Author of Madam, Have You Ever Really Been Happy? An Intimate Journey through Africa and Asia

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I JUST HAD TO VISIT LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE ONE MORE TIME!

Waves crashing into the breakwater

Waves crashing into the breakwater

…And now I can put the summer to rest. There is a magnetic pull exerted by this vast, untamed lake and the “Noble Cottage,” our family haven for over fifty years, so when I find a few days of Indian Summer I cannot resist one last visit. Well, the days were warm and sunny last week, but the nights were anything but! Try thirty degrees. I made a quick trip to the Franconia Range for a visit with Anne and Frank Magill, my wonderful sister and brother-in-law, who were celebrating 57 years of marriage, before returning to a three-day-blow on the lake, with ocean-sized waves and water to rival the North Atlantic in winter. No matter. Swimming is what I wanted to do, and I got my fill.

Just before sunset...

Just before sunset…

Cottage, Summer 2009 010 Cottage, Summer 2009 028

I always love to watch the movement of the sunset from its place directly in front of the cottage in June to its new position way over to the left of our dock in September. And there is a light just before it sets that speaks to me in tones of white and yellow, the mysterious light of impending winter.

Cottage, Summer 2009 042

Now the day is over...

Now the day is over…

AND NOW, BACK TO THE REAL WORLD!

 

 After three glorious weeks in New Hampshire and three more in the Northwest (Seattle, Whidbey Island, and the Northern Cascade Mountains), I returned to the reality that I had more to deal with than the hundreds of backed-up emails (Will I never learn to post that vacation message?). A new year beginning (I always think of September as the new year, since that is when the kids returned to school after the summer), several book ideas fighting for dominance, and the sober facts of national and international conflict that have changed very little during my NYTimes hiatus. I loved being away, but now it’s back to work . I began with a speech at the South Orange Rotary Club last Thursday, to a group of responsive business leaders, who responded with enthusiasm to my subject, “Traveling off the Beaten Path,” and showed great interest in the orphanage project in Zimbabwe I’ve written about in this blog. I also told them about the Tibetan Childrens’ Villages (TCV) I had visited and help support in India. Thank you, President Stacey Borden for the wonderful reception. Please write me if you want any more information about these two important projects. My grandson, Adam, has been working hard on a prospectus to help raise money for the orphanage, spurred on by the encouragement of Greg Mortenson, whom he met last spring.

 

I’ve been told to write my blog more often and keep it short! I get the message. I’ll be posting photos of my summer trips next week. In the meantime, let’s hear about your summer adventures!

OLD MAN NOAH HAS COME AND GONE AND IT’S FINALLY SPRING IN NEW JERSEY.

 Would you believe that a month ago we were drowning and now, in the middle of summer, we’re having the spring we never had? I’m beginning to think that we’re competing with Seattle to see who can have the strangest weather year. But who’s complaining? I’m glad for the cool breezes and mild sunshine. Overjoyed, in fact. 

Speaking of Seattle, my daughter, Cary, is having a banner year creating, with the help of 160 volunteers, a gigantic garden on Whidbey Island, the Good Cheer Garden, which supplies the Food Bank with much-needed produce. Gardening is, once again, seen as an important part of our country’s economic life as well as a great social and community enterprise. And then, there are those delicious, healthy fresh vegetables! I recommend that you take a look at her website, www.goodcheergarden.wordpress.com  This has become a major project in the life of South Whidbey, WA.

 In June Mike Fenton, Autoharp player extraordinaire, and his lovely wife, Rachel, visited me from England on their way to the Mt. Laurel Autoharp Gathering. They surprised me by taking me to the fabulous Billy Elliot on Broadway. It is every bit as great a musical as the Tony Awards proclaimed, and a must-see for those visiting New York City. 

Another great Autoharp player visited me this week. He’s the other Will Smith and hails from Nashville, TN. Here he is playing his new Tom Fladmark Autoharp, which he designed and fitted with the most beautiful and unusual chord combinations I have ever heard. I was enthralled by his playing and can’t wait to hear his latest album. IMG_5660My traveling and hiking have been greatly curtailed because of a stupid accident (are there any smart ones?) in which I tore the meniscus in my left knee. It wasn’t serious, but it needed repair. So at the end of June, during my recuperation from laparoscopic surgery, I spent a glorious week with my two sisters at our cottage on Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hampshire. It was perfect…if you like rain. And the water temperature would have thrilled a polar bear. Not being polar bears, we waited for our meager three days of sunshine to brave the icy waves. Here are some pictures of the cottage at sunset.

Aftermath of Shippy Peterson wedding 030

Cottage, Goodmans & barn, 2008 008

 Cottage, Goodmans & barn, 2008 077

    Cottage, Goodmans & barn, 2008 440

Cottage, Goodmans & barn, 2008 449

Upon returning to Maplewood in July I was treated to a once-a-year rock concert extravaganza, Maplewoodstock, conceived and organized by my son-in-law, Gary Shippy. This two-day celebration of local and national bands is in its sixth year and draws an enormous crowd from Maplewood and South Orange. Families gather on the grassy hill near the railroad station to mingle, visit folk art booths, and delight in being with old friends. Children dance to the music and play on the lawn, while adults engage in an all-day picnic, which continues late into the night. This year we were treated to such headliners as Marshall Crenshaw and Jonathan Edwards. And the weather cooperated by holding the rain until the moment the last note was played. This is just another good reason to live in this friendly, alive community.

 Tomorrow I leave for another three weeks at the Winnipesaukee cottage, where my family and friends will gather for swimming, kayaking, and hiking in the White Mountains. After that I head for the great northwest, Whidbey Island, and the northern Cascades. I shall write about these adventures next month. In the meantime, do look at my latest photos mentioned at the bottom of the home page in red ink. Like most people who use digital cameras, I’m way behind in my postings. There are just too many pictures. And who’s to blame for that? I’m afraid we’re all the same!

 While in Seattle, I’m looking forward to seeing my friend, Beth Whitman, writer, most recently, of For Women Traveling in India, and a peripatetic traveler (www.WanderlustAndLipstick.com). I had also hoped to see Rita Golden Gelman (www.ritagoldengelman.com), whom I have admired since I read her book, Tales of a Female Nomad. She is a true nomad. I now discover that she won’t be there at the end of August, but urge you to look at her website and read about her new program, Let’s Get Global, for the “gap year and more” movement she has started. This is a program after my own heart, introducing young people to the joys of travel and of really getting to know other cultures.

