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All caregivers are called upon to recognize both the pain and
beauty in this world and to help move society towards an “Ideal
City”. Beauty is the aesthetic by which healers can care for
their patients. The book proclaims three manifestos for healing:
• Healing a Violent World. Healers of every type are called on to
reduce the pain of human suffering by working towards a
non-violent, empathetic world. • Healing the Healer. Those who
give care to the suffering patient in turn suffer themselves, and
this manifesto asks that healers recognize their vulnerability, and
to engage in conversation to help them towards diminishing the pain
that they feel. • Healing Power of Justice. Justice needs to be
recognized as the pathway to healing. Justice is a powerful force
for human and social transformation and its pursuit is both intense
and often tragic. These three manifestos, together with the
sentiments of poetry that intersperses them, are published here to
awaken your sense of healing. This book is published in partnership
with the Harvard Program in Refugee Trauma (HPRT) which has
pioneered the health and mental health of survivors of mass
violence and torture, refugees, and traumatized communities
worldwide over the past four decades.
An eleven-year-old's world is upended by political turmoil in this
"lyrically ambitious tale of exile and reunification" (Kirkus
Reviews) from an award-winning poet, based on true events in Chile.
Celeste Marconi is a dreamer. She lives peacefully among friends
and neighbors and family in the idyllic town of Valparaiso,
Chile--until one day when warships are spotted in the harbor and
schoolmates start disappearing from class without a word. Celeste
doesn't quite know what is happening, but one thing is clear: no
one is safe, not anymore. The country has been taken over by a
government that declares artists, protestors, and anyone who helps
the needy to be considered "subversive" and dangerous to Chile's
future. So Celeste's parents--her educated, generous, kind
parents--must go into hiding before they, too, "disappear." Before
they do, however, they send Celeste to America to protect her. As
Celeste adapts to her new life in Maine, she never stops dreaming
of Chile. But even after democracy is restored to her home country,
questions remain: Will her parents reemerge from hiding? Will she
ever be truly safe again? Accented with interior artwork, steeped
in the history of Pinochet's catastrophic takeover of Chile, and
based on many true events, this multicultural ode to the power of
revolution, words, and love is both indelibly brave and
heartwrenchingly graceful.
"This collection is a testimony of hope and endurance through the
power of writing. The experience that unites us and that we want to
share with you is the experience of exile, of belonging neither in
Chile nor the United States: our experience of existing between two
cultures and not feeling comfortable in either of them, of choosing
the path of political activism and uniting our destiny with that of
the voices of marginalized women." --Marjorie Agosin "I am
convinced that [these letters] should be made public as a testimony
of the life of women in Latin America, and of the Latina immigrants
who live in the United States. The histories interwoven in our
correspondence are not exceptions, they are the norm. These
episodes from the lives of Marjorie and Emma are part of a
voluminous tome of common histories that have been lived and
continue to be lived by Latin American women, from our grandmothers
to our daughters. --Emma Sepulveda
This collection of letters chronicles a remarkable, long-term
friendship between two women who, despite differences of religion
and ethnicity, have followed remarkably parallel paths from their
first adolescent meeting in their native Chile to their current
lives in exile as writers, academics, and political activists in
the United States. Spanning more than thirty years (1966-2000),
Agosin's and Sepulveda's letters speak eloquently on themes that
are at once personal and political--family life and patriarchy,
women's roles, the loneliness of being a religious or cultural
outsider, political turmoil in Chile, and the experience of
exile.
I only wanted to write about them, / Narrate their fierce audacity,
/ Their voyages through the channels of the Mediterranean. So
begins a poetic journey through the islands of the Mediterranean
that served as homes and refuge for the Sephardic Jews after the
Alhambra Decree, which ordered their expulsion from Spain. Inspired
by her own journey to Salonika and the Greek Islands, Rhodes,
Crete, as well as the Balkans, Marjorie Agosin searches for the
remnants of the Sepharad. Presented in a beautiful bilingual
Spanish-English edition, Agosin's poems speak to a wandering life
of exile on distant shores. We hear the rhythm of the waves and the
Ladino-inflected voices of Sephardi women past and present: Paloma,
Estrella, and Luna in the fullness of their lives, loves, dreams,
and faith. An evocative and sensual voyage to communities mostly
lost after the Holocaust, The White Islands offers a lighthouse of
remembrance, a lyrical world recovered with language and song,
lament and joy, longing and hope.
