Page 758«..1020..757758759760..770780..»

The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia – The Diplomat

Posted By on June 29, 2021

Advertisement

May 4, 2021 marked the 116th anniversary of the arrival of ethnic Koreans to Latin America. In April 1905, the first thousand Korean labor migrants boarded a British cargo ship in the Korean port of Chemulpo (present-day Incheon). The migrants were drawn away from the increasingly tumultuous Korean peninsula by the promises of stable work and regular wages in faraway Mexico. A month later, on May 4, the ship arrived at the Mexican port of Progreso, near Merida, on the Yucatan peninsula.

Arrival of the first Korean immigrants to Mexicos Port of Progresoon the Yucatan peninsula in mid-May 1905 (public archives).

In January 1903, the first shipload of Koreans had arrived in Hawaii, then a recently incorporated territory of the United States, to work on pineapple and sugar plantations. By 1905 more than 7,000 Korean labor migrants had departed Chemulpo for work in Hawaii.

British cargo ship S.S. Ilford took the over 1,000 Koreans to Mexico on April 4, 1905. (public archives)

The history of Korean immigration to the Americas began with sweat and exploitation. The British lured Koreans with promises of four and five-year work contracts, but upon arrival, the Koreans found themselves sold into indenture servitude on the Yucatans henequen plantations, where local Yaqui and other indigenous groups were also exploited for labor.

Enjoying this article? Click here to subscribe for full access. Just $5 a month.

In 1910, Japan annexed Korea and the Koreans in Mexico effectively lost their nationality.

Documents confirming the arrival of ethnic Koreans to the Port of Progreso on May 14, 1905. (public archives)

Get briefed on the story of the week, and developing stories to watch across the Asia-Pacific.

Some Koreans tried to escape from the dire situation in Mexico to Hawaii through San Francisco with no success. Around 1921, when demand for henequen fiber declined, 288 Korean laborers managed to escape to Cuba from the Mexican port in San Francisco de Campeche. The roughly thousand-strong Korean diaspora in Cuba today cites its roots in those nearly 300 migrants.

With the passage of time, the Koreans who remained in Mexico managed to not only survive but eventually integrate themselves in the local society. Through them, the wider story of Korean diasporas became woven into Mexicos own complicated history.

A second wave of Korean migration to Mexico was triggered in part by the economic crises in South America in the 1970s and 80s. South Koreans, as well as Argentine and Paraguayan Koreans, came to Mexico seeking better opportunities and living conditions.

Some of the first Mexican Korean laborers on Yucatans henequen haciendas (public archives)

At the end of 1990s, there were almost 20,000 ethnic Koreans living in Mexico. Most recently, the Mexico City Association of Korean Descendants claimed in mid-March 2021 that around 30,000 ethnic Koreans resided Mexico.

Despite this long presence in Mexico, it was only in the early 2000s that the Mexican Korean diaspora gained greater recognition. This was facilitated, in part, by South Koreas pragmatic foreign policy, encompassing strong public diplomacy and cultural soft power, matched with outreach to various diaspora communities not only in Eurasia, but in Latin America as well.

Monument in Merida commemorating the 100th anniversary of the first Koreans arrival to Mexico. (Wikimedia Commons)

In the last two decades, South Korea has managed to reconnect itself not only with the post-Soviet Korean diaspora known as the Koryo Saram, they number around half a million and are spread across the former Soviet Union but also with the tens of thousands of ethnic Koreans scattered around Mexico.

Enjoying this article? Click here to subscribe for full access. Just $5 a month.

Reengaging its diaspora serves many purposes for South Korea and the communities of Koreans abroad. On one hand, the diaspora longs to reconnect with their cultural and linguistic roots, which lie in a now prosperous homeland. On the other, South Koreas insatiable demand for energy resources, particularly its quest to diversify its energy partnerships beyond the Middle East, has led Seoul to seek out connections abroad on which to build.

Descendants of ethnic Korean deportees in Uzbekistan dressed in festive South Korean styled clothes, waiving and pledging allegiance to South Korean flag besides their national flags (Koryo-saram.ru)

The transitional post-Soviet economies and the emerging markets of Latin America are ideal economic partners. South Korea a true middle power has invested in establishing relations, promoting free trade and travel with other middle powers similarly stuck between great powers in their respective regions. There are number of similarities in South Koreas models of bilateral interaction economic, political, cultural with its major trading partners in both Eurasia and Latin America.

In terms of bilateral trade, Mexico and Eurasia (in this case referring to Russia plus the states of Central Asia) are South Koreas largest partners in each respective region. In 2019, South Koreas total trade volume with Mexico amounted to $21 billion, having grown over 70 percent in the last decade; meanwhile, its trade with Russia reached $22 billion, having grown over 100 percent in the last 30 years, and trade with Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, combined, hit $15 billion in 2021.

South Korean foreign direct investment into the same economies is another important illustration of growing ties. In 2019, South Korean FDI into Central Asias top two economies exceeded $7 billion and its investments into Russia topped $4 billion in 2020; while FDI into the Mexican economy hit almost $7 billion by early 2021.

Ethnic Korean descendants in Uzbekistan in April 2019, together with the Uzbek and South Korean presidential couples at the opening ceremony of Korean Culture and Art House (Sputniknews.ru)

The above countries share not only a very high degree of export and import complementarity with South Korea mostly in crude petroleum as a principal product of exports from both regions (45 percent respectively from Mexico and Russia and over 90 percent from Central Asia) and machinery hardware and vehicle parts being the main categories of imports from South Korea but also host significant numbers of ethnic Korean immigrants (hundreds of thousands dispersed across Eurasia and Latin America).

It is particularly interesting to view in parallel South Koreas unique mixture of foreign policy and public diplomacy paired with soft power and diaspora outreach in both regions.

Mayor of San Francisco de Campeche and descendants of ethnic Koreans in Mexico at the Korea Day celebrations in 2021 (Facebook)

As a result, ethnic Korean diasporas have become more than just proponents of South Korean cultural power, but important political and economic players in the efforts of the involved middle powers to gain market access and influence.

