Sandwich Democratic Town Committee member Linell Grundman has announced that she will be hosting a “meet and greet” for Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley. AG Coakley is one of the Democratic candidates who are in contention to become the Party’s nominee in the gobernatorial election next year. The “meet and greet” will not, however, be a fundraising event.
The “meet and greet” will take place on December 21st, from 1:00 pm to 2:30 pm at Linell’s home, 51 Wing Boulevard, East Sandwich. Because the reception is at a private residence space is somewhat limited so Linell has asked those who are interested in attending to contact her — linellgrundman [at] comcast [dot] net — to confirm their intention to attend. [See the Calendar entry for a map of the event location.}
[Editor’s Note: These thoughts were originally published in The Lynn Item by Jim Walsh of Nahant, and is reproduced here as a service to readers of The Democratic Free Press. The Lynn Item noted that “The Nahant Historical Society sponsored this performance [to which Jim is referring below] in association with the Nahant Village Church and St. Thomas Aquinas Church.”]
For some of us the date November 22, 1963 is one we will never forget. I was a young college student, walking out of class when I heard that John F. Kennedy had been shot in Dallas. I spent the next four days glued to the TV as did uncountable millions of others as those four days played out. For other, older Americans,November 11, 1918 might be the November date to remember, marking an end to the four blood-soaked years of the First World War that took the lives of millions on Flanders Fields and beyond.
For still others, here and around the world, November 9 and 10, 1938 has deep significance as well. On those days, the Nazi Party began its systematic assault on Jews throughout Germany, Austria and parts of Czechoslovakia. It became known as kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass, and the pogrom would eventually culminate in places like Auschwitz and Treblinka…and Terezin.
Terezin (or Theresienstadt) was a special kind of concentration camp to which many artists—painters, composers, musicians, singers and others—were sent. It served many purposes, for instance, as a work camp housing skilled workers valuable to the Nazis. It was a dismal place, overcrowded, lacking adequate food, water and sanitation. But, at first secretly, a vibrant underground cultural life came into being. Children continued to be educated, composers composed, artists painted, singers sang. At a certain point the Nazis saw a utility in all this. Terezin became a “show camp.” Both Danish and International Red Cross officials were brought to Terezin and shown the benevolent policies of the Nazis toward the Jews. A propaganda film was made showing this benevolent treatment of Jews that included the performance of an opera, with children’s chorus and a full orchestra. Bows were taken. There was applause. It was all filmed.
Shortly after the lighting was dismantled and the film crews departed, virtually every single man, woman and child who took part in or saw that performance was shipped to Auschwitz and eventually exterminated. That Children’s Chorus was never heard again.
Some years later, hidden in walls and in forgotten attics, poems and artwork was found, created by children and their teachers. One child wrote:
go to the woods someday
And weave a wreath of memory there.
Then if the tears obscure your way
You’ll know how wonderful it is
To be alive.What does one do in the face of such facts and memories? What can be said?
On Sunday, November 10th, the seventy-fifth anniversary of kristallnacht, music that was composed in Terezin was performed in the Nahant Village Church. The composers–Gideon Klein, Paval Haas, Viktor Ullman and ZikmundSchul–did not survive nor did the musicians that first played their music there. But the music itself, played by the Hawthorne String Quartet, all members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, performed, and in our hearts this art, through remembrance, has brought hope. No flame is eternal, not even the Sun’s, but in human terms there are some things that should not be forgotten.
Editor’s Note: Paul Houlihan, SDTC Chair, has passed along to the Free Press the following statement from Morris Dees, Founder of the Southern Poverty Law Center, issued in reaction to the passing of Nelson Mandela:
December 5, 2013
President Nelson Mandela’s death leaves human rights advocates across the world with an undeniable sense of loss. But amid the sorrow, we can take solace from the former South African president’s legacy.
Here at the SPLC, we think about Mandela often. At the Civil Rights Memorial Center that we built in Montgomery, Alabama, he is recognized as a leader of the contemporary struggle for human and civil rights.
Every year, thousands of school children visit the Center and learn about the universal nature of the struggle for civil rights. They learn about Mandela and how the U.S. civil rights movement influenced the fight against apartheid in South Africa. In fact, on Mandela’s first visit to our country he insisted on meeting Rosa Parks.
Mandela’s courage during his 27 years of imprisonment will forever inspire people to stand up to oppression and injustice. And the more we can learn from his life, the more we can amplify the drumbeat for human rights.
