season. Before you pull out the holiday silver and start decking the halls and setting tables, take a quick peek at your chandelier. When was the last time you washed it? There is nothing more embarrassing for a hostess then gathering around a beautiful table with family and friends, ready to dig into the holiday feast, and noticing cobwebs and dusty crystals hanging directly over the holiday table. Every November I make a special trip to Home Depot, to purchase the best Chandelier cleaner on the market. Extend AFinish Chandelier Cleaner formulated with “Sheeting Action” makes a daunting task a quick an easy one! No more removing, cleaning, drying, and rehanging each and every crystal. Simply place a drop cloth or plastic sheet under chandelier; spray each crystal on all sides; stand back and watch it work its magic. In minutes your chandelier crystals will be sparkling like new!

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Henry David Thoreau Quote of The Week From Greg Bover

“If we will be quiet and ready enough, we shall find compensation in every disappointment.”
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)

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Sometimes called the first environmentalist, Thoreau, born and raised in Concord, Massachusetts, was mentored by the Transcendentalists Ralph Waldo Emerson and Bronson Alcott, his neighbors. His book Walden, about the two years he spent living in a hut he had built himself on Emerson’s woodlot at Walden Pond, has become a classic of American literature for its introspection blended with natural history. His Civil Disobedience, written as an explanation of his non-payment of taxes as a protest against the Mexican-American war, is still influential, and his books on his journeys to Maine, Canada and Cape Cod go much deeper than mere travelogues. Thoreau is also credited with the invention of raisin bread.

Jay DiPrima will read from Thoreau’s Civil Disobedience at seven o’clock next Thursday evening at the Sawyer Free Library as part of the Gloucester Lyceum Series.

Community Stuff 11/10/13

POP GALLERY PRESENTS:

Our SPAlidays Offer!

This month, if you spend $75 at POP, you will receive a coupon for 10% off a 60, 75 or 90 minute massage at Saltwater Massage at 161 Main Street!

Likewise, if you purchase a 60,75 or 90 minute massage at Saltwater Massage, you will receive a coupon for 20% off at POP!
We all get stressed around the start of “holiday shopping season”. Why not kill two birds with one stone as they say? Shop POP’s extensive array of soothing soaps, lotions and aromatic candles! Then, unwind with a nice massage… all on the same street! Shop local, stress less.

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TURNER’S SEAFOOD AT LYCEUM HALL SAILS INTO SALEM, PERMANENTLY MOORED AT ICONIC LYCEUM HALL

This November, Turner’s Seafood family, brothers Jim, Joe, John Jr. & Chris, are bringing four generations of experience, expertise and their passion for all things seafood to Salem, opening an authentic New England seafood restaurant and market in storied Lyceum Hall on Monday, November 18th. Turner’s Seafood at Lyceum Hall expands their culinary footprint adding to their Melrose restaurant grill and market, and up to Cape Ann for their seafood plant and market. Diners will experience the restaurant’s signature seafood cuisine, a lively oyster bar and Salem’s first fresh, locally- sourced seafood market.

“Over the past five years we were casually looking for a very special space to offer our seafood dining and fresh-catch market in the heart of the North Shore. The first time I walked through the Hall I imagined a time past, a true seafood eatery with classic fish and chips prepared the way they should be,” recalled, Jim Turner, owner, Turner’s Seafood, “The genuine seafood model and quality standards that define our Melrose restaurant are the experiences our dining guests and market customers will have with us in our new Salem home, and more.”

As stewards of Lyceum Hall, the Turner family’s seafood heritage and appreciation for the region’s history culminates in a seamless fit between restaurant and the Hall’s architectural bones, influencing their thoughtful approach to the design in developing a welcoming environment, partnering with the esteemed Boston architectural firm, Niemitz Design Group. Dining guests will find familiar amenities long-valued along with new spaces to experience.

Executive Chef Yale Woodson, with a rich background in the culinary arts, especially the sea’s bounty, leads a kitchen team whose menu centerpiece will be a creative mix of appetizers and entrees from Turner’s authentic New England seafood classics paired with Chef’s interpretive culinary spirit for blending available foods of the moment.