LILACS, MAGNOLIAS, WILD ROSES, DOGWOOD, and GRASS THAT WILL NOT STOP GROWING. AH, THE JOYS OF SPRING….

 I am always entranced by the awakening of the earth, which for so many months has lain dormant. Birds return to my holly trees, ferns turn bright green and spread, gracefully, along my back fence, and the carefully tended gardens in the neighborhood afford me color and delicate aromas as I take my morning walk up and down the hills of Maplewood. The azaleas have just passed and the rhododendron, with its plump round flowers, has arrived in various shades of purple. I am carried back to Lukla, when I returned from Everest Base Camp, and wandered through a forest of deep red rhododendron, so miraculous in their beauty after leaving the bitter cold of high altitude. I never take this abundant new life for granted. 

Many of you travelers struggle with the same frustration I have in selecting and cataloguing the huge number of photographs produced by digital cameras. True, it’s our fault. We could just press delete. But we don’t. And then there is the desire to crop, tune, and retouch each scene to perfection (in my case the vast mountain panoramas and ancient living quarters) before moving them to albums that can be enjoyed by friends and family. And so, the saga of my efforts to upload photographs continues with incremental learning spurts that keep me ever-optimistic and eager to share. I hope many of you have seen the five albums I placed on facebook.  For the refreshed links, look at my April 4th blog. I am now, however, putting new albums on my home page. I have put the photos of Myanmar and Dharamsala on hold and am starting in on Ladakh and Tanzania, my most recent trips. Consistency has never held me back, but I do ask your patience. I also would like your feedback on my newest photo galleries. The link is written in large red print at the bottom of my home page. Be sure to click on each photo to enlarge, and read the captions as the adventure unfolds. More are coming! 

I go to New York City a great deal, sometimes with friends, and sometimes alone. The city never ceases to amaze and tickle me. When alone I could be walking up a street in Asia, listening to languages as diverse as the faces that accompany them, and enjoying the varied garb of a cultural potpourri. If I were in another country, I’d be putting down the names of the quaint stores along the way and recording the shouts of the vendors as they ply their trade…and the conversations overheard on cell phones or in the small groups that wander with me up Eighth Avenue from Penn Station to Midtown. I see the usual brand of tourist, gawking at high buildings that are commonplace to me, and, most recently, enjoying the people lounging in chairs on the new pedestrian mall in Times Square. It’s a scream! Not only can you sit on bleachers near the TKTS booth at 47th and Broadway and eat your lunch or just people-watch, but you can also lie on your webbed chair and breathe in the exhaust fumes from the traffic on Broadway, while looking at a most unappealing bunch of stores on either side of the street. No trees—just pavement all around, and tourists taking your picture. Does that sound a bit bizarre to you? Only in America! 

I’ve played my fill of concerts for the year and attended some stirring performances at Carnegie and Avery Fisher Halls. Alice Tully Hall has been refurbished and all of Lincoln Center is getting a needed facelift for its 50th anniversary. Come see it, if only to enjoy spring at one of New York City’s most beautiful spots. 

I don’t want to disappoint my theater-addicted friends, so I shall end with a list of some of the wonderful plays I’ve attended this past month. My friend, Barry Hamilton, artistic director of Ruth Eckherdt Hall in St. Petersburg and his lovely wife, Ruth Klukoff, a violin teacher, attended my granddaughter Cally’s graduation party, following her graduation, Phi Beta Kappa, from Rutgers. Barry took me to God of Carnage on Broadway, the best comedy I’ve seen since August: Osage County. It was the beginning of my birthday week celebration. Phyllis Bitow, another theater buddy took me to Next to Normal, a very thoughtful, unusual musical, starring Alice Ripley. Other shows worthy of mention are: the Pulitzer prize winning Ruined by Lynn Nottage, a heart-breaking story of the treatment of women in the Congo; Eugene O’Neill’s powerful Desire Under the Elms with Brian Dennehy; Groundswell, Off-Broadway, a moving post-apartheid story from South Africa with Larry Bryggman; Blithe Spirit by Noel Coward, starring the incomparable Angela Lansbury and Christine Ebersole; Accent on Youth, a rather disappointing comedy with David Hyde Pierce; Joe Turner’s Come and Gone by August Wilson, a deeply moving production of the black experience in the first decade of the twentieth century; Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett—a superb revival starring Nathan Lane, Bill Irwin, John Goodman, and John  Glover; Why Torture is Wrong and the People Who Love It by Christopher Durang, at the Public Theater; and the screamingly funny trilogy from England, The Norman Conquests by Alan Ackbourn—Table Manners, Living Together, and Round and Round the Garden.  Don’t miss all three if you get to town. I thank Play-by-Play and Audience Extras for my luck in getting inexpensive tickets for most of these productions. 

I started hiking a little late this season, and on my first outing managed to get thoroughly lost wandering the hills of South Mountain Reservation. I’m not good at reading maps, but could sure have used one today! It’s so nice to spend a balmy, sunny afternoon in the woods after all the rain we’ve had. Think of it…in one month I’ll be in the White Mountains. 

Please let me hear from you. I want to know what you’re doing, how you’re doing, and any adventures you want to share.

I’VE JUST HAD AN INSPIRING WEEKEND IN UPSTATE NEW YORK….

Bright and early Easter morning, my daughter, Martha, and I hopped into the car and headed for Syracuse, NY, to show her son, my youngest grandson, Adam, Syracuse University. We visited Henricks Chapel, showed Adam the Noble Room, named for my father, and visited the Dean’s office. Unfortunately, most of the buildings were closed, but we walked around, or were blown around the campus (it was cold and windy!), accompanied by the well-known artist, Scott Bennett (www.scottbennettart.com), and his daughter, Sarah. In the evening we arrived in Troy at the home of an Emma Willard classmate of mine, Nina Pattison, and spent a lovely night in her fabulous Victorian home not far from RPI and Russell Sage College. The next morning we were privileged to hear Greg Mortenson, author of Three Cups of Tea, speak to an audience filled with eager Emma Willard and RPI students and alumnae.

 

Many of you have read Greg’s book and are aware that his non-profit organization, Central Asia Institute, has already been instrumental in building 78 schools for children (mostly girls) in Pakistan and Afghanistan. His aim has been to build peace, one school at a time, thus breaking down barriers between cultures, and changing the world for the better. A lofty goal, which is being achieved by the hard work and dedication of thousands of people—people who are fed up with violence and know that a better future for their children starts with education.

