Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
Friday, July 30, 2021
Walking My Bike in a Grocery Store
Tuesday, July 27, 2021
Last Day of the Trip was a Beautiful Day in Paris
Thursday, July 22, 2021
Visiting Auschwitz Again It Is Even More Horrible
camp itself. Auschwitz began as a Polish army camp taken over by the Nazis shortly after their victory in 1939. The camp is on the edge of the small city of Oswiecim.
Sunday, July 18, 2021
Entrepreneurs of Violence: Money and Hate Drove SS Innovations in Horror
Friday, July 16, 2021
Surviving War and Terror: Sister Hildegard
On my second day in Dresden, I met Sister Hildegard. She is 84 and has lived in Dresden all of her long life. During that life her world has changed dramatically again and again.
She was born in 1937, one of four children of German parents. Her father was a member of the Nazi party. Her mother had left the Church so there was no religion in her early life. The war began in 1939 when Hildegard was two and soon her father left to serve in the army. At the beginning of 1943 her father was reported "missing presumed dead" in the Battle of Stalingrad.
Also in 1943, Allied bombing of Germany began in earnest. Hildegard and her siblings went to the country for school. In February 1945 the beautiful city of Dresden was smashed and burned in consecutive nights of Royal Air Force fire bombing raids.
The war ended in May of 1945, with more trouble ahead. Dresden was in the Soviet occupation zone so the communist East German government was in charge. When Hildegard turned 14 years old in 1953 she had to find a job. She could not continue her education. The problem was not that her father was a Nazi, it was that her parents were educated. Preference for education under the communists went to the children of workers.
Hildegard found work at a Catholic hospital in Dresden. At first she cleaned bricks to help in rebuilding the hospital which was nearly completely destroyed in the fire bombing of 1945. She eventually trained as a nurse and decided to become a sister in the order of nuns that work in the hospital. Her mother returned to faith in 1947 and would become part of the Land of Kanaan sisterhood in Darmstadt.
Until 1961, Hildegard and her family could cross back and forth between East and West Germany with little difficulty. But the Berlin Crisis in 1961 led to a fully closed border. Hildegard was in Dresden. Her mother was in Darmstadt and it would be many years before they were reunited.
With the communists in full control, Hildegard took charge of the OB GYN section of the hospital from 1967 to 1997. She worked under increasingly harsh control by the communists then suddenly in 1990 they were gone. One of the things that made life bearable under the communists was everyone in her community and in other faith communities were clear that the danger was the communists. The communists had spies everywhere. As devout Catholics the nuns were always under suspicion.
But believers were all united in opposition to the communists. When communism fell, the freedom that followed led to competition and the end of opposition to a single enemy and the unity that went with it.
Sisters who had lived through the Nazi era said life then was very different. During that time, some of the sisters were devoted Nazis and some were ardently against the Nazis. The challenge was to keep the community together when the worst strife was within. Hildegard said after the war, the sisters who were devoted Nazis either repented or left the order. The purge was rapid.
My friend Cliff and I visited Sister Hildegard in her room in the hospital residential area for nuns and women in long-term care. She speaks no English. I speak no German. Cliff and Hildegard talked and every ten minutes of so, Cliff would give me a summary of what he learned. I asked questions in these intervals.
Part of her story was in a speech she gave in 2015 explaining the many radical changes she lived through. She and Cliff reviewed the speech which was written in neat handwriting while I watched and wished I had learned German. She does not have a computer or a phone--except the phone with a wire on her desk.
Sister Hildegard has retired from nursing but still a leader in her community. We ate lunch in the hospital cafeteria and sat at her table. As the guest, I got to sit in her chair and eat some very good goulash and mashed potatoes. On the walk to and from the cafeteria she greeted everyone we met with a smile. She is in every way a gracious host.
Tuesday, July 13, 2021
Fun with Five Euro Notes
This morning we visited the Terezin concentration camp. We parked in the designated lot. When it was time to leave, the automatic parking exit would only accept Czech Koruna--no Euros, no credit card.
Beside the parking lot was a vendor selling drinks and ice cream. I asked her about changing Euros. She looked a little sad. So I said "Zwei eis und kleingeld in koruna." She smiled at that. Probably as much at my bad German as with not having to be a money changer. I got 45 koruna in change. The parking cost 30 koruna ($1.50) so Cliff and I were on our way with paid parking and ice cream cones.
