Magazine
Sojourners Magazine: September-October 2002
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Cover Story
Feature
Against all odds, Palestinian Christians seek resurrection in Bethlehem.
Recently a newspaper in Washington, D.C., carried a four-part series titled "Black Money."
For Louisiana writer Ernest Gaines, home is the place where you're torn between the difficulty of leaving and the terror of staying.
Imagine a packed elementary school auditorium and only an hour between hundreds of kids and summer vacation. "Peace" isn't the word that comes to mind.
Commentary
How could anyone have gotten so out of touch with physical reality?
Attacks in both East and West Jerusalem damage and demoralize—but they're not the same.
Columns
Those of you just back from vacation might need a quick reminder about the state of the world. It's not good.
At Wimbledon in 2002, tennis great Serena Williams was asked how it felt to be
number one in the world.
Hear this, you that trample on the poor and take from them their jobs and
retirement funds.
Culture Watch
Leaving out my all-time favorites Carlos Santana and John Coltrane, whom I've written
about for Sojourners, here are a few cultural artifacts I'm currently excited
about.
"Fantasy is what people want, but reality is what they need.
Spokane Indian Sherman Alexie often snaps "that's personal" during interviews, yet the characters in his books and films closely follow his own life growing up on the Spokane Indian Reservation...
I'm reluctant to mouth off about something like the 30th anniversary of the Watergate break-in and all that followed. It makes me feel old.
John H. Timmerman's incisive look at poet Jane Kenyon could use a snappier title
because, more than a "literary life," it is a quintessential modern American
spiritual journey.
Chris Rice, a former columnist for Sojourners, chronicles in Grace Matters: A True Story of Race, Friendship, and Faith in the Heart of the South his years living in Antioch...
Departments
Daring Deeds. In June, seven women gathered on a boat on the Danube in
Austria to be ordained as Roman Catholic priests.
I FOUND SISTER Joan Chittister's article "The Faith Will Survive" encouraging in these troubled times.
Twelve of the world's top 20 megacities are in Asia and the Pacific. Tokyo, with
more than 26 million people, is currently the world's largest city.
IN "CATHOLIC
Scandal, Ecumenical Solution" (July-August 2002), Rose Marie Ber
Brazilian popular educator Paulo Freire probably never thought his ideas would revolutionize the fashion industry, but his student Maria Teresa Romeiro Leal has done just that.
The world now has purple M&Ms, but hold your applause for the
little chocolates until the West African cocoa fields are rid of child slavery.
THANKS TO Walter Brueggemann for calling on us to challenge the capitalist system that causes such loss and pain for the powerless.
JIM RICE'S "SINS of the Fathers" and Rose Marie Berger's "Managing the Erotic Life" (May-June 2002) were much too coy about male supremacy's major role in maintaining sexual promiscuity and abuse in the church.
In June, the African Religious Leaders Assembly on Children and HIV/AIDS met in Nairobi at the request of the Hope for African Children Initiative and the World Conference of Religions and Peace.
The Glasgow University Media Group decided to research how much about the Middle East
conflict students learned from watching TV. This is what they found.
THANKS FOR including Joan Chittister's article "The Faith Will Survive" in your July-August issue.
Here's the perfect gift for the hard-to-shop-for Lutheran in your life, or for
that matter any friendly neighborhood church reformer.
TODAY I RECEIVED an e-mail from a friend who was sharing an article by Julie Polter titled "Martha Stewartship" (May-June 2002).
Nurit Elhanan and her husband, Rami, both 52, are campaigning for an end to the Israeli
occupation of the Palestinian territories. What's remarkable about their peace
campaign?
'Nonviolent resistance isn't about making a point, it's about taking power."
Even many people who believe deeply in nonviolence might be taken aback by the bluntness of such a statement.
Two-hundred-seventy Haitian refugees—including children—have been held for more than six months in a maximum-security prison