This is especially important from the position of leading members of the Korean diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia, those actively engaged in (and engaging with) local governments, promoting South Korean economic, social, and political agendas under the banner of mutual cultural cooperation.

The first Korea Day in Mexico on May 4, 2019 with festivities in Yucatan and Campeche (Facebook)

For instance, the head of the South Korea-Mexico Friendship Society, David Bautista Rivera Morena, is also a deputy in the Mexican Congress. On March 18, 2021, the Mexican Chamber of Deputies approved with an overwhelming majority of votes a proposal from Morena to mark May 4 each year as Korean Immigrant Day across Mexico.

Morenas initiative brought what had been a local holiday, marked on May 4 in the states of Yucatan and Campeche since 2019, to the national level. Korea Day was originally (and still is) celebrated in Yucatan and Campeche after direct efforts by the South Korean Embassy, then under Ambassador Kim Sang-il, to mark the 100th anniversary of the provisional Korean government in 1919.

A day before the Korean Immigrant Day vote, the statue of Greetingman or El hombre que saluda created by South Korean sculptor Yoo Yong-ho in 2020 to commemorate the 115th anniversary of the departure of the first Korean labor migrants to Mexico was installed in Merida, a twin city of Incheon since 2007, on the Avenue of the Republic of Korea.

Enjoying this article? Click here to subscribe for full access. Just $5 a month.

Greetingmans unveiling ceremony on Republic of Korea avenue in Meridain mid-March 2021 (Facebook)

A turquoise nude male figure inclined in a traditional Korean-style courteous bow represents the gratitude to Mexicos generosity in receiving Korean migrants over a century ago in spite of the dark slave trade history behind their original arrival.

The street itself was renamed thusly in December 2017, following efforts by then South Korean Ambassador Chun Bee-ho to celebrate the 55th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relationship between South Korea and Mexico.

Similarly, the Korea-Mexico Friendship Hospital was opened in Merida in 2005 after South Korean President Roh Moo-hyuns visit to Mexico.

In each of the above cases, South Korea has deftly wielded diplomatic and cultural tools to both reach out to the Korean diaspora in Mexico and through them connect with the Mexican government. The marking of the arrival of the first ethnic Koreans to Mexico with a federal level holiday underscores the efforts of the South Koreans and the position of ethnic Koreans in the region. This is something no other Asian diaspora in Mexico and no other Korean diaspora community in the world has achieved.

Read more:

The Korean Diasporas in Mexico and Eurasia - The Diplomat

London Design Biennale 2021 Winners: Chile, Venezuela, Pavilion of the African Diaspora, and Israel – ArchDaily

Posted By on June 29, 2021

London Design Biennale 2021 Winners: Chile, Venezuela, Pavilion of the African Diaspora, and Israel

Facebook

Twitter

Pinterest

Whatsapp

Mail

Or

The jury of the London Design Biennale 2021 has announced today June 24 the winning pavilions to the third edition. Responding to artistic director and curator Es Devlin's theme Resonance, the Biennale brings together over 30 pavilions to showcase how design can provide solutions to the challenges of our times, from sustainability to globalization, to migration to the future of humanity.

The winners of the 2021 London Design Biennale Medals truly illustrate the importance of design thinking to help bring social change and economic growth across the world," said John Sorrell, President of the London Design Biennale. While Victoria Broackes, Director of the London Design Biennale, stated the winners "clearly demonstrate how brilliant design can be in telling complex stories that communicate directly to hearts and minds."

Selected by the London Design International Juryexcluding the Public Medal Chile, Venezuela, Pavilion of the African Diaspora, and Israel were awarded this years London Design Biennale Medals, while Germany received a special commendation. The medals were handmade by Shimell and Madden whose design "represented the concepts of collaboration and bringing together countries, territories, and cities," as explained by the organization.

The Chilean pavilion receives the medal for the most outstanding overall contribution. As the official statement says, "Tectonic Resonances is about the sound of rocks. Did you know that small stones became the first ritual instruments for sound and rhythm? And that geological events in Chile have an effect on the globe? Chile is a country of rocks that resonate, and for the team behind the Pavilion, this is the starting point for a decolonizing discourse for design in the south."

La Rentrada has been awarded the Theme Medal for the most inspiring interpretation of Resonance, the theme of the current edition. The pavilion "seeks to imagine the return of the Venezuelan diaspora. An event that will be marked by a radical questioning of previous systems."

Recognized as the most exceptional design, "the Pavilion of the African Diaspora (PoAD) was born from the need for a space on the global stage centered on the voices and contributions of people born of the African Diaspora, designed by Ini Archibong."

Laureatedfor by the public, "Israel's pavilion explores the perpetual tension between Globalisation (Networking) and Nationalism (Capsularisation), how they overlap and ignite each other, leading us to an imminent boiling point."

Exceptionally, the jury decided to give the German pavilion a special commendation: Spoon Archaeology is designed as a study, presenting historical references from a museum collection next to contemporary cutlery designs. The installation presents the material and immaterial cultural heritage of the past and present, and invites the audience to resonate sustainable solutions for the future."

This years London Design Biennale International Advisory Committee and Jury included Aric Chen, Ben Evans, Christopher Turner, Es Devlin, James Lingwood, Jonathan Reekie, Marva Griffin Wilshire, Nipa Doshi, Paola Antonelli, Jeremy Myerson, John Sorrell, Suhair Khan, Victoria Broackes, and Waldick Jatoba.

The London Design Biennale 2021, which opened to the public on 1 June, runs to 27 June at Somerset House.

Read the rest here:

London Design Biennale 2021 Winners: Chile, Venezuela, Pavilion of the African Diaspora, and Israel - ArchDaily

Reflecting on the diaspora’s tangible and intangible contributions – University World News

Posted By on June 29, 2021

AFRICA-GLOBAL

In addition, the concept note advances the notion that African higher education institutions should consider the need for country policies and funding to harness diaspora academics.

This could be achieved through the adoption of institutional and long-term approaches and the development of a practical blueprint on how all willing diasporans can, and should, each adopt one African higher education institution to mentor and call a second academic home.