Late in the afternoon we got burgers in a burger restaurant in Old City Dresden. The woman who waited on us was a very happy person. We made a couple of jokes with her. When we were ready to leave she came to the table and said, "You would like to pay?"
I said, "We would like to pay. In fact we would love to pay you." She laughed out loud. I then said I hoped she would be rich and famous, make millions of Euros and become the most successful restaurant owner in the world. She and Cliff were both laughing. American exaggeration sounds very strange in Dresden.
Cliff asked if my drink was really alcohol free. She said they had put vodka in my drink.
She gave us the change. I gave her back a five-Euro note and said it was the start of her first million.
Christian Nationalism in Fort Worth, Texas, Calls Itself Mercy Culture, Preaches Hate and Division. Church of Trump Worship.
From the Washington Post
An American Kingdom
A new and rapidly growing Christian movement is openly political, wants a nation under God’s authority, and is central to Donald Trump’s GOP
Sunday, July 11, 2021
Christian Nationalism and the Church at the Flossenburg Concentration Camp
When I visit concentration camps, along with learning about the horror, I pay attention to how the survivors, both victims and those who live nearby, deal with the evil happened in their midst.
At Flossenburg, one response was to build a memorial chapel just two years after the end of the war in 1947. The stone building of the chapel is attached to a former guard tower. The chapel honors the victims from 22 countries who were murdered in the camp. Its design stands against every form of Christian Nationalism--the arrogant and hateful belief that God picks specific nations to be His representative here on earth.
Christian Nationalism has been the justification for slaughter in the name of God since the Church melded with the government after the fall of the Roman Empire. I recently read Karl Jaspers "Socrates, Buddha, Confucius, Jesus." Jaspers makes clear that Jesus pointed to the Kingdom of God and had no program for any kind of kingdom here on earth. In the Gospels, there is nothing to support taking any kind of political power in the name of God. A vegan butcher is less of a contradiction than conquest in the name of Jesus.
The Beatitudes, or the Sermon on the Mount, one of the central documents of Christianity, says God is with the victims in this world. "Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth." That is not the marching orders for "Christian" army to slaughter its neighbors.
But Christian Nationalism has fully infected the Evangelical Church in America. In 2016 nearly 80% of Evangelicals voted for the "America First" immigrant-hating candidate who expressed their beliefs. The percentage went up in 2020. Four years of lies and hate made the Christian Nationalist candidate more attractive. White supremacists like Steve Bannon and Sebastian Gorka just made fake Christians more excited.
So in the midst of all the sadness of the remains of the Flossenburg concentration camp, I was glad to see a flat rejection of Christian Nationalism and all of the simmering hate behind it.
No one can love the whole world. Abstract love is not love at all. The commandment of God to love our neighbor whether in the Hebrew Scriptures of the New Testament can only be brought into being by loving those with us and near us.
The Holocaust, among its many horrors is a record of people who ignored, betrayed and murdered their Jewish neighbor. From the Pyrenees to the Ural mountains, the Jew next door was beaten, robbed and dragged away in the night to be murdered.
Every form of Christian Nationalism is wrong and hateful. Flag waving America First Evangelicals make the Jesus they claim to worship into a symbol of hate.
Friday, July 9, 2021
Meeting an American Author in a Paris Bookstore
My first full day in Paris, I walked to Jardin Luxembourg to visit The Red Wheelbarrow bookstore. I have visited the store several times since 2018 when Penelope bought the store and moved it to this lovely location near the Pantheon and the Sorbonne.
When I arrived at the store it was not open. A woman was waiting outside and said the store would open soon in English that was very American. Penelope arrived a few minutes later. While we waited outside the store, Nita Wiggins and I began talking about The Red Wheelbarrow and the beautiful day in Paris.
As we talked I learned that Nita is a professor. She teaches journalism in Paris at l’Ecole Supérieure de Journalisme de Paris. she moved to Paris in 2009 to teach journalism and has lived here ever since.