 

This has not been an easy task, and is still fraught with danger in places mired in political upheaval, war, and poverty. But, Mortenson’s willingness to talk about things like hope, love, and compassion in a nonsectarian way is refreshing and appeals to people who are hungry for peace and nonviolent solutions to complex international problems. He has empowered these people to create their own solutions, giving them help along the way. I was especially moved when he said, “Don’t try to be like me. Listen to your heart. And when your heart speaks, take good notes. This will lead you in the direction of your own goals.”

 

Recently, Greg has talked with the military commanders who are in charge of the war in Asia and the Middle East. General Petraeus, who read his book, told Mortenson that it made him realize the importance of listening, of building relationships with the people and their communities, and of learning to respect and understand their culture. Greg’s book is now required reading for every person, from combat troops to government officials, who is deployed to Afghanistan. It says to me that our government and military are listening as well.

 

At the beginning of his remarks, Mortenson asked how many students talked to their grandparents, or an older relative, listened to their stories about growing up, and asked what traditions were treasured when they were young. He stressed the Importance of listening to your elders, learning from their experience, and, in turn, building a relationship that engendered respect between the generations.

 

Adam has been inspired by Greg’s work, especially the Pennies for Peace program started by his daughter. When Martha and I returned from Africa and told him about the Tamiha Orphanage we had visited in Tanzania, that is now caring for 100 orphans, Adam immediately started making plans to help the director, Crispen Mugarula, raise money for his new school. He put together a prospectus and handed it to Greg, who accepted it and told Adam to be in touch by email. During his presentation Greg had told the students to come up with their own projects to raise money for schools, and said that he is hoping for the establishment of an internet portal at which many organizations promoting peace through education can exchange ideas and find funding. His work is in Central Asia, but he encourages projects that lift up and educate people in all parts of the world, especially girls and women. As he said, “You educate a man, and you have one educated person. You educate a woman, and you educate a whole community.”

 

You may also know that Greg has been nominated for a Nobel Prize. I cannot imagine anyone who is doing more at this crucial time in history to promote peace through education than this man.

 

My theater report this month includes four excellent productions: Neil LaBute’s Reasons to Be Pretty; a revival of The Master Class; Michael Laurence in Krapp 39; and the amazing Janet McTeer in Mary Stuart.

 

SPRING IS HERE, THEN IT’S NOT, THEN IT IS…WHAT’S GOING ON?

Hiking in Harriman Park

Hiking in Harriman Park

The entrance to Thendara Camp

The entrance to Thendara Camp

I’m not a weather-watcher, but I can stand the capriciousness of April just so long. Two weeks ago I took a great seven-mile hike in Harriman State Park, about an hour drive from my house, and we were in shirt sleeves. Now I’m back in polypro. Think I’ll leave the weather stripping on the windows and doors a bit longer. And the lawn furniture in the garage.

The weekend at Harriman was spent with a group of hikers at Thendara Camp, a rustic cabin near Lake Tiorati on Seven Lakes Drive. Each week there are different hosts who take turns with meals and opening and closing the camp. This week it was Alan and Cathy Gordon, and the atmosphere was warm and friendly. The small lake close to the cabin was a bit too cold even for me, but it was great to get back into the woods, again. We crisscrossed the Appalachian Trail and several local trails, and climbed to splendid views of the Letterback and Hasenclever Mountains, ending up for lunch near a charming old family burial ground circa 1850. It was peaceful, utterly quiet, and somewhat ghostly. I love it just before the end of the winter when you can see the hills more closely through the leafless trees.

After lunch we explored Hasenclever, one of the old iron mines, where ore was dug to make the material for cannonballs during the Revolution. These are dotted everywhere in Harriman and it’s fascinating to see the dark water filling the giant caverns in the earth, and the huge boulders left by the excavation.

I finally taught myself how to upload videos to YouTube. Below is the link. Just click on it. I promise there will be more from my Tanzanian trip in the future. You may notice by the beginning remarks that I was quite a neophyte as I attempted to tape the porters singing and dancing at Lava Tower Camp on Mt. Kilimanjaro. The quality is vastly inferior to the original, due to the size that YouTube can handle, but the spirit of the song is there. Hope you like it.

Here is a video interview with Suzanne Roberts that was made last spring just before l left for two months in Ladakh, India. They filmed for three hours and came up with five minutes. You can imagine how condensed that one was! But at least there were those who found it inspirational that such an ancient creature went to so many challenging places.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xv6TEJX6u9g

Several people have asked me to refresh the links to my facebook photo albums—pictures of my first two weeks in Myanmar. I didn’t realize that they expire after about six months. Facebook “friends” can get them anytime by looking at my profile, but, otherwise, just click on the links below or cut and paste them into your internet address bar. I can’t seem to find the sixth album, but here are the first five.

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=5607&id=584094331&l=b877096ce3

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=13360&id=584094331&l=607b68d99a

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=9669&id=584094331&l=fd932161b0

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=16605&id=584094331&l=6d16df2222

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=15341&id=584094331&l=8b79a8115d

In conclusion, my big opera event at the Met for the month was a double bill: Cavalleria Rusticana and Pagliacci. The tenor Jose Cura was the lead in both and is now my favorite post-Pavarotti tenor. Watch for him. He’s terrific…and handsome, too!

HOW COULD WE GET THROUGH THE WINTER DOLDRUMS WITHOUT OUR CHILDREN, NO MATTER WHAT THEIR AGE?

As I take my daily three-mile walk up and down the frozen, often-icy hills of Maplewood, NJ (don’t laugh, it snowed last night), I think of my sons in balmy Los Angeles, who, despite the state of the economy, are starting new businesses and artistic endeavors with enthusiasm; of my daughter, Cary, who is heading two garden projects on Whidbey Island, one to supply healthy, organic food for the island community through the Good Cheer Food Bank, www.goodcheergarden.wordpress.com and the other to maintain an extensive garden for Whidbey Institute; and Martha, who has just written a book to be published by Barnes & Noble about her work alleviating pain through Hanna Somatics, www.essentialsomatics.com. And there’s more to raise our spirits if we just open our eyes and forget the gray skies. Michelle Obama has been vocal in promoting healthy living and eating, and, I hope, like Eleanor Roosevelt, she’ll turn part of the 17 acres around the White House into an organic vegetable garden. There’s definitely a movement afoot to get people and whole communities to start thinking in terms of a local food supply. Guess what? Just after I wrote that last sentence I opened today’s NYTimes and found a long front page article about the garden Michelle is planning for the south lawn. Google it if you get a chance.

