This is the first time in a long time that I have missed the Unitarian Universalist General Assembly. The poet/farmer/activist Wendell Berry read this poem at a public witness event at UUGA (wish I had been there):
“Questionnaire”
(a poem by Wendell Berry)
1. How much poison are you willing
to eat for the success of the free
market and global trade? Please
name your preferred poisons.
2. For the sake of goodness, how much
evil are you willing to do?
Fill in the following blanks
with the names of your favorite
evils and acts of hatred.
3. What sacrifices are you prepared
to make for culture and civilization?
Please list the monuments, shrines,
and works of art you would
most willingly destroy.
4. In the name of patriotism and
the flag, how much of our beloved
land are you willing to desecrate?
List in the following spaces
the mountains, rivers, towns, farms
you could most readily do without.
5. State briefly the ideas, ideals, or hopes,
the energy sources, the kinds of security,
for which you would kill a child.
Name, please, the children whom
you would be willing to kill.
I am pleased to be able to live-stream the Ware Lecture tonight (Friday, June 21) at the UUCiA, 7:30 p.m. sharp! If you want to hear (and watch, live!) this year's lecture by Eboo Patel, please join us! Event details:
The Ware Lecture will be streaming live, online, from the
UU General Assembly. We will project it onto our big screen and through
our big speakers. Bring a comfortable, portable chair for extra
comfort. The Ware Lecture has a distinguished history and has featured
some amazing people, including Martin Luther King, Jr., Kurt Vonnegut,
May Sarton, and Jane Addams!
This year’s Ware lecturer will be
Eboo Patel. From uua.org: “Dr. Patel is founder and Executive Director
of the Interfaith Youth Core, an international nonprofit building the
interfaith youth movement. He was appointed by President Obama to the
Advisory Council of the White House Office of Faith Based and
Neighborhood Partnerships and serves on the Religious Advisory Committee
of the Council on Foreign Relations…. He has been featured on a range
of media, including CNN Sunday Morning, NPR’s Morning Edition, the PBS
documentary Three Faiths, One God, The New Republic, American Public
Media, the BBC, and CNN. Patel is a sought-after speaker whose addresses
include the keynote speech at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum with
President Jimmy Carter. He is the author of Sacred Ground: Pluralism,
Prejudice and the Promise of America, and Acts of Faith: The Story of an
American Muslim, the Struggle for the Soul of a Generation, which was
the 2011-2012 UUA Common Read and 2010 winner of the prestigious
Louisville Grawemeyer award in religion. An Ashoka Fellow, Patel was
named by Islamica Magazine as one of ten young Muslim visionaries
shaping Islam in America, was chosen by Harvard’s Kennedy School Review
as one of five future policy leaders to watch, and was selected to join
the Young Global Leaders network of the World Economic Forum. He lives
in Chicago, Illinois.”
To see the Facebook event page, click here.
