Tags
Climate disruption, Global warming, Gun violence, Reflections Year 2015, Refugees, The Empire, Writers' Critique Group
Happy New Year 2016
Source: Esplorando Cartoline Blogspot
Year 2015 has been a tumultuous journey on Spaceship Earth. But all wasn’t bleak. In the blogosphere, friends like Cyril Bryan at the Guyanese Online Blog boosted my spirits and hits by sharing my posts and keeping me in touch with news from Guyana and the Guyanese Diaspora. In May, we welcomed the newly-elected coalition government of President David Granger and Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo. The challenges are innumerable. Clean-up goes much deeper than unclogging drains and removing trash.
Blogging friends, Dr. Gerald Stein (Chicago/USA) and Bruce Witzel (Vancouver/Canada), continue to inspire, motivate, and lift me up when passing through an asteroid field. Carol Hand, a new blogging friend from the Sokaogon Ojibwe Community (Wisconsin/USA), shares much-needed voices from the margins of Native American life.
I thank each one of you who have read and commented on my posts. You have made this year’s journey through our galaxy meaningful and brighter.
My failure to find a literary agent for my first novel, Under the Tamarind Tree, clouded my days. In September following another rejection, I put my search on hold. Work on my second novel, The Twisted Circle, held my shattered heart together. Later that month, I completed the first draft. With ongoing feedback from my best friend and poet as well as the members of my writers’ critique group, I’ve made great strides in the revision process.
Here in the United States, gun violence remains a part of our daily lives. Three hundred and fifty-three mass shootings, within 350 days, have killed or injured four or more people. When our nation responds to every aggression from our enemies with even greater violence, what else can we expect from our home-grown, male, white terrorists raised on entitlement, fear, and hatred?
Our police force, too, is fast becoming another enemy within our borders. This is already a reality for black communities, even where they comprise the majority. Disproportionate incarceration of blacks fractures their families, leaving them even more vulnerable.
This year, the plight of women and children fleeing war-torn countries in the Middle East and Africa darkened my days and kept me awake at nights. The majority of refugees who made it to Europe have not found a new haven. Exposure to the European winter brings death to the weakest. Hearts filled with hate and fear of the other have no room for compassion.
The UN climate conference in Paris has come and gone. Agreements reached are not enough to reduce global warming within safety margins for human survival. The greatest crisis facing humanity demands a collective, revolutionary global response.
Through control of our minds and hearts, the Empire draws us to the Dark Side. Only light can overcome the darkness spreading across Spaceship Earth. Let us free ourselves from slavery to consumerism. Let us free ourselves from our addiction to oil. Let us free ourselves from hate and fear. Only then will the Force awaken.
QUOTE: “Only light can overcome the darkness spreading across Spaceship Earth. Let us free ourselves from slavery to consumerism. Let us free ourselves from our addiction to oil. Let us free ourselves from hate and fear. Only then will the Force awaken.”
Says it all. Thank you for all your efforts on behalf of the planet and the people, Rosaliene. May the coming year give you more to hope for.
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Thanks, Sha’Tara. Without hope, we’re left with apathy and become easy targets of the Empire.
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As Sha’Tara suggests, you are in inspiration, Rosaliene. As to your first novel, my dad used to say “Every knock is a boost.” A tough slog for sure, but some of the greatest authors have waited long for an agent and a publisher. Thanks too, for mentioning me, quite properly, as your “blogging friend.” I think of you in this way, as well, with an emphasis on the second word.
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Dr. Stein, thanks for your words of encouragement regarding my first novel. Persistence a must!
It’s a friendship I treasure ❤
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Here is a little bit of light shining in the darkness: http://www.kare11.com/story/entertainment/2015/12/26/minnesota-orchestra-concert-to-benefit-syrian-refugees/77915632/
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Dr. Stein, thanks for sharing that bit of light shining in the darkness. It’s worth reflecting on what the musician Tony Ross said in the interview: “I think music feeds the best part of the soul of humanity.” Kudos to the response of their orchestra! Let the music play on 🙂
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Reblogged this on Guyanese Online.
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Thanks for sharing, Cyril. Enjoy your preparations for the year-end festivities 🙂
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Your voice for social justice is so crucial in these dark and difficult times, Rosaliene. You continue to raise awareness about important issues and advocacy efforts.
I look forward to reading your first and second novels, and I thank you for your kind words.
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Thanks, Carol 🙂 The struggle never ends.
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It seems as if it were a long, long time ago that I crossed your blog: Three Worlds One Vision, but never had the hindsight to follow intensely the ‘Vision’ you so immensely explore – climate change, human rights, arts and literature…and being so connected with Cyril Bryan’s so prodigious Guyanese Online bog. But I began to take notice of your expose of poets from Guyana and Brazil, and your sense of disillusionment with politics in the 60’s onward in Guyana. Then I stumbled on your profile discourses and your teaching career ( much of situations I can relate to). And for our present connection, I can say the rest is history. Simply speaking, you have done remarkably well to wet the appetite or stir the imagination of those who eye your blog posts. About your novels – keep prodding at the publishers. Remember my poem: You will Rise after the Fall; and Marlon James didn’t get noticed overnight. As for your novel: Under the Tamarind Tree, I recall some time ago on Poemhunter.com, I wrote this poem:
Under The Tamarind Tree (St. Patrick’s Anglican School) – Poem by Leonard Dabydeen
Under the tamarind tree
I stand there
Still as a cross in the graveyard
I hear bells toll
In the Anglican church
Hands cupping salt and pepper
Mouth salivating
I listen to rivulets
Water flowing in Reliance creek
Wind whispering among the graves
I feel uncanny
With my pockets of tamarind
And my broken slate
On the ground
Should I go to school
On this St.Patrick’s Day?
Cheers ! All The Best for 2016 …HAPPY NEW YEAR!!
Leonard Dabydeen
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Leonard, thanks for your encouraging words about my yet-to-be-published first novel. In my novel, the tamarind tree personifies the bitterness of our lives as colonial subjects and later under our democratically-elected dictatorship government. With this in mind, I find the first three verses of your poem most appropriate.
Under the tamarind tree
I stand there
Still as a cross in the graveyard
The imagery you present of that younger self as a schoolboy speaks volumes of our lives in Guyana in those days, dominated by the British Anglican Church and school.
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You bring the memories of then B.G. so near to mind, with the images you remember… thank you. I left before Johnny Braf, was known, so I enjoyed the songs he sang.Best wishes for a wonderful 2016.
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Vibert, thanks for dropping by and for your kind comment. I look forward to hearing more from you in 2016.
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Hi Rosaliene. Thanks for popping by and liking my post re-blogged from my editor Eamon O’Cleareigh. The best hing is it has allowed me to discover your wonderful blog. I intend to explore more of its contents over the coming days.
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Thanks to you, too, Frank, for signing up to follow my blog 🙂
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Hi Rosaliene. Thanks for liking Ornate. I’ve just posted part 2. This is going to be a serial – not sure how long!
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I look forward to reading part 2, Frank.
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Your blog and your followers’ comments have been a highpoint for my online reading – despite being always so terribly late in getting here. The very best, Rosaliene, in 2016 and beyond for you and your family – and followers!
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Angela, I thank you for your continued support. All the best to you too in 2016 🙂
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