 

Many other encouraging signs of the indomitable American spirit have jumped out at me this winter and tell me that the older you get the more intense is your desire to make each day count and live your remaining years engaged in enterprises that make a difference in the lives of others. Some of you may have seen David Brancaccio’s NOW last December 19th about the slavery of young girls in Nepal (www.PBS.org Daughters for Sale) in which an 83-year-old retired lawyer, Olga Murray from California, saved thousands of young girls from being sold into slavery through a program that entailed giving each family a pig or a goat, which would bring as much money at the end of the year as their daughter’s wages. It’s an amazing story, starting from a simple idea. But nobody else had thought of it. And once the children are returned to their families, they are given an education, all for about $50.  Google Olga Murray and you’ll find ample information about her work.

 

 

Another dynamic woman in her 80’s, who is presently working in Vietnam to help orphans, is Betty Tisdale, www.bettytisdale.com, who started the organization H.A.L.O. (Helping And Loving Orphans) and continues with her extensive travels to find and care for children at risk. She has already helped thousands of children in Vietnam, Afghanistan, Colombia, and Mexico. Look her up on the web and be inspired.

 

 

I just found out about Muriel Johnston, 84, who left for 27 months in the Peace Corps on March 2nd. She will be stationed in Morocco and begins with a three-month training period, living with a Moroccan family and learning Berber through total immersion. She will be working with mothers and children in a health care setting, something she is well-suited for, having raised six children and volunteered for years in a local hospital nursery. She’s scheduled to return to the U.S. in May of 2011. Muriel has traveled on a “shoestring” to over 30 different countries, often solo. She goes by caravan and horseback, and sometimes camps out or in hostels. But always, she says, off the “gringo trail.” The bulk of her travel took place after the age of 65. What a great example for all you baby boomers!

 

 

During this period in my life, while I’m taking a hiatus from travel and cleaning out my cellar and attic, trying to make sense of accumulated photos and memorabilia from the last 50 years, I’ve enjoyed traveling by DVD with a young French couple, Alexandre and Sonia Poussin, who walked 14,000 kilometers through eleven countries, and stayed with 1200 families in the part of Africa that is called the Cradle of Life. Their journey began at the Cape of Good Hope and ended, three years later, at the Sea of Galilee. This unusual adventure, available on three DVDs, can be found on www.africatrek.com I was especially excited to see so much of the Africa I remembered from twenty-two years ago and which is detailed in my book, Madam, Have You Ever Really Been Happy? They even photographed their climb up Mt. Kilimanjaro, making me more determined than ever to return and experience the summit. Thanks go to my good friend, Paul Sharar, for introducing me to this excellent travelogue.

 

 

I’ve just received a glowing report about hiking in Japan from an old friend, Terry Rollins, whom I met in 1996 on the Kangchenjunga trek in Nepal. He’s an avid trekker and one of his last big trips was in Pakistan. Believe me, that’s daunting! While teaching ESL near Yokohama, he hooked up with the Friends of the Earth Japan, a hiking group that usually meets on Sundays near Tokyo. Tokyo is bounded to the west by mountains, so hiking has become one of the activities of choice, especially for the growing retiree class. And many trail heads are easily accessible via the extensive train network and bus system. The group asks for a 1,000 yen donation for each hike (about $10), but it’s worth it. For those of you contemplating a visit to Japan, you can look up FOE Japan and click on the events tab for information on their hikes. If you’re not into hiking, you can always take up gateball, which is equally popular with retirees. Kind of like croquet, but uniquely Japanese.

 

 

Mt. Takao National Park is the area closest to Tokyo. It’s a three minute walk from the train to multiple trail heads. But since the greater Tokyo metropolitan area is home to 35 million people, the trails can be packed beyond belief, especially on special weekends. It takes a little looking, Terry says, but he has managed to find other trails that are delightfully deserted, equally scenic, and unique.

 

 

In conclusion, let me bring you up to date, briefly, on my cultural activities. Thanks to my violinist niece, Margaret Magill, I was able to see the final dress rehearsal of Bellini’s Sonnambula with the versatile soprano Natalie Dessay and tenor Diego Florez.

And thanks to percussionists Al Jorgensen and Phyllis Bitow, I was able to see a stunning performance by Renee Fleming in Dvorak’s Rusalka. Not only was the singing flawless, but the music divine. This was my first Dvorak opera. Both operas were at the Met.


The plays I’ve attended include: Becky Shaw: The Story of My Life: Mrs. Warren’s Profession; Lynn Redgrave in The Importance of Being Earnest; 33 Variations with Jane Fonda; a magnificent revival of Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard at BAM; The Shanghai Quartet; The Paul Taylor Dancers; Ionesco’s Exit The King with Goeffrey Rush And Susan Sarandon; and Brian Friel’s The Aristocrats at my favorite theater, The Irish Repertory. Of course, symphony concerts continue until the middle of May at Plainfield, NJ.


Several of you have asked about my photos. Aside from the75 that are on the home page of my website under photo gallery, there are others on this blog under the heading online photo albums. Unfortunately, I’ve only had time to post six albums on facebook. They tell of the first two weeks of my trip in Myanmar. I truly hope to add recent pictures of Ladakh and Africa, soon, and appreciate your patience.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOW CRAZY CAN YOU BE?

 

I love to travel, but who in her right mind would leave New Jersey at 6 A.M. on a Saturday morning, drive four hours to see a two-hour basketball game between Syracuse University and Notre Dame, and drive four hours back in the same day? And then go to dinner and the movies with the excess energy accrued from sitting all day. Well, you may not think that subzero Syracuse is an exotic destination at this time of year, but my erstwhile son-in-law, Gary Shippy, will go anywhere (within reason) to see his Alma Mater play. And he decided the night before that this would be a blast. He also knew that when I was a student at Syracuse, I was an avid basketball fan. Unfortunately, his Alma Mater is Notre Dame (only unfortunate because of the score), but he is a courageous sort and had me run interference when he walked in amidst 30,000 yelling Syracuse fans, dressed in his blue and yellow Notre Dame jacket. Fair enough. We had a ball! And I love spontaneity. There I was, winding through the Cherry Valley on a sunny winter morning, reminiscing about those bygone days at the university and thoroughly enjoying the beauty of upstate New York, its bare trees silhouetted like lace against the almost white sky, and neat farms and snow-covered barns standing as a reminder of the old dairy farms, the smoke from wood fires curling from their chimneys.  Talk about a return to childhood….