While the suggestions are bold and encouraging, there is a need for political will on the part of African leaders. In addition, higher education policy leaders in Africa require a radical shift in their mindset and to view scholars in the diaspora as significant collaborators and partners who can play a critical role in helping to revitalise higher education in Africa.

The good work being done by the Carnegie Corporation of New York by establishing and funding the Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowship Program (CADFP) for educational projects at African higher education institutions needs to be supported and sustained.

Thus, since its inception in 2013, the CADFP offered by the International Institute of Education (IIE) in collaboration with the United States International University-Africa (USIU-Africa), has provided a total of 527 African Diaspora fellowships to scholars based in Canada and the United States to travel to various universities in Africa.

While several scholars, leaders and policymakers in Africa have come up with numerous success stories and theories of how African scholars in the diaspora can positively contribute to the development of higher education in Africa, in this article, I would like to share my lived experiences as a Carnegie African Diaspora Fellow.

I was very fortunate to serve for two months (June and July, 2017) as a visiting Carnegie African Diaspora Fellow at Kenyatta University (KU), my alma mater. I was also very fortunate to have been hosted by Professor Frederick Q Gravenir, my great professor who taught me at undergraduate and graduate levels at KU talk of practical coaching, great mentoring and reverse mentoring in reality and practice, not theory!

Fellowship work at Kenyatta

My visit to KU as a CADFP fellow provided me with the great opportunity to engage in some of the activities recommended by the AAU concept note such as strategic thinking about faculty research productivity and offering of innovative curricula.

I was hosted by the Division of Research, Innovation and Outreach (RIO). I cooperatively and collaboratively worked with Professor Gravenir, the deputy vice-chancellor, RIO; Professor Vincent Onywera, the registrar of RIO; Dr George Adino Onyango, the dean of the school of digital and virtual learning; Dr John Ndiritu, the chair of the department of education policy, management and curriculum studies; and faculty scholars in the school of education.

My research work involved working with academic leaders and faculty to develop a strategic plan for the Division of Research, Innovation and Outreach based on Kenyatta Universitys Strategic and Vision Plan (2016-26).

KUs strategic plan is grounded in the RIO divisions vision, mission, goals, resources and the expected impact. The plan specifically outlines faculty research productivity measured by an increase in grants and contracts awards.

In addition, the research division aims at inculcating among Kenyatta University faculty the culture of grant writing, publication of refereed journal articles in top-tier research journals, books, and book chapters published by reputable publishers.

The plan also sets out to increase faculty productivity indicators, including a rise in citations and the h-index (a measure of a researchers scientific impact) of KU faculty. KUs strong will and commitment to research productivity is being realised with faculty success in external grant funding. I can correctly observe that, Where there is a will, there is a way.

During my two months stay at KU, I saw the will among talented KU faculty and graduate students with whom I worked during my fellowship.

Curriculum development

In the area of curriculum development, I worked with faculty colleagues in the department of education policy, management and curriculum studies to revise their curricula.

We developed new and innovative curricula in four areas, including a masters of education in higher education leadership and management (MEHL) and a masters of education in student affairs in higher education (SAHE). The MEHL and the SAHE are not offered in any other Kenyan public university, while the demand for student affairs and services expertise is very high.

The masters of education in education policy and organisation leadership and a PhD in education policy and organisation leadership have both been revised after many years to make them current again.

All four of these drafts have been discussed by KU colleagues and revisions are ongoing with the hope of implementing the new curriculum soon.

As I reflect on the curriculum development activities, I realise how the revised curricula made a major departure from the previous ones since students will be expected to participate in integrated learning activities and to draw linkages across disciplines to respond to complex problems facing their communities.

Utilising theories or concepts or ideas from multiple disciplines, students, through writing assignments and discussions, will demonstrate knowledge-based responses to an array of complex practical and research problems.

The revised programmes will encourage the application of distinct realms within social science to address pressing leadership and policy problems via coursework, collaboration with local school leaders, and analysis of social change, business and industry in the Kenyan context.

In the revised curricula, graduate students will be required to take a proposal development class and a literature review course which will expose them to the canons of research writing with a strong emphasis on integrating complementary disciplines.

Other courses, such as in the area of qualitative research which requires the study of sample methods which, in turn, addresses multiple viewpoints, will be introduced. To support faculty, the division of research, innovation and outreach committed funds to acquire research software including Stata, NVIVO and Atlas.ti, which could be used in data analysis.

In conclusion, I would like to express my gratitude to various institutions and organisations. First, my employer, Texas A&M University, for giving me permission to take up the CADFP fellowship, second to the Carnegie Corporation of New York for funding this noble fellowship programme, third, to IIE, which manages and administers the programme, including applications, project requests and fellowships, and the USIU-Africa for providing the strategic direction through the Advisory Council, and fourth, to KU, my host institution, not forgetting, fifth, to the many individuals who did the groundwork to establish the fellowship programme.

For meaningful collaborations and partnerships between the African diaspora scholars and institutions of higher education in Africa, sound planning is not only a necessary but a sufficient condition.

For scholars in the diaspora with an interest in Africas higher education development, I would like to strongly encourage you to apply to the CADFP, and to higher education institutions that are not participating in this noble programme, I highly encourage you to consider hosting African Diaspora scholars by participating in the programme.

Fredrick Muyia Nafukho is professor of educational administration and human resource development and associate dean for faculty affairs in the college of education and human development, Texas A&M University, United States. The views expressed in this article are his own and not those of his employer. He can be reached at nafukho@gmail.com.

The Association for African Universities has invited delegates to continue to register for the free conference that takes place from 5-8 July.

Read the original here:

Reflecting on the diaspora's tangible and intangible contributions - University World News

Confusion and connection: The yams and sweet potatoes of the African Diaspora – Yahoo Lifestyle

Posted By on June 29, 2021

a plate of freshly harvested sweet potatoes

Welcome to Flavor & Soul: A Brief History of African American Food. Well be taking a closer look at one dish each week and tracing its roots within the African American cooking tradition.

