[aftermath]

Topic: Around Town

The Daily News reports that many of the rescue and cleanup workers who served at Ground Zero are now suffering from unusual cancers, including pancreatic cancer, which is almost always fatal. According to Dr. Charles Hesdorffer, an oncologist at Columbia Presbyterian, “In all instances, the cancers developed in young, otherwise healthy individuals with no personal or family histories of cancer.”

[what it feels like]

Topic: Culture
I was listening to a couple of my old Paul Simon records today — having cleaned our apartment for the barbecue we had yesterday, we can now get to both the records and the record player — and I was struck by a couple of songs that seemed to sum up the political mood today, even though they’re over 20 years old. There’s something both tragic and reassuring in realizing that we’ve been here before: tragic because we should have known better than to return, but reassuring because the world went on and there have been good times, too.

Anyway, I just wanted to quote the songs in full and let you make what you want of them.

Peace Like a River (1971)

Peace like a river ran through the city
Long past the midnight curfew
We sat starry-eyed
We were satisfied
And I remember
Misinformation followed us like a plague
Nobody knew from time to time
If the plans were changed
If the plans were changed.

You can beat us with wires
You can beat us with chains
You can run out your rules
But you know you can’t outrun the history train
I’ve seen a glorious day.

Four in the morning
I woke up from out of my dreams
Nowhere to go but back to sleep
But I’m reconciled
Oh, oh, oh, I’m going to be up for a while

*

American Tune (1973)

Many’s the time I’ve been mistaken
And many times confused
Yes, and often felt forsaken
And certainly misused
But I’m all right, I’m all right
I’m just weary to my bones
Still, you don’t expect to be
Bright and bon vivant
So far away from home, so far away from home

And I don’t know a soul who’s not been battered
I don’t have a friend who feels at ease
I don’t know a dream that’s not been shattered
or driven to its knees
But it’s all right, it’s all right
We’ve lived so well so long
Still, when I think of the road
we’re traveling on
I can’t help it, I wonder what went wrong

And I dreamed I was dying
And I dreamed that my soul rose unexpectedly
And looking back down at me
Smiled reassuringly
And I dreamed I was flying
And high up above my eyes could clearly see
The Statue of Liberty
Sailing away to sea
And I dreamed I was flying

We come on the ship they call the Mayflower
We come on the ship that sailed the moon
We come in the age’s most uncertain hour
and sing and American tune
But it’s all right, it’s all right
You can’t be forever blessed
Still, tomorrows going to be another working day
And I’m trying to get some rest
That’s all I’m trying to get some rest

I’m trying to get some rest

[be the reds]

Topic: Politics
During South Korea’s World Cup hysteria back in the summer of 2001, we were startled to see the whole country donning T-shirts that said “Be the Reds” in support of their national football team, the Red Devils. As I put it then, “I think the South Koreans completely missed the irony of collectively dressing in red, going to mass demonstrations and shouting nationalist slogans in unison.”

So when I read today in Ambiguous.org that the Rhode Island chapter of the National Organization for Women is sponsoring a program called Freedom Fridays: Wear Red as an antiwar protest, it set off certain alarm bells. According to the website, red was used as a code by Norwegians in World War II who were protesting the Nazi occupation. But in American political consciousness, the color red represents something else entirely. And the idea of secret Reds has a nasty history indeed, including both the baseless Red-baiting of the McCarthy era and the post-Soviet revelations that Communist spies were indeed deeply embedded in the American government in the 1940s. I can just imagine the headlines in the Conservative press when they get a hold of this: “Secret Reds Subvert War on Terror!” “New England Feminists Encourage Antiwar Communism!”

Remember, my left-leaning friends, that we’re working for an election here — one in which we’ll have to inspire middle-of-the-road undecideds to lean our way — not a revolution. Secret cabals of Reds will not help the cause.

[riveting rose]

Topic: Culture
On Thursday a bunch of real-life Rosie the Riveters (Rosies the Riveter?) were honored at Arlington Cemetary in Washington, D.C.I’ve always liked RtR as a feminist icon — tough, strong, hard-working, her efforts vital to our national interests — and though the Greatest Generation has feted itself endlessly, I’m all in favor of giving some extra accolades to the Rosies.

[singhing the praises of diversity]

Topic: India
On October 31, 1984, Indira Gandhi, India’s powerful and long-serving Congress prime minister, was assassinated by one of her Sikh bodyguards, who was retaliating for the attack she had ordered on the Golden Temple of Amritsar, the Sikhs’ holiest site. In the riots that followed, nearly 3,000 Sikhs were murdered. Now, a mere 20 years later, Manmohan Singh, a Punjabi Sikh, will lead a Congress government as India’s first non-Hindu prime minister.

The choice of Singh sends all the right messages. Because he was the architect of India’s successful economic reforms, the business community will be reassured that the return of Congress does not mean a return to state industry and quasi-socialism. He is also squeaky-clean, a rarity among Indian politicians. As a non-Hindu, he is a living demonstration of India’s secular inclusiveness and a rejection of the BJP’s Hindu nationalism. And as a Sikh, he is proof that the painful events of 1984 are firmly in the past, both for India and for the Congress Party.

Plus, of course, the elevation of a Sikh to the highest office in the land may well usher in a golden age of bhangra dancing, which has to be one of the coolest things ever.

[the weather]

Topic: India
I’ve come to believe that weather is too often overlooked as a factor that influences political events. What was the weather like in the summer of 1967? I bet it was nice both in the US and in Europe. And in 1968? I bet it was hot. And how was the weather in Paris in July of 1789?

Or take India, for example. While the drama in Delhi these last few days might seem a little nuts, just consider how sane you’d feel if the weather was 111 degrees with widespread dust, and you lived in a town where most people have no air conditioners and the electricity craps out in the heat of the afternoon.

If it ever hits 111 in New York for more than two days running, I expect mass looting and general carnage, not to mention multiple hijackings of ice cream trucks.

[indian drama]

Topic: India

I have just finished rereading Salman Rushdie’s Satanic Verses. When I first read it many years ago, I didn’t know much more about India than what I’d learned from Ravi Shankar and the Beatles, and my knowledge of Islam was even sketchier. I hadn’t even seen My Beautiful Laundrette. I remember finding it a difficult novel, and I don’t think I ever made much sense of the whole bit about the pilgrims from Titlipur, who march from their little village to the Arabian Sea, expecting it to part for them so that they can walk to Mecca.

On a second reading, I believe it may be the great Rushdie novel, surpassing even the extraordinary Midnight’s Children. It asks very deep questions — What is faith? What are good and evil, and how do we tell them apart? What is God? — and works on them through complex, moving narratives, without ever giving in to the temptation to answer them outright. And for whatever reasons, the novel touched me this time in a way that few novels have.

*

On a separate note, India continues its extraordinary tradition of melodrama with Sonia Gandhi’s tearful performance today in parliament. Was it sincere or all for show? Is this a ploy for sympathy and support, or is she really stepping down? Whatever the case, the whole show is worthy of a Bollywood weeper. Now all we need is a song-and-dance number.

[new york state of no-mind]

Topic: Around Town
Saturday, June 5 is Change Your Mind Day, “An afternoon of meditation, movement, and music [that] will take place in more than 40 cities around the globe.” Here in New York, the events will take place on the Great Hill in Central Park, from 12:30 to 5:30.

The subsequent week is Meditate NYC, a weeklong opportunity to explore NYC’s diverse Buddhist communities as they offer open houses and meditation sessions for beginners or the curious.