 

Then, too, it was wonderful to walk on campus, admire the new buildings, groove on the old ones, visit my father’s office at Hendrick’s Chapel, and see the sanctuary where I was married so many years ago.

 

An added note of clarification to those of you who are having trouble fully retrieving the archived entries from past months and years. Go to Archives on the right side, click on the date you want, and when the first part of the text comes up, click, again, on the TITLE of the entry. Magically (or so it seems to me), the entire blog will appear. And don’t forget to click on the January entry, which describes my three weeks in Tanzania and Kenya.

 

This is the shortest blog entry of my life. Saints preserve us! And a Happy New Year to you all!!

AN ELECTION HAS BEEN WON AND TRANQUILITY REIGNS AGAIN…SORT OF

 

What an emotional time it has been! And how hard we worked for this historic moment in our nation’s history. So much has been written about the election that I won’t bother you with my effusions, except to say that it will be wonderful to go to Kenya and Tanzania this month, as well as to other parts of the world, and feel proud of my country once again. It’s been a long and difficult eight years, and, like so many of you who have written me, there is joy in our hearts and hope and optimism in the air despite mounting economic and international problems. Attitudes seem to be changing and there is a feeling that we, as Americans in an ever-shrinking world, need to reevaluate our priorities, shore up our values, and realize that now, more than ever, we are all interconnected as human beings.

 

I shall be leaving on November 29 with my daughter, Martha, to travel to Kenya and Tanzania, climb Mt. Kilimanjaro, which eluded me twenty years ago, and go on safari in the Serengeti. We’ll return on December 22nd in time for a family Christmas. This was to be a trip for the extended Peterson clan, but only Martha and I could get away, so it will be our first overseas trip together since she lived in Europe. Cary, my eldest, has traveled with me to Mt. Kailash and Dharamsala. Sharing such journeys with my daughters is a supreme pleasure. It’s wonderful to live such experiences with them as we grow older.

I must correct two errors from my trip to the Canadian Rockies for all you climbing purists. First, I misnamed Sleeping Poet’s Pond, and called it Sleeping Poet’s Tarn. But it’s a bit confusing since this pond is, in fact, a hanging tarn. Go figure. Also The Nub, which we climbed, is 9,000 ft., not 8,000.  I don’t want to sell myself short. But it will seem like a mere hill when we hit Kili’s 19,500 ft. summit.

 

I’ve had several communications from Ine Doorman, whom I met at Mt. Assiniboine. She was there with members of a ladies’ hiking club whose name really tickles me. They call themselves the W’sWacky Wandering Wilderness Women. Kind of makes me think of my daughter Cary’s expression for older women. Instead of calling them LOLs (Little Old Ladies) she calls them WOWs (Wonderful Older Women). Perception is everything! Ina’s club should be an example for others around the country who dig hiking and exploring, which is why I’m mentioning it. Their mission: To exercise body and soul in the company of like-minded women in the surroundings of nature. And they have an ambitious ongoing program that keeps them on their toes, literally. This should be an inspiration to those of you who want to team up with others of all ages and explore the natural world.

 

Most recently I spent a weekend in Vienna, VA, near Washington, DC, to visit with my old friends, Robert and Lynn Rubright. They were attending a meeting of the Board of the American Hiking Society www.americanhiking.org a national organization dedicated to promoting and protecting foot trails and the hiking experience. It draws its membership from a great number of other outdoor organizations interested in conservation and outdoor recreation. Robert, whom I’ve mentioned before as the author of two popular hiking books and the soon-to- be-published Breakfast, Lunch, and Diner (yes, I spelled that right), a witty commentary on and history of St. Louis area restaurants, is the president of the Board of Directors of AHS as well as the president of the board of the Open Space Council in St. Louis. Lynn www.lynnrubright.com is my old traveling buddy of storytelling fame and a teacher and documentary film maker in St. Louis. Her most recent book is Mama’s Window.  We socialized at the home of Greg Miller, executive director of AHS and his wife, Vibha Jain Miller,  and spent several hours the next day roaming around Great Falls National Park in Great Falls, VA, and Mather’s Gorge, named after Stephen Mather, who spearheaded the formation of an independent national park service. Ed Talone, the AHS office manager and another avid hiker who has walked across much of the U.S., regaled me with stories of  heroes and heroines of the great outdoors, such as Mildred Norman Ryder, who walked 25,000 miles across the country for peace. Some people called her the Peace Pilgrim, or the American Mahatma Ghandi. She was a spiritual teacher, non-violence advocate, and a prophet for peace. Look her up on google. Now there was a live well lived.

 

I almost forgot to mention my friend Phyllis Bitow, who is competing with me as the theater guru of New Jersey. She greeted me on my return from the Rockies with tickets to an amazing production of Chekhov’s Seagull starring Kristen Scott Thomas. After that I managed such hits as Tale of Two Cities, Horton Foote’s Dividing the Estate, Richard Strauss’s Salome with the magnificent Karita Matilla (and the famous nude scene), Fifty Words with Norbert Leo Butz,  Spamalot, Beachwood Drive, Basic Training with Kahlil Ashanti, the San Francisco ballet, the incomparable Patti LuPone in Gypsy, and The Atheist,  with a superb Campbell Scott. Right now Phyllis is on another of her whirlwind trips, this time to Jordan and Israel. I feel grateful to have so many friends willing to share and enjoy the artistic bounty of New York City. But it’s always great to return to peaceful Maplewood (where I can rake leaves and kill myself trying to track down the mold in my basement).

 

I mention some of these cultural activities, like the two Plainfield Symphony concerts I played in this Fall, so I can entice some of you travelers to enjoy our home grown talent while you’re waiting for your next international adventure.