Sweet potatoes are a revered staple for most important meals in African American life. No plate of soul food is complete without the buttery liquid from candied sweet potatoes flowing into the juice from the greens and mixing with the noodles from the mac and cheese. Although fall and holiday meals like Thanksgiving and Christmas would be the expected time for these vegetables, they are served all year round in the Black community. Whether in the form of a side dish or a pie, sweet potatoes are a necessary part of our celebrations. But why?

Read more

In the groundbreaking Netflix series High on the Hog: How African American Cuisine Transformed America, Dr. Jessica B. Harris, the foremost authority on the food of the African Diaspora and author of the book upon which the series is based, breaks it down during the very first episode. Strolling through a bustling open-air market in the West African nation of Benin, she pointed to the mountains of yams everywhere. The yam, a tuber with rough skin that resembles tree bark and white flesh, is so important to the West African diet that festivals are dedicated to it in parts of Nigeria and Ghana. The very word yam can be traced to the phrase to eat in several West African dialects.

Yams grow in a tropical environment, and although they were used to feed enslaved prisoners on ships during the Transatlantic Slave Trade, they did not grow very well in the United States. So, like many elements of their cuisine that had to be substituted once enslaved Africans were shipped to America, the sweet potato became the next best thing to a yam. Brought over from Central and South America, sweet potatoes were plentiful and easily cultivated on American soil.

Story continues

Sweet potatoes are naturally sweet and related to the Morning Glory family. Yams, meanwhile, are dense and more neutral in taste, and they absorb the flavor of the seasonings with which they are cooked. They often appear in stews, soups, and as a side dish pounded into a doughy pulp called fufu. Yams and sweet potatoes dont taste or look the same, but we made it work. Although they are treated like they are interchangeable in the U.S., and you might have been taught that these are just two different names for the same thing, sweet potatoes and yams are, in fact, not even related. The only similarity between them is that sweet potatoes have been granted the same revered status in the African American diet as yams have in Africa.

One of the first recipes that my grandmother taught me was how to make candied sweet potatoes. My family has never called them yams, but thats the name that many Black cooks still call the orange, starchy tuber. I learned to mix butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, and nutmeg by visual and taste cues rather than measurements. The sweet potatoes would caramelize in her cast iron skillet and come out creamy, soft, rich, and sweet.

I make candied sweet potatoes all year round when I have the time, but sweet potato pie is a whole other thing. My great aunt had a legendary recipe that was beloved by anyone who tasted it, but nobody managed to watch her and learn all the details that went into its preparation. Her sweet potato pie, as thick as a phone book and scented with a generous amount of clove and cinnamon, remains a popular collective culinary memory in my family. I used to think our reverence for it was because of the impeccable, multi-layered flavors and the skill she used, but now I realize that it goes much deeper than that. It goes all the way back to Africa.

Read the original:

Confusion and connection: The yams and sweet potatoes of the African Diaspora - Yahoo Lifestyle

What To Do This Week: June 29 July 4 – Nob Hill Gazette

Posted By on June 29, 2021

You know you have made it to a pivotal point in the year when everyone is talking about fireworks, festivals and sneaking out of work a bit earlier than usual. Don your best red, white, and blue attire and fill your calendar with some cant-miss arts, entertainment and culture this week.

SCRAP, the San Franciscobased nonprofit dedicated to breathing new life into old arts and crafts supplies, is unloading a ton of great crafting material at its annual Yarn-a-palooza event this weekend. Stop by SCRAP to pick up high-quality acrylic, cotton, mohair and more, all priced at $10 per grocery bag. The creative reuse center, materials depot and workshop space is open from noon to 6 p.m. TuesdayFriday, and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday.

Thursday, July 1, through Saturday, July 3Info: scrap-sf.org

Chai has become a common cafe staple, but do you know the meaning and history behind the delicious beverage? Join Sana Javeri Kadri, founder of the direct trade spice company Diaspora Co., for an online event and virtual demonstration centered on Kadak Spicy Chai and in-depth exploration of the international spice industry. Presented by the Asian Art Museum, the event celebrates Diasporas mission to decolonize the crops of India, cultivate equity in the industry and partner with farmers to deliver heirloom varieties to consumers.

Thursday, July 1, 6:30 p.m.Info: calendar.asianart.org

All summer long, Half Moon Bay will celebrate its inaugural Make It Main Street event, featuring a massive collaboration between artists, musicians and performers, all in support of the areas downtown shops. Spanning five blocks of Main Street, the seasonal spectacle will take place on the first Thursday of the month and feature a rotating roster of creative talents. Attendees can also take in locally produced short films at the Oddfellows Hall, and get to know the works of local writers, poets, and essayists on stage at Mac Dutra Park.

First Thursdays of each month, July 1November 4, 1 p.m.7 p.m.Info: visithalfmoonbay.org

Make a virtual pitstop at Napas Frank Family Vineyards this weekend to relish an Independence Day celebration that also pays homage to the winerys 28th anniversary. The Fourth of July BBQ Bash features a cooking demonstration from renowned BBQ specialist and backyard pitmaster Jack Arnold, as well as info on wine pairings from proprietor Leslie Frank, winemaker Todd Graff, and director of hospitality Liam Gearity.

Saturday, July 3, 2 p.m.Info: frankfamilyvineyards.com

If youre looking for a classic way to commemorate Americas birthday, look no further than the 50th Half Moon Bay Ol Fashioned 4th of July Parade & Festival. The beloved tradition is back after last years hiatus and has expanded to a street festival fueled by music of all varieties. Three live bands will perform at the festivities, and plenty of vendors will be on hand to delight the crowd with food and drink options. Little ones are welcome to have their own celebration in the Bright Stars Kidz Fab Funzone, which will feature a bungee jump, cornhole and more.