Before moving to Paris, she was a sports reporter for all of the major US networks. Her book:
Civil Rights Baby: My Story of Race, Sports, and Breaking Barriers in American Journalism
Talking to Amtrak Conductor About Late-Life Enlistment, Loving the Cold War Army
Many Amtrak conductors and other rail workers are veterans. Over the past quarter century of commuting to Philadelphia on Amtrak, I got to know many veterans. The most recent is a conductor named Darrell I have only got to know in the past year. I still go to Philadelphia every week.
Tuesday, July 6, 2021
Who Fights Our War? Veteran of the Tet Offensive in 1968 Working Security at Kennedy Airport
This afternoon I checked in for a flight to Paris on IcelandAir. Checking in for boarding took a while because of COVID documents, but once I had a boarding pass, there was almost no line for security.
When I approached the screening area, I told the guy at the metal detector that I would need the alternative screening. I said,"I have metal here, here and here" pointing to my neck, left knee and left elbow. James, the TSA screener, said "Go ahead and try anyway." I did. The alarm sounded and I waited for the technician to check me. After I put my arms over my head in the plexiglass booth, James came over to do the pat down. The technician was a woman and could not do the hands-on check.
When James walked over I held my arms out straight to my sides. He said, "You don't need to do that, you're not an airplane."
'And you are a native New Yorker,' I thought.
Then he said, "You got metal all over the place, was it shrapnel from a war?"
"As a matter of fact, in 1973......"
"No way," he said. "You were in 'Nam? I was there during the Tet Offensive. '68. Radio man."
"I managed to get blinded by shrapnel in a missile explosion in America," I said. "Live fire test."
"That sucks," he said. "No Purple Heart, right?"
"Right?" I said. Then I told him about my fingers hanging off and getting re-attached. With professional curiosity and gloved hands, he checked the first fingers on my right hand.
He then told me about his communications site being surrounded, then the North Vietnamese went around his bunker and moved on. "I was sure I was dead," James said.
We fist bumped then waved as he went back to the check-in line.
I have talked to many TSA agents who were Iraq and Afghanistan veterans. I don't remember a lot of Vietnam War veterans. Certainly not recently. But it was fun to talk with him.
Monday, June 28, 2021
My Summer Vacation: More Concentration Camps
Next week I am flying to Germany to join my best friend Cliff on a thousand-mile tour of Nazi Concentration Camps. We have visited other concentration camps together in 2017, 2019 and 2020: Buchenwald, Dachau, and the first concentration camp opened in the state of Hesse in February1933.
We also visited Nuremberg in 2020, the site of the rallies that were central to Hitler's power.
In July we will visit Flossenburg, Auschwitz-Birkenau and Theresienstadt. We chose these because Cliff had never been Auschwitz, I had never been to Flossenberg and neither of us have been to Theresienstadt.
Auschwitz is the largest and worst of the camps. A million Jews died Auschwitz, but by the time the camp was in operation, three million Jews had already been murdered. They were shot by tens of thousands of German soldiers, German police, and by police and volunteers in conquered countries.
Flossenburg is where Dietrich Bonhoeffer was martyred by the Nazis just before the war ended. One of the worst Trump toadies wrote a biography of Bonhoeffer in 2011. Eric Metaxas could write about a martyr and then praise Trump.
Thereseienstadt in the Czech Republic was the "show camp" for the Nazis early in the war. It was a place they took the Red Cross to show them the camps were not as bad as the rumors. It was also the camp where Jews who were confessing Christians were sent. Churches in Germany stood aside and let their members who had any Jewish heritage be murdered.
Bruder Timotheus and Kanaan
Cliff was Sergeant Cliff Almes in the1970s in Cold War Germany where we were roommates. After leaving the U.S. military he became Bruder Timotheus at the Land of Kanaan in Darmstadt. Kanaan was founded in 1947 by two women who believed Germany must repent for the Holocaust.
Before 2017, I had never been to a Holocaust museum or memorial or a concentration camp. But when a racist President put the head breitbart.com in the White House, I knew I had to get connected to my genetic heritage. Steve Bannon gave white supremacists and neo-Nazis a place to promote hate on breitbart.com
In August 2017, Nazis were "fine people" according to the President and I needed to learn more about the hateful people who are his base of support.
Germany was a civilized, if impoverished, country in 1932. By 1945, the country was bombed, invaded and defeated. The Nazis killed millions of innocent people and left their own country a smoldering ruin. America was the leading democracy in the world in 2016, we are now slowly sinking into tyranny while Republicans cheer.