“Our team selectively sources and prepares food to please the full range of the senses, stimulating, and striving to create a memorable seafood dining experience for our guests … every visit,” explained Yale Woodson, executive chef, Turner’s Seafood.

And, it all begins very early each morning. Jim Turner and his team inspect and pick from dayboats’ fresh-catch in historic Gloucester and Boston Harbors, immediately coming to their Gloucester seafood plant where it’s expertly handled and processed to demanding quality standards. Within hours, Turner’s delivers fresh seafood to market, arriving in Salem & Melrose ready for market customers and dining guests…minutes to Gloucester.

“We are privileged to continue the Hall’s heritage as a public gathering place for engaging conversation and the finest in hospitality,” noted, Jim Turner.

Who Wants Pews? Perfect for Thanksgiving Seating

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Last three remaining church pews from old Christian Science Church on Rocky Neck, C.1950. 35″ high sides, 32″ high back, 20″ deep and 102″ long. Great pieces for a large foyer, living room, dining room or enclosed porch.   Perfect for seating at your Thanksgiving table.  $200 each or best offer, benefits the Cultural Center Building Fund.

E.J. Lefavour

Kids In The Kitchen With Sista Felicia

PrintGMG Contributor Donna Ardizzoni and her adorable Grandchildren came over this morning to learn how to make Pizzelle. I absolutely love when the kids climb up onto my kitchen island and help me cook!

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The Village Restaurant In Essex Gets Some Love

I think folks have forgotten how great this restaurant is.  It used to have lines so long and now no.  We had dinner there the other evening and the fried clams were as perfect as one could ask for, the onion rings were totally delicious, the corn bread yummy, the baked crab – out of this world, the scallops scrumptious and the Sicilian Chowder, the best one has ever had.  We have a lot of fine restaurants on Cape Ann, and we go to all of them, but this gem is being forgotten.  Also, the beauty of this restaurant is that you can carry on a conversation without a lot of noise.  We talked with the owner, and he said, “no one is coming over the bridge anymore”.  That is quite sad because this has the freshest fish that you could ask for and cooked by an excellent chef. Their prices are very affordable, and we would love to see lines there once more.   Sandy and Eben Andrew

ID More Difficult, But Not Much

This is a great example of a "point." I used to do a lot of photos for geography texts, and this is a good example. Twenty years ago, a friend, who sold me my first Kayak, asked me over to look at his darkroom equipment. I went, and didn't need anything. "Do you have any negatives," I asked. So I ended up with 1,000 aerials taken from Boston to Boothbay, ME. Photo by Don Felt. Where is this location?
This is a great example of a “point.” I used to do a lot of photos for geography texts, and this is a good example. Twenty years ago, a friend, who sold me my first Kayak, asked me over to look at his darkroom equipment. I went, and didn’t need anything. “Do you have any negatives,” I asked. So I ended up with 1,000 aerials taken from Boston to Boothbay, ME. Photo by Don Felt. Where is this location?

Community Stuff 11/9/13

CAT Collaborative’s Fall Play, Homestead Crossing Explores the Power of Reflection and Continuity of Self

If you were given a crystal ball at 20-something would you want to see you and your spouse at 50-something? At 50-something would you look back to see your 20-something self  and spouse? Would you have the courage to look at what you would become? Could endure you how you had changed from your youth?

Cape Ann Theatre Collaborative’s fall play, Homestead Crossing, by Sudbury, Mass. native William Donnelly creates a “crystal ball”  to view the 50-something married couple of Noel and Anne with the by-happenstance meeting of 20-something Claudia and Tobin. Both couples reflect each other across the spectrum of aging and remembrance of youth. Each couple transforms the other into deeper knowing and fuller remembrances. The quiet disconnect of comfortable middle age marriage and the youthful exuberance of setting out on a collective dream meet in a  delightful twist! Donnelly’s “jeweler’s eye” explores who we are at the start of relationships and who we are as we age into them. Homestead Crossing abounds with humor, poignance and the deep wisdom of life’s journey when lived fully and honestly.

Our cast features Emma Cavaliere as Claudia, Pauline Miceli as Anne, Tom Rash as Tobin and Marc St. Pierre as Noel.