 

As you know, music is very close to my heart and I feel strongly that it not only enriches our lives in many different ways, but also brings people from all parts of the world together in a shared “harmony.” Nowhere has this been more evident than in the work of a young man, Mark Johnson, who appeared on Bill Moyers’ NOW October 25th and told of his organization, Playing for Change: Peace Through Music. If you look it up on line you can hear his first experiment (on YouTube), taking a blues tune played in the U.S. by a street musician and introducing it to musicians in every corner of the globe, who take it up in turn and play it (in the same key), adding the nuances of their particular culture until it becomes a multi-layered composition of exquisite beauty. He is now building music schools, with the help of local citizens, for people who have a passion to express themselves musically. And it gives a great deal of hope to many whose life has been full of tragedy and deprivation. This is a project that bears supporting.

 

A warm, harmonious Thanksgiving to you all….           

 

 

 

 

Blog, November 18, 2008

 

AN ELECTION HAS BEEN WON AND TRANQUILITY REIGNS AGAIN…SORT OF

 

What an emotional time it has been! And how hard we worked for this historic moment in our nation’s history. So much has been written about the election that I won’t bother you with my effusions, except to say that it will be wonderful to go to Kenya and Tanzania this month, as well as to other parts of the world, and feel proud of my country once again. It’s been a long and difficult eight years, and, like so many of you who have written me, there is joy in our hearts and hope and optimism in the air despite mounting economic and international problems. Attitudes seem to be changing and there is a feeling that we, as Americans in an ever-shrinking world, need to reevaluate our priorities, shore up our values, and realize that now, more than ever, we are all interconnected as human beings.

 

I shall be leaving on November 29 with my daughter, Martha, to travel to Kenya and Tanzania, climb Mt. Kilimanjaro, which eluded me twenty years ago, and go on safari in the Serengeti. We’ll return on December 22nd in time for a family Christmas. This was to be a trip for the extended Peterson clan, but only Martha and I could get away, so it will be our first overseas trip together since she lived in Europe. Cary, my eldest, has traveled with me to Mt. Kailash and Dharamsala. Sharing such journeys with my daughters is a supreme pleasure. It’s wonderful to live such experiences with them as we grow older.

 

I must correct two errors from my trip to the Canadian Rockies for all you climbing purists. First, I misnamed Sleeping Poet’s Pond, and called it Sleeping Poet’s Tarn. But it’s a bit confusing since this pond is, in fact, a hanging tarn. Go figure. Also The Nub, which we climbed, is 9,000 ft., not 8,000.  I don’t want to sell myself short. But it will seem like a mere hill when we hit Kili’s 19,500 ft. summit.

 

I’ve had several communications from Ine Doorman, whom I met at Mt. Assiniboine. She was there with members of a ladies’ hiking club whose name really tickles me. They call themselves the W’sWacky Wandering Wilderness Women. Kind of makes me think of my daughter Cary’s expression for older women. Instead of calling them LOLs (Little Old Ladies) she calls them WOWs (Wonderful Older Women). Perception is everything! Ina’s club should be an example for others around the country who dig hiking and exploring, which is why I’m mentioning it. Their mission: To exercise body and soul in the company of like-minded women in the surroundings of nature. And they have an ambitious ongoing program that keeps them on their toes, literally. This should be an inspiration to those of you who want to team up with others of all ages and explore the natural world.

 

Most recently I spent a weekend in Vienna, VA, near Washington, DC, to visit with my old friends, Robert and Lynn Rubright. They were attending a meeting of the Board of the American Hiking Society www.americanhiking.org a national organization dedicated to promoting and protecting foot trails and the hiking experience. It draws its membership from a great number of other outdoor organizations interested in conservation and outdoor recreation. Robert, whom I’ve mentioned before as the author of two popular hiking books and the soon-to- be-published Breakfast, Lunch, and Diner (yes, I spelled that right), a witty commentary on and history of St. Louis area restaurants, is the president of the Board of Directors of AHS as well as the president of the board of the Open Space Council in St. Louis. Lynn www.lynnrubright.com is my old traveling buddy of storytelling fame and a teacher and documentary film maker in St. Louis. Her most recent book is Mama’s Window.  We socialized at the home of Greg Miller, executive director of AHS and his wife, Vibha Jain Miller,  and spent several hours the next day roaming around Great Falls National Park in Great Falls, VA, and Mather’s Gorge, named after Stephen Mather, who spearheaded the formation of an independent national park service. Ed Talone, the AHS office manager and another avid hiker who has walked across much of the U.S., regaled me with stories of  heroes and heroines of the great outdoors, such as Mildred Norman Ryder, who walked 25,000 miles across the country for peace. Some people called her the Peace Pilgrim, or the American Mahatma Ghandi. She was a spiritual teacher, non-violence advocate, and a prophet for peace. Look her up on google. Now there was a live well lived.

 

I almost forgot to mention my friend Phyllis Bitow, who is competing with me as the theater guru of New Jersey. She greeted me on my return from the Rockies with tickets to an amazing production of Chekhov’s Seagull starring Kristen Scott Thomas. After that I managed such hits as Tale of Two Cities, Horton Foote’s Dividing the Estate, Richard Strauss’s Salome with the magnificent Karita Matilla (and the famous nude scene), Fifty Words with Norbert Leo Butz,  Spamalot, Beachwood Drive, Basic Training with Kahlil Ashanti, the San Francisco ballet, the incomparable Patti LuPone in Gypsy, and The Atheist,  with a superb Campbell Scott. Right now Phyllis is on another of her whirlwind trips, this time to Jordan and Israel. I feel grateful to have so many friends willing to share and enjoy the artistic bounty of New York City. But it’s always great to return to peaceful Maplewood (where I can rake leaves and kill myself trying to track down the mold in my basement).

 

I mention some of these cultural activities, like the two Plainfield Symphony concerts I played in this Fall, so I can entice some of you travelers to enjoy  our home grown talent while you’re waiting for your next international adventure.

 

As you know, music is very close to my heart and I feel strongly that it not only enriches our life in many different ways, but also brings people from all parts of the world together in a shared “harmony.” Nowhere has this been more evident than in the work of a young man, Mark Johnson, who appeared on Bill Moyers’ NOW October 25th and told of his organization, Playing for Change: Peace Through Music. If you look it up on line you can hear his first experiment (on YouTube), taking a blues tune played in the U.S. by a street musician and introducing it to musicians in every corner of the globe, who take it up in turn and play it (in the same key), adding the nuances of their particular culture until it becomes a multi-layered composition of exquisite beauty. He is now building music schools, with the help of local citizens, for people who have a passion to express themselves musically. And it gives a great deal of hope to many whose life has been full of tragedy and deprivation. This is a project that bears supporting.