Mandela may be known for dismantling apartheid in South Africa following his release from prison, but the commitment to justice and equality he demonstrated after becoming South Africa’s first black president in 1994 provides a powerful lesson for all human rights activists.
He worked to fulfill the statement he made during the trial that ultimately led to his imprisonment: “I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society, in which all persons will live together in harmony and with equal opportunities.”
Mandela recognized that South Africa’s future depended on the country moving forward – together. Dismantling apartheid was only the first step, not the destination. Mandela understood that resentment, suspicion and fear undercut human rights advances. Empathy, reconciliation and tolerance are necessary to chart the course forward.
The Civil Rights Memorial Center not only honors Mandela and the martyrs of the U.S. civil rights movement but teaches that the movement isn’t just a period in time – it’s a continuum.
When the Civil Rights Memorial was built in 1989, we refused to use South African black granite because we would not support apartheid. But when the South African ambassador spoke at the Memorial in 2011, he spoke of Mandela and the tremendous transformation he helped bring about.
As we honor Mandela today, we must remember that the transformation is not complete, and we must recognize our future is a shared one, one that’s brighter when we’re united. It’s a belief President Mandela understood. It’s a belief we must take to heart.
The march continues.
Sincerely,
Morris Dees, Founder, Southern Poverty Law Center
The Falmouth Democratic Town Committee will host a breakfast fundraiser for Congressman Bill Keating on November 16th. The breakfast will be held at Liam Maguire’s Restaurant in Falmouth and will start at 9:30 am. Donations are set at $20 per person. For more information please call 508-563-6264. For a map showing the location of the restaurant please see our calendar entry.
[Editor’s Note: the follow post was written by Kristina Meservey of Eastham]
As a disabled veteran, I have learned several things from the recent government shutdown and debt ceiling political conflict in Washington and I wanted to share them with The Free Press readership.
- The House refused to conference with the Senate about the budget
- The House Rules Committee changed the rules at a secret majority meeting so that a Discharge Petition could be brought by only Mr. Cantor or a Designee. The Founding Fathers established that a House Rule could be changed only with an open vote of at least two thirds of the House present.
- Senator Ted Cruz and Sarah Palin led an unsuccessful attempt to rally Veterans against the President. They handed out Confederate flags along with American Flags. The day after the demonstration, a coalition of Veterans Groups spoke out against attempts to politicize the shutdown with Veterans. It is my understanding that legislation is being developed by this coalition to exclude Veterans from future Shutdowns.
- This unfortunate debacle cost US Taxpayers (me included) incredible angst and 24 billion dollars.
- This needs to be the message of the Democratic Party going forward.
The featured speaker at this month’s regular meeting of the Sandwich Democratic Town Committee will be gubernatorial candidate Steve Grossman. Mr. Grossman will speak prior to the start of the SDTC regular meeting, at about 7:30 PM. Registered Democrats are invited to attend his presentation regardless of whether they are Town Committee members. The Committee has extended invitations to all of the gubernatorial candidates to speak its members and interested Democrats from the area. Watch the Calendar for future speakers.
As many of you may be aware, the Party is in the process of selecting a new female member of the Democratic Party State Committee from the Plymouth-Barnstable senate district. Accordingly, the town committees around the district have been meeting to select “electors” who will then choose the next female member of the State Committee from our senate district. (Each senate district has 1 female and 1 male state committee member.)
The Sandwich Democratic Town Committee will select its electors before our monthly meeting starts this coming Monday, October 21st. We will convene at 7 PM at our new meeting location in the Human Services Building at 270 Quaker Meetinghouse Rd. Any Sandwich registered Democrat may attend the caucus and may offer themselves as a candidate to be an elector. However, only Town Committee member can nominate someone and vote for electors. Per State rules our area is eligible to select 11 electors.
The electors from each of the town committee areas will convene next month in Plymouth and elect the new female state committee member from the district.
Via SDTC member Karen Miller we have learned of an important forum that will be occurring October 10 at Cape Cod Community College. The event is focused on ways to get young people more actively interested in, and involved with civic affairs. It is sponsored by the League for Women Voters, the College, and the Cape Cod Foundation Youth Action Plan Coalition. The featured speaker will be Dr. Meira Levinson, associate professor of Education at Harvard and the author of No Citizen Left Behind. She will be joined by a panel of commentators that includes State Representative David Vieira from the 3rd Barnstable District. See the flyer for more details. Forum on Youth Civic Engagement
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