Sunday, July 4, 11 a.m.4 p.m.Info: miramarevents.com/4th-of-july-parade

To kick off their 62nd season, the San Francisco Mime Troupe presents Tales of the Resistance, Volume 2: Persistence, a series of radio play podcasts that are categorized in two genres: adventure and mystery. The weekly episodes begin on July 4, with The Tale of the Black FOX featuring Velina Brown as Angelica Phenex and Keiko Shimosato Carreiro as Eido Kawakami; and EYEBALL ON HISTORY! starring Amos Glick as Chip Banister, Michael J Asberry as Bobby Seale, and Michael Gene Sullivan as Huey P. Newton. The 29-minute audio broadcasts will feature original political comedy and more from SFMT veterans and newcomers.

Released weekly on Sundays from July 4 through September 5Info: sfmt.org/talesvol2

Stanford Live officially kicks off a six-week series of in-person performances at Frost Amphitheater this week with jazz and classical concerts presented in partnership with the San Francisco Symphony and SFJAZZ. The inaugural concert series highlights a rotating selection of artists, including Joshua Redman and Zakir Hussain with Joel Ross and Zach Moses Ostroff; Kronos Quartet with singer Meklit Hadero; Esa-Pekka Salonen; and Fantastic Negrito.

Thursday, July 1, through Saturday, August 7Info: live.stanford.edu

Filoli Historic House & Garden invites guests to experience the Bourn-Roth Estate country house in a whole new way, with various rooms outfitted to showcase the sights and sounds of different eras. Visitors can walk through the ballroom to hear 1920s opera or enjoy a classic 1960s television show in the study (or try a unique meal made out of rationed ingredients in the 1940s wartime kitchen). Fans of the iconic 1980s hit, Dynasty, will be particularly thrilled to know several scenes of the series were filmed at Filoli, so pack your shoulder pads and prepare for some dramatic photo ops.

Now through September 23Info: filoli.org/decades-of-entertainment/

For those who lived through the AIDS crisis, it may be hard to believe its been over 30 years since the historic Sixth International Conference on AIDS took place in San Francisco in 1990. Now, the newly reopened Main Library is displaying photographs by Rick Gerharter, who documented the activism surrounding the protests and demonstrations of the time, along with text by veteran HIV journalists Liz Highleyman and Tim Kingston. The show also includes memorabilia, conference materials and more.

Now through October 9Info: sfpl.org

The San Jos Museum of Art invites visitors to explore the revolutionary approaches of what critic Clement Greenberg once called post-painterly abstraction in Break + Bleed. The exhibit features an array of pieces from artists who eschewed the norms of abstract expressionism and leaned into staining unprimed canvases and creating flat planes of color without making distinctive marks. Works from artists like Josef Albers, Joachim Bandau and Helen Lundeberg invoke a range of styles like hard-edge abstraction, color field painting, Op art, minimalism and soft-edge abstraction.

Now through Sunday, April 3, 2022Info: sjmusart.org/exhibition/break-bleed

Related

Link:

What To Do This Week: June 29 July 4 - Nob Hill Gazette

Uganda: Covid-19 and HIV/AIDS Why It Is Time Diaspora Scientists Must Return Home to Develop African Herbal Therapies – Black Star News

Posted By on June 29, 2021

Covid-19 Medics In Gulu Regional Referral Hospital at work. Photo by Joseph OmagorChina should not to cross the red line on Cyber Security.Russia and China are trying to drive a wedge between Western allies.The year 2020 will be a year of humility and everybody should humble themselves and bow down on their knees and pray to God for forgiveness.It is what comes out of a person that makes him unclean. For from the inside, from a persons heart, comes the evil ideas which lead him to do immoral things, to rob, kill, commit adultery, be greedy, an do all sorts of evil things, deceit, indecency, jealousy, slander, pride, and folly- all these evil things come from inside a person and make him unclean (Verses 20-23).

Gulu-Uganda: Biden is reported to have recently accused Russia and China of trying to drive a wedge between Western allies. North Atlantic Treaty Organization members are supposed to submit 2% of their national budget required for the security of the region.

On Friday June 25, 2021, the Anglican Archbishop of the Province of the Church of Uganda has prophetically said this Wuhan virus has unleashed Third World War. He was making his closing remarks after the forth National prayer held at Ugandas State House during which Mr. Museveni also said he wants to see a Science-Led Christianity.

When HIV epidemic hit the world like a tornado, the scientists Museveni wants to be priests to lead Christianity, were quick to recommend testing for HIV to know our status; whether on is already infected or not before any treatment can commence. Today, testing for HIV has penetrated every village and is free of charge with massive campaigns for tests to the extent of enticing massages for one to go for test. Remedy is subsidized to affordable rate to the poorest African. Some people have lived with HIV for over four decades now and is no longer a killer disease.

However with this pandemic is seems the scientists Museveni wants to leads Christianity have gone back to immunization campaigns of postnatal care where children are vaccinated at a few hours after being born into this wicked world. No wonder they cry at birth after breathing in our polluted oxygen.

It has been proven without any reasonable doubt that children still die out of malaria and Wuhan virus even after vaccination. Talk of a wicked crazy world.

I am not an expert in world politics, but that said, I would like to re-echo what the late evangelist and prophet, T. B Joshua (RIP), had prophesized years before that; the year 2020 would be a year of humility and everybody should humble themselves and bow down on their knees and pray to God for forgiveness.

At the time of these prophesies, it was only HIV- AIDS rampaging the world but what started as a China-virus on in December 2019, is now a very serious pandemic which is affecting all continents. Prophets of doom told the world that African would be hit more than other continents. It is nearly twenty months since the first case of China-virus was reported where African continent has registered fewer numbers of the affected and casualties than from USA alone.United States of America has registered 601 deaths so far and still counting, but in Africa registered a total of 136287 deaths and in Uganda 334 people have lost their lives to the virus.

Who is fooling whom?

Prophet T.B. Joshua was a prophet with extraordinary supernatural powers to heal all types of diseases, including HIV-AIDS and China-virus. He had exceptionally a large heart for charity regardless of color, continent, creed, etc. What happened to him that discredited him and brought him down? His Holy Water therapy did not go through the laboratories of The World Health Organization (WHO) and, even though those who took the Holy Water testified that they got cured of Wuhan virus, it was quickly dismissed as not approved by WHO.