When: November 15, 16, 17, ( 21st Benefit performance for the Lanesville Community Center, 8pm), 22, 23, 24   Fridays/Saturdays 8pm and Sundays 3pm

Where: Gorton Theatre (home of Gloucester Stage Company), 267 E. Main St., Gloucester, MA

General Admission: $15

Door Sales: Cash/Check Only

Reserve: CATcollab@gmail.com

Buy Tickets Online: www.catcollaborative.org

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Calendar listing for College Essay Nights

The Gloucester Writers Center is holding two College Essay nights in November for High School Seniors. Writers in the community will work one-on-one with seniors at two different times and locations to give feedback, advice, or a shoulder to cry on. Free, no appointment necessary. Bring your draft, at any stage, even if it still just in your head. For more information, contact JoeAnn@joeannhart.com.

Thursday, November 21

Show up anytime between 7 pm and 9 pm.

The Gloucester Writers Center, 126 East Main St, next to Richdale, park on Chapel St.

Tuesday, November 26

Show up anytime between 5 pm and 7 pm.

The Sawyer Free Library, downstairs in the Friend Room.


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Historic Businesses of Cape Ann Open House

The Cape Ann Museum is pleased to present an open house at 16 Rogers Street, Gloucester as part of their Who We Are is Who We Were: Historic Businesses of Cape Ann series on Saturday, November 16 from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Visit the working studios of sailmaker Josh Bevins, furniture restorer Dean Snell and artist Jeff Weaver to learn more about these occupations that have been a part of Gloucester’s working waterfront since the 19th century. Light refreshments will be served.  This program is free for members, $10 nonmembers. Reservations are required. Please call 978-491-7872 or email info@capeannmuseum.org.
 
Sailmaker Josh Bevins has been involved with sailmaking since he was 14 years old. A Marblehead native, he got his start with Cressy’s Sailmakers. He fell in love with Gloucester during the eighties when he came through for boat repairs. He set up shop twelve years ago and has been working out of 16 Rogers Street for the past ten years. Dean is an electric bass player who has been happily married for thirty years.

Furniture restorer Dean Snell lives in Gloucester with his wife and three children. He moved here soon after getting a fine arts degree at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth. He first worked as a carpenter and then apprenticed with John Ockenga, maker of prized North Shore cabinets, in the 1980s and went on his own in 1992. Located on the historic Gloucester harbor, the Restoration Works at 16 Rogers Street specializes in restoration and repair of all kinds of furniture, from fine antiques to pieces worth saving simply because of their sentimental value.

Artist Jeff Weaver was born in Framingham, Massachusetts. He began drawing and painting at an early age, accepting portrait commissions by age fourteen. In his high school years, he won awards in drawing & sculpture in the Boston Globe state-wide art competitions. After graduating from high school, he entered the Boston Museum School. In 1972 he took up residence in Gloucester, sketching and painting the waterfront on an almost daily basis. In his early years in the city, he supported himself at various waterfront jobs, as well as from commissions for boat portraits from fishing vessel captains, and for murals in commercial establishments and private homes. This eventually led to many years of commercial work, including over 30 murals painted in different parts of the city. Returning to fine art pursuits in the 1990s, Jeff again focused on depicting Gloucester and its environs in various media. He currently operates a studio/gallery at 16 Rogers Street on the Gloucester waterfront.

The Cape Ann Museum tells multiple stories, all relating to this remarkable place.  Founded in 1873, the Museum’s collections represent the history of Cape Ann, its people, its industries, and especially its art and culture. The Museum is closed for renovations until summer 2014. For more information visit www.capeannmuseum.org


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HELLO FRIENDS:

The Frenchman is currently featured on Whizbuzz and has a great review in InD Tale magazine. Both links are below.

http://www.derekhaines.ch/whizbuzz/2013/10/b-b-boudreau-the-frenchman/#comment-341

http://www.indtale.com/magazine/2013/june/#?page=82

Enjoy! Books available at The Bookstore, 61 Main St., Gloucester and Toadhall, 47 Main St.,
Rockport.