Dance, Human Rights, and Social Justice: Dignity in Motion presents
a wide-ranging compilation of essays, spanning more than 15
countries. Organized in four parts, the articles examine the
regulation and exploitation of dancers and dance activity by
government and authoritative groups, including abusive treatment of
dancers within the dance profession; choreography involving human
rights as a central theme; the engagement of dance as a means of
healing victims of human rights abuses; and national and local
social/political movements in which dance plays a powerful role in
helping people fight oppression. These groundbreaking papers both
detailed scholarship and riveting personal accounts encompass a
broad spectrum of issues, from slavery and the Holocaust to the
Bosnian and Rwandan genocides to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict;
from First Amendment cases and the AIDS epidemic to discrimination
resulting from age, gender, race, and disability. A range of
academics, choreographers, dancers, and dance/movement therapists
draw connections between refugee camp, courtroom, theater,
rehearsal studio, and university classroom.
Marjorie Agosin is an award-winning poet, essayist, fiction writer,
and activist, as well as Professor of Spanish language and Latin
American literature at Wellesley College. The United Nations has
honored her work on human rights, notably for women's rights in
Chile. Professor Agosin has won many important literary awards and
in this book she, once again, uses her evocative poetry and
distinctive voice to illuminate a hidden history of Venice that so
richly deserves to be recorded and remembered. "The Guardian of
Memory" chronicles the meetings between the author and Aldo Izzo,
the eponymous "Guardian of Memory," a man who has tended the
Venetian Jewish cemeteries for over 30 years. However, this work
goes far beyond a mere homage to Aldo Izzo's tireless work and
becomes a sensory journey through the ancient city of Venice that
is interleaved with memories and stories of those who have gone
before. Venice, perhaps the most liminal of cities, serves a
backdrop to this meditation on the profound aspects of human
existence. The elemental contrasts of light and dark, water and
land, past and present, life and death, are enhanced by the
atmospheric black and white photographs of Samuel Shats to provide
an unforgettable and unique insight into the mysteries of the city.
As the book progresses, so the strange and, at times, ominous
aspects of this history of Venice unfold, thus making this book so
much more than a mere walk through the ancient streets of La
Serenissima.
This new edition of The House of Memory: Stories by Jewish Women
Writers of Latin America revisits the meaning of heritage and home,
exploring the experience of losing the familiar to embrace the
unknown. While often painful in its examination of antisemitism,
this collection of essays embraces the belief that hope and love
can triumph over adversity and racism. This collection contains
over thirty stories from internationally acclaimed writers, such as
Clarice Lispector and Margo Glantz, as well as new voices, with
some appearing for the first time in English translations. Although
many of the stories are rooted in the Jewish experience and
tradition, there is a universal resonance that transcends place,
race, gender and religion to speak of matters that are still
ever-present to all of us.
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Braided Memories (Hardcover)
Marjorie Agosin; Photographs by Samuel Shats; Translated by Alison Ridley
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R1,378
Discovery Miles 13 780
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Braided Memories (Paperback)
Marjorie Agosin; Photographs by Samuel Shats; Translated by Alison Ridley
bundle available
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R1,121
Discovery Miles 11 210
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In this evocative and emotional work, the poet, novelist, and human
rights activist Marjorie Agosin pays homage to her
great-grandmother, Helena Broder. As a young woman, Helena escaped
Vienna to seek refuge in Chile, leaving shortly after the Night of
Broken Glass in 1938 when the Nazi regime unleashed a campaign of
violence, terror and destruction against the Jewish population.
This book takes readers on Marjorie's journey through time and
space, and across thresholds between life, death and dreams, to
discover Helena's lost voice. This is not a linear journey, but one
that braids together the past, the present, and the future,
allowing Marjorie to give Helena, an exiled woman, a third home in
the liminal space of memory and literature; a safe haven where she
can be complete rather than fragmented, a place where her
"exhausted suitcase" can finally rest. This touching collection of
poems, in Marjorie Agosin's native Spanish together with Alison
Ridley's delicate English translation, is accompanied by images
from the Chilean photographer Samuel Shats, as well as poignant
memorabilia of Helena herself.
Anne Frank was a young Jewish girl forced into hiding with her
family by the Nazi regime that occupied the Netherlands in the
Second World War. No one would have known of her, her family or
their fate had it not been for the survival of the diary that she
kept during this time, a book that has long been an inspiration to
the poet and writer Marjorie Agosin. In her quest to introduce more
young people to this tragic tale of the irrepressible Anne, the
author provides a lyrical and engaging imagining of Anne's world.
Through Anne's eyes, the reader is taken on the family's journey:
their flight from Hitler's Germany, the excitement of a new start
in Amsterdam and their eventual confinement in a small set of
hidden rooms where they lived in fear of discovery, transportation
and likely death.