 

A warm, harmonious Thanksgiving to you all….           

 

 

 

 

BACK FROM THE CANADIAN ROCKIES TO A NEW JERSEY INDIAN SUMMER!

 

How great it is to hang on to summer for a few more days as I attempt to absorb the glorious month spent in the Northwest, visiting my daughter, Cary, and her friends on Whidbey Island; my nephew, Frank Magill, jr, wife, Jessica Plumb, and daughter, Zia, in Port Townsend; and climbing for ten days in the Canadian Rockies with my Himalayan buddy, Jon Pollack, of Seattle. I also spent a day and a night with Nancy and Bob Quickstad—always an inspiration—an afternoon with Yana Viniko, with whom I traveled for a time in Myanmar, and whose reports from her 2008 trip to Myanmar with Lee Compton have appeared on this blog, and, finally, a few enjoyable hours swapping stories with the peripatetic Beth Whitman of www.WanderlustAndLipstick.com. She just published her practical guide to adventuring in India, part of her Wanderlust and Lipstick series, this one entitled, For Women Traveling in India. It’s crammed full of well-researched, helpful information for anyone visiting this fascinating country. Go get it, if you want a full rundown and Hot Tips on how to negotiate this elusive and enigmatic continent.

 

I also spent an evening with Dale Reiger, a Whidbey Island friend I connected with in Myanmar in 2007, and he showed me his art work (not his etchings!), which he sells to help finance a community clinic he built in Honduras. His son, a Cornell student, is the executive director and has managed to staff the clinic with volunteer doctors, most of whom come from the University of Arizona. If you want to know more about Dale’s extraordinary work visit:  http://saludjuntos.org/ 

                              

Hikers and travelers—if you haven’t experienced the unspoiled grandeur of the Canadian Rockies, add this to your “must see” experiences of a lifetime. If you are able to do it by camping in the wilderness, as Jon Pollack and I did, that gives you a special, unspoiled view, but it can also be enjoyed by a cross-Canada train ride or by car (once you dig your own oil well…those expanses are wide and the gas is astronomical!) or by helicopter. The national parks of Canada are well-maintained, tended by a plethora of helpful personnel, and provide campsites a well as cabins and lodges to fit most budgets. It saddened us to realize how many of our own parks have been affected by deep budget cuts and do not have the number of rangers or the new facilities found in the Canadian parks.

 

Before beginning our ten-day sojourn, we spent a long weekend climbing in eastern Washington, having been unable to carry out our original plan to camp at Divide Camp near Mt. Adams, which was now dangerous due to subzero, snowy weather. We went with old friends Carol Johnson, and Pat and Dennis Larsen, and pitched our tents near White Pass, climbing to Tieton Pass with some added hikes on the Pacific Coast Trail. Dennis, a consummate storyteller, regaled us every evening with tales from his historical books about the 1850’s and the beginnings of the famous Oregon Trail. He recounted the life of those times, marriage and courtship practices, and stories of Ezra and Elizabeth Meeker, two pioneers who were passionate about the preservation of the trail. Ezra was an entrepreneur in the early American tradition and lived to be well into his 90’s, having driven a team of oxen across country to Washington, D. C. (in his 80’s) to call attention to the trail. Title: The Missing Chapters: The Untold Story of Ezra Meeker’s Old Oregon Trail Monument Expedition, January 1906-July 1908. The book is available from the Ezra Meeker Historical Society on the web.  Dennis’s second book, Selling Soup: Ezra Meeker’s Letters from the Klondike, 1898-190, will be published in 2009.

 

Returning to Seattle, we drove through Stevens Canyon with its gorgeous views of the Tatooch Mountains, the foothills of Mt. Rainier. This was all within Mt. Rainier National Park. I was appalled when I saw the damage done to Sunshine Point, where Jon and I had camped two years ago. It had been completely washed out by a violent storm and flood the previous year. All the trees were gone and a river now ran through where fireplaces and tent sites once stood.

 

On September 8, as we drove through Idaho to the Canadian border, we noticed the effects of the pine beetle, which is devastating the forests of Canada and creeping into northern Washington. Whole swaths of forest are brown, and the giant fir trees stand like ghosts, withered and bowed. It doesn’t seem to have reached the graceful, feathery larch trees, however, which were on the verge of turning yellow, then orange, before they dropped their needles. At first we thought the damage had been caused by forest fires, but the devastation was just too widespread. Both the U.S. and Canada are working, tirelessly, to solve the problem.

 

We crossed into Canada at Inverness and drove to the heliport at Mt. Shark for our flight into Assiniboine Provincial Park in British Columbia. The helicopter was a compromise, because we didn’t have time for the two-day hike over Wonder Pass into the park. We set up camp on a high spot a mile from the lodge and Magog Lake, one of the pristine glacial lakes in the area. Mt. Assiniboine, often called the Matterhorn of North America, could be seen towering above the other mountains, its chiseled peak gleaming and clouds trailing like wispy prayer flags from its summit. It was very cold our first night, but we did get glimpses of Assiniboine in the sunrise—fingers of gold carved into slabs of rock. Then came the sleet and we retreated to our tent for warmth. Fortunately, the weather improved, so we headed for The Nub, an 8,000 ft. peak affording perfect views of the park, and covered with a spotty blanket of snow. We climbed steadily through larch forests until we reached one grassy knoll overlooking Sunburst and Elizabeth Lakes. Continuing on we stopped at the Nublet, just before the summit. I chickened out on the last hundred feet, which had to be reached by a slippery corridor of jagged rocks covered with ice, and completely exposed on both sides. There were trees everywhere, even at this altitude. I’m always amazed at how high the forests reach in the West. In the White Mountains our tree line ends at 4,000 ft.

 

After our climb we stopped in at Mt. Assiniboine Lodge, a charming log house run by Barbara Renner. She informed me that my nephew, Frank Magill, had given me a birthday present of two dinners that evening (naturally, Jon ate one of them). Well, that was one terrific present, believe me! And the company was wonderful, too. I bonded with a Vancouver lady, originally from Holland, Ine Doorman, and found out more about the park and Barbara’s family. Her children are all skiers and one daughter won a silver medal at the 2006 winter Olympics in Torino, Italy. What a lovely spot to have been raised! For those of you who want a backcountry inn, accessible by hiking, on skis, or by helicopter, with a guide, comfortable rooms or cabins, and incredible meals, go to: www.assiniboinelodge.com. I just found out that it was the first cross-country ski lodge in the Canadian Rockies and is celebrating 80 historical years.