He was quickly dismissed as a false prophet, his Church collapsed killing pilgrims in a mysterious manner and, now, he died mysteriously and suddenly to the surprise of millions of followers who would flock to his Synagogue Church for All Nations in Lagos, Nigeria, to receive relief from pains of the soul and body. Rest in Peace Prophet. God will condemn whoever is responsible for your going too soon to eternal hellfire.

That said, the prophet had one weakness, just as King Solomon had weakness for the skirts and that brought the richest man in our human history to miss heavenly bliss. T.B. Joshua had a weakness for publicity by setting his own TV station; Emmanuel TV to publicize his ministry of healing, charity, counseling, name it. His downfall came after he began to market a remedy for COVID-19-The Holy Water, during his shows on television screens across the globe at the beginning of 2021. Today, he is dead and nobody now talks about the Holy Water anymore.

What befell of T.B. Joshua also had earlier befallen Ugandas own, the late Professor Charles Ssali, the former Ear, Nose & Throat surgeon in Scotland, when he publicized his claims that his health-food supplement, Mariandina, could cure HIV-AIDS.

Mariandina is made by Pharmadass of Greenland, Middlesex, a company that supplies vitamins, health-food supplements and natural cosmetic to pharmacies and health stores. It was going for 6 Pound Sterling per month in each formulation of A, B & J that and one must receive for three months for results. Professor Ssali claimed that 17,000 clients worldwide went through his therapy and 80% of them recovered.

They are friends of mine. They have got Mariandina from me and they are cured. As soon as I have the necessary permits and have made the necessary arrangements, it will be available to all those who want it. I will sell it through health stores He is quoted to have said, literally, boasting on that fateful Midnight of Monday, October 17, 2011, at a function at the African Center in London.

He claimed his Mariandina health-food supplement is an immune booster and is a combination of vitamin, herbal extract and micronutrient which he believes it can heal HIV/ AIDS in a way that oranges relieved the symptoms of scurvy in the eighteenth century.

The same media said one woman who was called Rosayln said her 47-year-old aunt who was seriously ill with symptoms of AIDS bought Mariandina therapy from a Zimbabwe store and took it. Within four days she had stopped vomiting and started eating again and from then, she gradually got better, the UK based Independent news agency reported.

However the so called health experts were quick to dismiss Professor Ssali, saying that you cannot make medical claims without a license. But the professor rebutted that this was a conspiracy by major pharmaceutical companies who wanted to discredit his discovery in order to protect their own drugs such as AZT and the protease inhibitors from which they are making huge profits.

Just like Professor went mysteriously, a few years after revealing his miraculous therapy for HIV-AIDS, T.B. Joshua also went in a similar manner with his cause of death concealed in secrecy.

Who must give permit to whom?

Global banker, Paul Warburg on February 17, 1950 is quoted by the media to have proclaimed that we will have a world government whether you like it or not. The only question is whether that government will be achieved by conquest or consent. Today World Health Organization is more or less that World Government with absolute authority to control as to what man must or must not eat/drink.The Greatest Prophet, Jesus Christ teaches us in the Gospel of Saint Mark 7:14-23 that what kills a man is not what goes into his stomach, but it is what comes out of a man is the ones that will kill him.It is what comes out of a person that makes him unclean. For from the inside, from a persons heart, comes the evil ideas which lead him to do immoral things, to rob, kill, commit adultery, be greedy, and do all sorts of evil things, deceit, indecency, jealousy, slander, pride, and folly- all these evil things come from inside a person and make him unclean (Verses 20-23).

To them, Africa is a Dark Continent and nothing good can come out of Africa and that Africans must not enjoy and benefit from its abundant God given resources for its own development, forgetting the fact that a country like Egypt which got civilization before Europe, became civilizedbaby Jesus took refuge in Egypt.

Today another Uganda Professor, Professor Phillip Ogwang, has come out openly to proclaim that he has discovered the cure for COVID-19 through his regiment of COVIDEX now on sale to willing buyers. I will not be surprised if he also goes in the same mysterious manner as Professor Ssali and Prophet T.B Joshua went to meet the creator and judge of all of us.

It is time African scientists in the Diaspora return home to get home grown remedy to cure sick Africa from the intoxications of those who want to see Africans extinct to enable them to take over the continent, just like natives of other continents- all because we are well endowed.

Follow this link:

Uganda: Covid-19 and HIV/AIDS Why It Is Time Diaspora Scientists Must Return Home to Develop African Herbal Therapies - Black Star News

Focus on investments, knowledge and skills to facilitate trade – Wamkele Mene to Diaspora – GhanaWeb

Posted By on June 29, 2021

Wamkele Mene, Secretary General of the African Continental Free Trade Area

Wamkele Mene has said the diaspora has a lot of potentials that could be tapped into developing Africa

He said the Ghana Beyond Aid initiative is a step in the right direction, and the diaspora has played a significant role in governments developmental effort

He also said the AfCFTA agreement paves way for the diaspora to invest and rope in revenue to develop their country

The Secretary-General of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), Wamkele Mene has stated that, the diaspora has positive development potential which when well harnessed, will help mitigate the development challenges of Africa and Ghana, as a whole.

He said there is still potential to enhance engagements not just in dealing with the challenges of COVID-19 but also in the pursuit of national economic development and the AUs Agenda 2063, The Africa We Want, as well as the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

He also said the Ghana Beyond Aid initiative is a step in the right direction, and the diaspora has played a significant role in governments developmental effort.

Thankfully, Ghana does not have to reinvent the wheel in forging a meaningful link with its African diaspora since a number of initiatives have already been undertaken toward deepening the cultural linkages and bridging the physical divide between the African (Ghanaian) diaspora and the country.

Initiatives such as the highly successful Ghana Year of Return in 2019, designed to symbolize 400 years since the first enslaved African arrived in Jamestown, Virginia in 1619, resonated with the African American community in the United States and served to further inculcate linkages between Ghana and the diasporan counterparts, he said.

He further added the Ghanaian diaspora community needs to take advantage of the opportunities presented by the AfCFTA, by harnessing the trade and investment engagements within the country.