"Our century has become marked by the distinct, bitter tinge of
nomadism and emigration." The sixteen essays in this book are by
writers from diverse parts of the world recalling their experiences
and emotions of what is meant by the concept of Home. Each essay is
written with evocative and often lyrical tones of great beauty as
well as lucidity. Many of the essays describe homes that exist no
longer, and homes that have changed or disappeared through time.
Yet the power of place is real: each author understands that Home
belongs to the landscape of the imagination, with a power to
recover and to transform. It is perhaps no coincidence that all of
the contributors make their home in the USA, a nation that has
defined itself by its emigrant imagination and a nation that has
allowed its immigrants to be Americans while also holding on to who
they were in the past. Through their experiences, the authors are
both outsiders and insiders. They carry their dreams of homeland
wherever they settle, for Home is never lost but real in its
evocation and the power to remember.
This book gathers a collection of multidisciplinary essays written
by distinguished scholars, visual artists, and writers. The common
thread of these essays addresses the ways in which fiber arts have
enriched and empowered the lives of women throughout the world.
From Ancient Greece to the Holocaust, to the work of grassroots
organizations, these essays illustrate the universality of fiber
arts.
The Chilean coup d'etat of 1973 was a watershed event in the
history of Chile. It was also a defining moment in the life of
writer Marjorie Agosin.
This collection of prose vignettes and free verse draws upon her
experiences as a child in Chile, an expatriate abroad, and a
minority Jew--even in the land she calls home--to create a striking
portrait of a life of exile. The tone of the book varies as it
lyrically explores the geography of Chile and weaves into it the
themes of exile and oppression. At times the words become hymns to
the physical beauty of her country, evoking the grandeur of this
land extending to the southernmost tip of the world. At times they
are intimate and melancholy, exploring personal and familial
history through miniature portraits that reveal the pain of being
different. Finally the tone becomes angry as she denounces the
injustices committed against her friends and against the families
of the disappeared during the seventeen-year dictatorship of
Augusto Pinochet.
Combining themes of memory, childhood, minority issues, Judaism,
and political oppression, this collection contains some of Agosin's
strongest work. "Of Earth and Sea" is a poetic autobiography that
explores the world of Chile with eyes that see both despair and
hope.
In "Taking Root," Latin American women of Jewish descent, from
Mexico to Uruguay, recall their coming of age with Sabbath candles
and Hebrew prayers, Ladino songs and merengue music, Queen Esther
and the Virgin of Guadalupe. Rich and poor, Sephardi and Ashkenazi,
Jewish immigrant families searched for a new home and identity in
predominantly Catholic societies. The essays included here examine
the religious, economic, social, and political choices these
families have made and continue to make as they forge Jewish
identities in the New World.
Marjorie Agosin has gathered narratives and testimonies that reveal
the immense diversity of Latin American Jewish experience. These
essays, based on first- and second-generation immigrant experience,
describe differing points of view and levels of involvement in
Jewish tradition. In "Taking Root," Agosin presents us with a
contemporary and vivid account of the Jewish experience in Latin
America.
"Taking Root" documents the sadness of exile and loss but also a
fierce determination to maintain Jewish traditions. This is Jewish
history but it is also part of the untold history of Brazil,
Argentina, El Salvador, Ecuador, Chile, Peru, and all of Latin
America.
In this classic memoir that explores the Nazi presence in the south
of Chile after the war, Marjorie Agosin writes in the voice of her
mother, Frida, who grew up as the daughter of European Jewish
immigrants in Chile in the World War II era. Woven into the
narrative are the stories of Frida's father, who had to leave
Vienna in 1920 because he fell in love with a Christian cabaret
dancer; of her paternal grandmother, who arrived in Chile later
with a number tattooed on her arm; and of her great-grandmother
from Odessa, who loved the Spanish language so much that she
repeated its harmonious sounds even in her sleep. Agosin's A Cross
and a Star is a moving testament to endurance and to the power of
memory and words. This edition includes a collection of important
new photographs, a new afterword by the author, and a foreword by
Ruth Behar.