 

On our second day we moved to one of the small cabins in the Naiset enclave (like Assiniboine, this is an Indian name). Barbara suggested this. She was afraid that we would freeze, since the weather predictions were for more cold. She even offered me a down comforter and pillow. Did I look that fragile? (I should never have told her my age!) The day started out bright and sunny, but just as we reached Wonder Pass it started to sleet. Big time. We turned and hurried back down the path, which was fast disappearing. Snow followed. The biggest flakes I’d ever seen. It was like slogging through a Christmas card, the only sound being the crunch of our boots as we raced back to our cabin. It snowed all afternoon as we huddled in a newly-built cook house with hikers all trying to keep warm while enjoying a touch of winter in August. The afternoon was spent in conversation with our new cabin mates, Chris (Canadian) and Ladislav Malek (Czech) from Thunder Bay. Needless to say, the topic of choice at every gathering was the upcoming election in the U.S. The rest of the world is as eager for a change in our country’s direction as we are.

 

We spent the next morning exploring around Lake Magog and enjoying the fresh winter wonderland that greeted us. When the helicopter arrived I sat in the back and took movies. I had ridden in the front next to the pilot on the way over, which was much more exciting. Try to get that seat if you can.

 

The scenery as we drove down the trans-Canada highway toward Lake Louise was breathtaking. In fact, all the scenery was. Therefore, like a good travel writer, I will not use that word again. Perhaps just to say sublime would sum it up: the towering mountains as far as you could see, the rock formations, and the bear bridges built across the highway, planted with trees and underbrush so the animals could cross. We traveled through a charming small town, Canmore, and picturesque Banff, where I had led workshops twenty years ago. For the rest of our trip we were in the province of Alberta.

 

After settling into our campsite at Lake Louise, with a view of Victoria Glacier and Temple Mountain, we headed for Moraine Lake in the valley of the ten peaks, named because its deep turquoise waters were ringed by ten majestic mountains. We walked way up where we could look down at the sparkling water and the intermittent waterfalls descending from cliff walls. This is one of the most beautiful lakes in the region. For me it had a richer feeling than the light blue-green, almost opaque color of Lake Louise. And I liked the simpler lodge rather than the rambling European-style hotels at the Lake Louise resort.

 

Early the next morning we drove to the entrance to Lake O’Hara, another magnificent glacial lake, and climbed into a bus, which took us to our campsite in the woods near the lake. Here we set up camp and spent three days climbing, taking advantage of the beautiful weather before the cold and snow arrived. Our first hike was to Opabin Plateau, where we ate lunch at Opabin Prospect (viewpoint), an outcropping with views of the valley, the streams, and the amazing monolithic stone formations everywhere. In the afternoon we scrambled up a 300 ft. pile of sand and scree to Sleeping Poet’s Tarn, an unusual “hanging tarn” high above the ledges. The rest of the day we walked around the Yukness Ledges to Lake Oesa, another jewel of a lake. In addition to the waterfalls and glacial streams were huge square boulders that looked as if they’d been sliced deliberately and tumbled onto the trail. We were surrounded by immense rock creations, as if some giant hand had thrown every possible geologic design in our way—piles of thin granite slabs stacked up like pancakes, smooth lavendar stones at the foot of etched columns, fanciful designs intersecting at ten-foot intervals on cliff walls. Upheaval was everywhere, the result of cataclysmic eruptions millennia ago. My imagination ran wild. And I was happy about the fact that I seemed to have conquered my fear of exposure on the high ledges. It must have been my trek in Ladakh that cured me.

 

After negotiating a difficult trail back to Lake O’Hara, we peeked into the fancy lodge and met a delightful couple, Shannon and Tom Palmer, whose parents had come from the U.S. and settled in Canada years ago when oil was discovered. This was my first election news in days and you can imagine the ensuing conversation.

 

Our next hike to MacArthur Lake was halted for a time by a lightening storm, during which we sat huddled under the trees until the rain stopped. It turned out to be a wet, but interesting trail leading to the mist-laden lake. We returned via the Elizabeth Parker Huts used by the Alpine Club of Canada.

 

The final hike came hours after an all-night snowstorm had covered the area. We waited until mid-morning, when the sun had melted most of the ice, and started up the Big Larch Trail to Devil’s Rockpile…which is exactly what it was! The views of Schaeffer Lake, Mary Lake, and O’Hara were excellent. After lunch we climbed a very steep and slippery trail to All Soul’s Prospect, one of the best views in the park. And ahead of us was Yukness, where we had climbed two days earlier and a slew of other peaks, one of which was Hungabee Mountain. We stayed there a long time, grooving on the views and basking in the sun. By the time we left, much of the snow had melted, but the trail down was still muddy and treacherous.

 

On our drive home we traveled through Rogers Pass to Revelstoke and on into Kamloops, where I had stayed in 1991 during a cross-Canada train ride. We lost over 6,000 ft. of altitude in a few hours, dropping into a river valley leading to the town.

 

Did we meet a grizzly? Well, we didn’t meet one, but we passed one not many feet away in Assiniboine. And, yes, we kept going. At O’Hara we came close to a white mountain goat and some friendly marmots and chippies, but all in all it was pretty tame.

 

Again, nothing surpasses the beauty and the peacefulness of this part of the world. I’ve gone into more detail, perhaps, than you wanted, but if you have a limited time in the Canadian Rockies and want some good pointers on a perfectly planned and executed trip (thanks to Jon), you have them. Be sure to write if you want any more information. This trip was unforgettable, but I still like reminding.

 

Also, there was a mix up with my server a few weeks ago, about which I knew nothing. After receiving letters from friends, who told me my website was down, I remedied the situation. Know that I always like to hear from you, especially if this sort of thing happens again.

 

I won’t talk about my theater addiction this time, but want to urge all of you to see Taxi to the Dark Side, an excellent documentary from Alex Gibney, who gave us the film: Independent Lens: Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room. You may remember that excellent film. This one is even more harrowing and disturbing, dealing with the U.S. policy on torture since 911. I urge every American to see it.

 

                                               

 

 

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