He said it will enable them to take advantage of the continental market size of more than one billion people with an aggregated gross domestic product of $3.4 trillion created by the Agreement.

Efforts to attract the diaspora could focus on three key economic areas: investments, knowledge and skills and trade facilitation. In terms of investments, mechanisms could be put in place to tap the diaspora as preferred foreign direct investors in continental development projects, he said.

Mr Mene pointed AfCFTA agreement also paves way for the diaspora to invest and rope in revenue to develop their country.

The AfCFTA agreement, whose implementation commenced on January 1, 2021, provides a platform where the African diaspora can play an important role in the economic development of their countries of origin and the continent. There is now increased and diversified opportunities to promote trade and foreign direct investment, create businesses and spur entrepreneurship, transferring new knowledge and skills within the AfCFTA market, he said.

He further stated that almost 69% of countries that have signed the agreement have deposited their instruments of ratification which means that they have legally accepted the obligations to open their markets, reduce their barriers to trade, reduce barriers to investment and to adhere to this single set of rules for trade and investment on the African continent. This is an unprecedented achievement for Africa.

View post:

Focus on investments, knowledge and skills to facilitate trade - Wamkele Mene to Diaspora - GhanaWeb

Honors, happenings, comings & goings June 2021 J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on June 27, 2021

Honors & Awards

Rabbi Camille Angel, the rabbi-in-residence at the University of San Francisco, has received the Excellence in Advising award from Student Leadership and Engagement, an umbrella organization for student groups at USF. The award recognizes her work with QMmunity, a student organization that actively affirms the LGBTQ+ community and religious and spiritual identities at USF, according to a community email from USFs Swig Program in Jewish Studies and Social Justice.

Among the 26 teens chosen for the 35th annual prestigious Bronfman Fellowship are three from Northern California. Eva Hecht of Redding is a member of the board of Temple Beth Israel in that city, and she volunteers in the rebuilding of a school that was damaged by the Carr Fire in 2018. Yossi Moff of Foster City is a member of Peninsula Sinai Congregation, spends his summers at Camp Ramah in Northern California, attended Ronald C. Wornick Jewish Day School and is involved with his local United Synagogue Youth chapter. Ephraim Shalunov of Lafayette founded his own organization, AKIN, which builds the U.S.-Israel bipartisan relationship by lobbying Congress and building a national network of student advocates. The Bronfman Fellowship is a year-long program of study and conversation about pluralism, social responsibility and Jewish texts. Normally, the fellowship begins with a summer spent in Israel; this year, due to Covid-19, the summer program will take place at the Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center in northwest Connecticut.

Dr. Laura Stachel, a member of Chochmat HaLev in Berkeley who was profiled in J. in 2013, has been selected for Forbes 50 Over 50 list. The magazines profile of her is headlined The Giver Of Light: How Dr. Laura Stachel Is Fighting To Ensure No Mother Gives Birth In The Dark. Stachels clinical career as an OB-GYN came to a premature end after a devastating back injury. But, writes Forbes, she reconfigured herself as a social entrepreneur one whose nonprofit, We Care Solar, is using solar electricity to make births safer around the world.

Sonoma County teen Shai Fichtelberg has been included on the Chabad Teen Network (CTeen) 8 Teens Under 18 list, which recognizes those making a difference in their communities. Fichtelberg is very involved in student life at Santa Rosa High School as captain of the debate team, treasurer of the math club and founder of the Jewish Heritage Club. The club meets monthly during lunch and draws a mix of Jewish and non-Jewish students. One presentation on the Holocaust led to a non-Jewish student apologizing for sharing Holocaust jokes on social media. Fichtelberg has also led her CTeen chapters wildfire relief efforts. She will attend UC Berkeley in the fall.

Jamie Hyams, development director at Hebrew Free Loan in San Francisco, is now Rabbi Jamie Hyams. She received her rabbinic ordination last month from the Academy for Jewish Religion in Los Angeles. Hyams has worked at many Jewish institutions, including Hillel at Stanford, the Contra Costa JCC and the Shalom Hartman Institute of North America. She will continue in her role at Hebrew Free Loan, but she will also serve as part-time rabbi of Congregation Pnai Tikvah in Las Vegas.

The Jeff Astor Foundation is holding a 30 anniversary fundraising campaign to benefit the Israel Tennis and Education Centers, a social service agency that helps underprivileged children at 14 facilities across Israel. The foundation was founded in memory of Jeff Astor, who grew up in Los Altos and died in a plane crash in 1991 at the age of 24. He was involved in a number of Jewish organizations, completed a 10-week training program with the Israel Defense Forces and was an avid athlete. The campaign, which is spearheaded by Jeffs parents, Merry and Steve Astor, has a goal of $100,000. For more information about the foundation or contribute to the campaign, go to jeffastorfoundation.org.

Jessica Rosenberg is the new director of the Taube Center for Jewish Peoplehood at the Oshman Family JCC in Palo Alto. Most recently, she served as director of the Rising Tide Open Waters Mikveh Network, which works to make the ritual of mikvah immersion accessible to Jews around the world. Rosenberg has also worked at the Koret International School for Jewish Peoplehood at the ANU Museum in Tel Aviv and as director of external relations at the Krakow JCC. Rosenberg recently completed a masters of divinity at Harvard Divinity School. She lives in Inverness with her partner and two dogs.

After 14 years at the JCC Sonoma County, executive director Ellen Blustein is retiring at the end of the month. She was honored at the JCCs annual meeting, held virtually on June 16.

Cantor Sandy Bernstein is joining the team at Congregation Bnai Shalom in Walnut Creek starting July 1. The native Californian most recently served at Temple Sholom in Greenwich, Connecticut. Bernstein has collaborated with popular Jewish musicians Craig Taubman and Neshama Carlebach and served as a regional officer of the Cantors Assembly, an association of Conservative cantors. She was ordained in 2013 at the Academy for Jewish Religion in Los Angeles, where she received a masters degree in Jewish sacred music with a specialization in Jewish education. Bernstein is married to percussionist Gaston Bernstein; they have four children. We are so very delighted that Hazzan Bernstein will be joining our community, Bnai Shalom president Michael Bloom said on the synagogues website. Her warmth, musicality and ability to connect with people of all ages and backgrounds truly set her apart from a very qualified pool of applicants.