Antiques, furniture, collectibles, art, and more will be available at a tag sale at the Unitarian Universalist Society of
Rockport, 4 Cleaves Street, Saturday, November 17 from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.  The sale will be held in both the
upper and lower levels of the church and will feature the work of local artist William Reynolds Beal.


True or False

Adam Bolonsky submits-

Poll: the following story is true or false:


True: I was there and I saw it happen. We made frogs’ legs stew out of the frogs stuck in the mud 

False: no way a 12-gauge shotgun could scare that many seagulls

Probably true: winters in Gloucester were a hell of a lot colder back then. Most winters kids from Magnolia iceskated to GHS by way of Normans Woe and the Blynman Canal

Reporting in the Gloucester Daily Times more than a few years back, none other than Joe Garland was accosted downtown by Ray Davis, deliveryman for the Railroad Avenue Market:

Ray jabbed a finger in my chest and asked why I didn’t mention the day Niles Pond disappeared. 

“You mean the day back in the twenties when Jack Prentiss tried to drain it to under twenty acres so it wouldn’t qualify as a Great Pond and he could claim if for his private puddle?

“Naw,” said Davis. “This was way back, a terrible hard winter. Niles froze right deep. Came on so fast an awful crowd of gulls there got their feet froze in. Next morning one of the guys was tramping through that way, and thought mebbe he could save ’em if he could scare ’em off.

“So he went home and got his twelve-gauge shotgun and went back and fired both barrels up in the air. Them gulls all started flying at once, and they lifted the whole of Niles Pond right up off the bottom and flew away it over Brace Cove to the no’theast.”

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Fish on Fridays

The Fish on Fridays series is a collaboration between Gloucester photographers Kathy Chapman and Marty Luster. Look for various aspects of Gloucester’s centuries-old fishing industry highlighted here on Fridays.

Halloween on Gloucester Harbor

Grim Reaper’s iron dredge assembly broke loose and tipped over the side of the vessel. During the incoming tide she got caught under the cement dock and took on water. After a few high tides she took on enough water to sink. The distress call for Grim Reaper came into the Coast Guard on Halloween. They said, “you just can’t make these things up!”.
TMC Services Inc. was sub-contracted by the Boston Coast Guard to drain the oil and gasoline tanks and clean up any spillage.

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Photos © Kathy Chapman 2013
http://www.kathychapman.com

 

November in the Matz Gallery: Laureen Adrienne Maher’s “Birdseye View”

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This month the Adolph Matz Gallery features the work of Laureen Adrienne Maher. “Birdseye View” is her largest body of work and features many images of the old Birdseye building as it stands today. You will see the dilapidation and gritty character that this site brings to our unique cityscape … if only for a little while more. Birdseye View is also the title of the large centerpiece of this exhibit: three 18 x 24 canvases dressed in oils and mounted on a stucco-like background.

 This show is dedicated to her late husband, Steve DeBoer, who supported her painting efforts wholeheartedly and loved Gloucester and the cast of characters and artists that make up this City. “Everywhere I go people are talking about what is happening around the old Birdseye building. All I know is I had a great time painting it!”

Laureen was published in the Gloucester Times in March 2010 and 2011. Both articles featured her florals and popular series, called Catch of the Day, which depicts our great local rock stars including Allen Estes, Fly Amero, and Willie “Loco” Alexander. In recent years she has exhibited locally at Lone Gull, Good Morning Gloucester Gallery on Rocky Neck, and The Bodin Historic Gallery. The latter carries Snack Bar at Good Harbor Beach which is one of her most popular reproductions.

Laureen resides in beautiful East Gloucester. She owns Beauty Bar at 12 Parker Street where she cuts and colors hair and exhibits her artwork year-round. New works are in progress for her upcoming late Spring exhibit to be held at Beauty Bar. She also participates in the Sawyer Free Library Annual Art Auction each year.

Contact Laureen at (617) 335-6788 or email her at laureen@beautybarstyle.com.

Sun Sets in Peabody (not “on”)

Not to panic, I was a passenger on this journey down Route 128 / I-95 . Traveling on the way to Reading for the Manchester Essex field hockey game and I got to watch a changing sky almost all the way.