I am going to concentration camps to see just how bad it can get if a tyrant rips away American democracy.
Monday, June 21, 2021
The Three Little Pigs in French--the original gruesome version
Saturday, June 19, 2021
My Daughter's First Book -- Amelia's Journey to Find Family
If I were asked to name one thing that defines the life of my oldest daughter, I would say, "Lauren loves dogs!"
We got our family's first dog when Lauren was eight years old. The German Shepherd named Lucky was the whole family's dog, but Lauren really loved that dog. Except for when she lived in college dorms, Lauren has had dogs ever since. She currently has two rescue dogs named Guinness and Watson, but she wrote her first book about a dog named Amelia.
Lauren adopted Amelia last year and kept her alive and as healthy as possible until she passed away last month on May 20, National Rescue Dog Day at the age of approximately 12-14. The book is a story told by Amelia about finding her last and final family. If you would like to get the book for a child in your life (or yourself), order here.
Lauren volunteers for Lu's Labs, a Labrador Retriever Rescue organization. Lauren fostered thirty rescued labs over the past five years before deciding to keep Amelia.
Over the past year, Amelia posted daily on the Lu's Labs site as well as her and her brother's instagram page. These posts detailed her transition to Lauren's home, old lady ailments, the difficulties of training the humans and attempting to understand their behavior, and about finding the simple joys and things to be grateful for in each day. These posts had hundreds of followers.
In her passing, Amelia received over a thousand messages from people telling her how her posts inspired them, taught them about love and gratitude, helped them through difficult times in their lives, the uncertainty of COVID, and how reading her daily posts became part of their morning coffee routine or part of family dinner each night. These messages also had another common and incredible theme, so many people spoke of the incredible love they had for dog they'd never met.
Lauren is currently posting on Facebook at Team Wag Forever.
On Instagram: Amelia Writes Books and Guiness Watson and Friends.
Lauren shared with me many of the hundreds of comments she received. I was really moved by the comment from her soccer coach at Juniata College, Scott McKenzie. I only went on one college visit with Lauren and that was the college she picked. I remember little of the visit except the first moment of meeting coach McKenzie.
Lauren and I walked into McKenzie's office. He was sitting at the desk looking at some papers, looked at Lauren then bolted straight up out of his chair, hands raised like he was in Church and said, "Praise the Lord. A five-foot ten goalkeeper wants to play for my team."
Lauren played every season, but missed a lot of her senior season after an open fracture of her finger in a pre-season game.
Here is Coach McKenzie's response to Amelia's passing. Lauren's nickname on the team was "Goose."
A good friend of mine lost one of her dogs this morning. Not just any friend and not just any dog! Goose (my friend) competed for me while a student-athlete at Juniata College. Goose was a terrific goalkeeper for our women’s soccer team. She’s an even better human being who has dedicated her professional life to caring for others. It makes sense, then, that this tendency towards care would carry over to her personal life in the dedication she shows to her family and her pets. Goose volunteers for an organization called Lu’s Labs, which connects available dogs with their forever families.
In Amelia’s case, the cards were stacked against this wonderful chocolate lab. Elderly dogs and dogs with compromised health are tough to place. In steps Goose (about a year ago) and becomes Amelia’s foster and then forever Mom. Goose and her husband welcomed Amelia into their family of two other labs and they became a family of five.
Goose and Amelia wrote a children’s book together about finding a home and being loved. I can’t wait to get my “pawtographed” copy.
Goose gave Amelia a voice and many of us have followed their wonderful journey together.
This morning, that journey ended as Amelia earned her wings and will be waiting for her families at the Rainbow Bridge.
Before she left, Amelia asked for a favor from all of us. She asked us to consider an elderly or ill dog if/when you adopt. She proved, over the past year, that they can give love and laughs with the time they have left. I believe this to be true.
So, please learn more about adoption. Visit Lu’s Labs online. Consider Amelia’s book as a good read for you or a friend.
Most importantly, open your heart to the possibility of the great amount of love that remains in our dogs, no matter what their age.
Amelia, I never met you but my eyes were filled with tears of heartbreak when I learned of your passing.
Good dog Amelia. Good dog.
Goose - you’re an amazing person and I thank you for allowing many of us to join you in loving that good dog.
No Canvassers for Trump
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