The rest is here:

Honors, happenings, comings & goings June 2021 J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Trivially Speaking: Bagels have been around since the 17th century – Loveland Reporter-Herald

Posted By on June 27, 2021

The little rascals were a common feature on the break area sideboards of many of the business meetings at my former place of gainful employment. I am speaking here of bagels.

Fifty-some years ago, few Americans outside of those of Jewish extraction had ever tried a bagel.

Even if you were Jewish, it was difficult to find a bagelry outside a major metropolitan area.

Just to show you that things take a long time to cross the pond, bagels also spelled beigels are widely associated with Ashkenazi (no relation to Nazi) Jews from the 17th century.

The first mention in their present configuration was in Jewish community ordinances in Krakow, Poland in 1610. This doesnt count the fact that a bagel-like bread obwarzanek was around in Poland in 1394.

I am assuming here that you know a bagel is formed in a ring from yeasted wheat dough, boiled for a short time in water, then baked. The resultant creation is a doughnut-shaped delicacy with a dense, chewy interior and a browned and crispy exterior.

The little guys were so tasty that in the late 16th century and following, the bajgiel (note Polish spelling) became a staple of the area cuisine.

The name was derived from the Yiddish beygal, thence from the German dialect word beugel meaning ring or bracelet.

There was no patent on bageling so they appeared in the Brick Lane district and surrounding streets in London in the 1850s. In a clever approach to storage, the bagels were hung on vertical dowels and displayed in windows.

Immigrant Polish Jews brought bagels to the U.S., in particular New York City where Bagel Bakers Local 338 controlled the product and had contracts with bagel bakeries around the city for its workers.

Harry Lender sounds like a hirsute pawnbroker emigrated from Poland in 1927 and opened the first American bagel bakery outside of New York City.

Harry picked New Haven, Connecticut is Bagelry a major course of study at Yale? for his little enterprise and sold directly from his store as well as distributing the product to Jewish delis and grocery stores.

Bagels tend to go stale fast and dont travel well (a rolling bagel gathers no moss?) so Harrys market was limited geographically.

To address that issue, Harrys kids, Murray and Marvin, discovered that flash-freezing the bagels would keep them from going stale for months. Personally, I think redeeming a bagel flash frozen for months is not as rewarding as eating one fresh from a bakery.

However, coupling their technique along with softening the crunchy crust and chewy center made Lenders Bagels a hit with mainstream America.

Bagel purists grumbled at the modifications but most American gentiles didnt seem to care about the difference.

The Lenders sold out to Kraft in 1986 sensing a marriage with Kraft Philadelphia Cream Cheese, but Kraft proved to be a fickle lover and sold it to Kelloggs.

Important to note for those dietetically inclined is that in 1915 the average bagel in the U.S. weighed 3 ounces. They began to increase in the 1960s (as did many Americans) and by the early 21st century the average bagel weighed about 6 ounces.

Therefore, I typically have half of one for breakfast slathered with cream cheese and strawberry jam. Its a nice start to a writing day.

Incidentally, a tennis loss 6-0, 6-0 is called being bageled. I have few of those.

Continued here:

Trivially Speaking: Bagels have been around since the 17th century - Loveland Reporter-Herald

Every New Vendor Coming to Smorgasburg LA Next Month Starting July 4 – Eater LA

Posted By on June 27, 2021

Smorgasburg, the weekly Downtown LA outdoor food bazaar, is back after a year-plus hiatus during the (still ongoing) coronavirus pandemic and now theres a new slew of restaurant names to add to the massive five-acre space. Heres who to look for at Smorgasburg when it reopens inside the Row DTLA development on July 4:

Bridgetown Roti: Chef Rashida Holmes massively popular Caribbean street food pop-up with nods to the flavors and cuisine of Barbados

Go Go Bird: The Hinoki + the Bird team does Sichuan-spiced fried chicken from the mind of chef Brandon Kida

Little Fish: Following on the current fried fish moment, expect sandwiches, drinks, and sides

Los Dorados: Chef Estiven Orozcos flautas have become some of the most sought-after tacos in all of LA of late

The Bad Jew: Rebecca King used to pop up out of her house, but now shes cooking pork pastrami weekly for Smorgasburg and an ongoing residency inside the Mar Vista

Picnic: Chef Shanna Milazzo has been making sandwiches (first as a storefront in Silver Lake, and lately as a pop-up) for years, with nods to the Italian-American experience in Queens, NY

Saucy Chick Rotisserie: Mexican and Indian flavors collide at this former pickup and delivery-only rotisserie chicken pop-up

Veggie Fam: Vegans are ready for Veggie Fam, with its simple array of burgers and hot chicken sandwiches

Goat Mafia: This busy Compton pop-up does Jalisco-style goat birria using a family recipe

Other options arriving at Smorgasburg on July 4 include Be Bright Coffee; the Trufflelist (cheesesteaks); Holy Basil (Bangkok-style street food); Leid Cookies (chocolate chip cookies); A little Salty Pie Co. (pretzel-crust pies); ManEatingPlant (vegan Asian comfort food); Mort & Bettys (vegan Jewish deli); the Puffs (cotton candy); Sweet Grass (sugarcane drinks).

Its also worth noting that some of Smorgasburgs most popular ongoing vendors are planning to return this year, including Burritos La Palma, Cena Vegan, Little Llama Peruvian Tacos, Lobsterdamus, Love Hour, Macheen, Tacos 1986, and Todo Verde. The kickoff event for Smorgasburg is July 4 at 777 S. Alameda Street in Downtown Los Angeles, with free entry and hours from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Sign up for our newsletter.

Read more from the original source:

Every New Vendor Coming to Smorgasburg LA Next Month Starting July 4 - Eater LA


Page 758«..1020..757758759760..770780..»

matomo tracker