Gabriela Mistral is the only Latin American woman writer to be
awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. Even so, her extraordinary
achievements in poetry, narrative, and political essays remain
largely untold. Gabriela Mistral: The Audacious Traveler explores
boldly and thoughtfully the complex legacy of Mistral and the way
in which her work continues to define Latin America. Edited by
Professor Marjorie Agosin, Gabriela Mistral: The Audacious Traveler
addresses for the first time the vision that Mistral conveyed as a
representative of Chile during the drafting of the United Nations
Human Rights Declaration. It depicts Mistral as a courageous social
activist whose art and writings against fascism reveal a passionate
voice for freedom and justice. The book also explores Mistral's
Pan-American vision and her desire to be part of a unified American
hemisphere as well as her concern for the Caribbean and Brazil.
Readers will learn of her sojourn in Brazil, her turbulent years as
consul in Madrid, and, finally, her last days on Long Island.
Students of her poetry, as well as general readers, will find
Gabriela Mistral: The Audacious Traveler an insightful collection
dedicated to the life and work of an inspiring and original artist.
The contributors are Jonathan Cohen, Joseph R. Slaughter, Veronica
Darer, Patricia Varas, Eugenia Munoz, Darrell B. Lockhart, Ivonne
Gordon Vailakis, Santiago Daydi-Tolson, Diana Anhalt, Ana Pizarro,
Randall Couch, Patricia Rubio, Elizabeth Horan, Emma Sepulveda,
Luis Vargas Saavedra, and Marie-Lise Gazarian-Gautier.
In these lyrical meditations in prose and poetry, Marjorie Agosin
evokes the many places on four continents she has visited or called
home. Recording personal and spiritual voyages, the author opens
herself to follow the ambiguous, secret map of her memory, which
""does not betray."" Through Agosin's memories and reflections on
exodus, migration, and moving beyond the familiar we learn what can
be found when we journey with openness, as approachable to
strangers as we are to ourselves.
Latin America has been a refuge for Jews fleeing persecution from
1492, when Sepharad Jews were expelled from Spain, until well into
the twentieth century, when European Jews sought sanctuary there
from the horrors of the Nazi Holocaust. Vibrant Jewish communities
have deep roots in countries such as Argentina, Mexico, Guatemala,
and Chile--though members of these communities have at times
experienced the pain of being "the other," ostracized by Christian
society and even tortured by military governments. While
commonalities of religion and culture link these communities across
time and national boundaries, the Jewish experience in Latin
America is irreducible to a single perspective. Only a multitude of
voices can express it.
This anthology gathers fifteen essays by historians, creative
writers, artists, literary scholars, anthropologists, and social
scientists who collectively tell the story of Jewish life in Latin
America. Some of the pieces are personal tales of exile and
survival; some explore Jewish humor and its role in amalgamating
histories of past and present; and others look at serious episodes
of political persecution and military dictatorship. As a whole,
these challenging essays ask what Jewish identity is in Latin
America and how it changes throughout history. They leave us to
ponder the tantalizing question: Does being Jewish in the Americas
speak to a transitory history or a more permanent one?
"This anthology adds strength and credence to the struggle for
women's human rights. It reinforces the conviction that no society
can prosper and no new world be born until the rights of women are
fully protected and realized."-William F. Schulz, executive
director of Amnesty International, USA "The devastating
commonalities and startling differences in women's oppression and
activism around the world are keenly explored in this excellent
anthology. Agosin's collection provokes a powerful reexamination of
the human rights field."-Jacqueline Bhabha, Harvard University
"This moving anthology, masterfully compiled by poet and human
rights activist Marjorie Agosin, is a must for scholars, students,
and human rights workers; it also will captivate the general
reader."-Elena O. Nightingale, scholar-in-residence, National
Academy of Sciences "Essential reading, Women, Gender, and Human
Rights argues forcefully and convincingly that the elimination of
gender-based violence and discrimination, so often ignored by
governments and aid organizations, must be at the center of the
struggle for social justice and human dignity in this new
century."-Eric Stover, author of The Graves: Srebrenica and Vukovar
The 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights
expresses the credo that all human beings are created free and
equal. But not until 1995 did the United Nations declare women's
rights to be human rights, and bring gender issues into the global
arena for the first time. Women, Gender, and Human Rights is the
first collection of essays encompassing a wide range of women's
issues, including political and domestic violence, education,
literacy, and reproductive rights. Most of the essays were written
expressly for this volume by internationally known experts in the
fields of government, bioethics, medicine, public affairs,
literature, history, anthropology, law, and psychology. Recipient
of the Henrietta Szold Award by Hadassah (2001), the Gabriela
Mistral Medal of Honor (2000), and the United Nations Leadership
Award (1999), Marjorie Agosin is a professor of Spanish at
Wellesley College. Among her books are A Map of Hope: Writings on
Women and Human Rights and The Alphabet in My Hands (both by
Rutgers University Press).
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