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1000 results for “Old_salt”

  1. Chile: RIP Revolutionary Sergio Hernández Diaz, “Old Alberto”

    “Your stature as a combatant illuminates the path of the new generations of revolutionaries”

    One of the great anonymous figures in the history of the resistance and the combative struggle against the civic-military dictatorship has passed away. The news from Havana, Cuba, is that the old man fought against death as well as the attack dogs that pursued him after each of the Central Force operations, the structure of the Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR) that he led in the early 1980s and that despite the harsh repression exerted by the apparatus security managed to carry out political-military operations that impacted the regime and promoted the anti-dictatorial struggle.

    The old man, a native of Mejillones, was marked since he was a child by the murder by police of the workers of the Pedro de Valdivia salt mine. He was first active in the Socialist Party where, captivated by the Cuban revolution and Fidel, he tried unsuccessfully to join the column of Ñancahuasu, in Bolivia, after the fall in combat of Che Guevara; he later joined the contingent that traveled to Cuba to receive political-military training at Punto Cero at the beginning of the 1970s, and after Miguel’s fall he finally joined the ranks of the MIR, where after military training, he was part of the Offensive Plan of ’78, also known as Operation Return, which brought him to Chile, clandestinely, in September 1977.

    The old man’s traces are from the first operations of the Central Force, the economic recuperation of the tobacco and cigarette distributor on Independence Street, the action at the José Domingo Cañas torture house, the triple assaults on the banks of Santa Elena and Rodrigo de Araya, the execution of Roger Vergara, Director of the Army Intelligence School, the attack on the Investigation and CNI barracks, among other operations, in addition to being the Head of the Information Operations, Planning and Logistics team and being part of the Santiago Military Zonal Directorate, were part of the combative experience that Alberto developed in those short but intense years at the beginning of the 1980s and that served not only to inflict accurate blows on the dictatorship, but also to encourage the working class and the people through the tactics of armed propaganda, to launch into the fight against their oppressors.

    Alberto, as he was known in the subversive and revolutionary militancy, while he could, never stopped being part of the processes of emancipation and political-military training that were developed at a continental level in recent decades; the cities and mountains of the Latin American Caribbean and of course the class-conscious and combative youth of Chile, learned of his combative experience and hundreds of militants from various detachments went through his cadre training schools, many were guided by the old man in the streets of Havana, in those beautiful afternoons of reflection on the shores of the Malecón on the fight to definitively end this order of injustice and misery and for the construction of socialism and a classless society.

    Today, when the old man is no longer among us, it is not the sorrow or the pain that overwhelms us, on the contrary, his lessons, his life experience, his actions are the best memory for those who made his revolutionary militancy his life, surely now, together with Arcadia, Arturo, Lucia, Hugo and so many others who fell while being part of the Central Force, he will become an example for the new generations of young combatants who join the fight and who fight day by day for the end. of capitalism and the construction of a new classless society, communism.

    Honor and Glory to Old Alberto… may his death be transformed into energy for the class-conscious and combative youth

    Revolutionary Communist Organization

    Chile, May 9, 2026

    Resumen Latinoamericano, 9 May 2026.

    abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p= #chile #communist #cuba #guerrilla #latinAmerica #mir #rip #SergioHernándezDiaz #southAmerica
  2. Chile: RIP Revolutionary Sergio Hernández Diaz, “Old Alberto”

    “Your stature as a combatant illuminates the path of the new generations of revolutionaries”

    One of the great anonymous figures in the history of the resistance and the combative struggle against the civic-military dictatorship has passed away. The news from Havana, Cuba, is that the old man fought against death as well as the attack dogs that pursued him after each of the Central Force operations, the structure of the Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR) that he led in the early 1980s and that despite the harsh repression exerted by the apparatus security managed to carry out political-military operations that impacted the regime and promoted the anti-dictatorial struggle.

    The old man, a native of Mejillones, was marked since he was a child by the murder by police of the workers of the Pedro de Valdivia salt mine. He was first active in the Socialist Party where, captivated by the Cuban revolution and Fidel, he tried unsuccessfully to join the column of Ñancahuasu, in Bolivia, after the fall in combat of Che Guevara; he later joined the contingent that traveled to Cuba to receive political-military training at Punto Cero at the beginning of the 1970s, and after Miguel’s fall he finally joined the ranks of the MIR, where after military training, he was part of the Offensive Plan of ’78, also known as Operation Return, which brought him to Chile, clandestinely, in September 1977.

    The old man’s traces are from the first operations of the Central Force, the economic recuperation of the tobacco and cigarette distributor on Independence Street, the action at the José Domingo Cañas torture house, the triple assaults on the banks of Santa Elena and Rodrigo de Araya, the execution of Roger Vergara, Director of the Army Intelligence School, the attack on the Investigation and CNI barracks, among other operations, in addition to being the Head of the Information Operations, Planning and Logistics team and being part of the Santiago Military Zonal Directorate, were part of the combative experience that Alberto developed in those short but intense years at the beginning of the 1980s and that served not only to inflict accurate blows on the dictatorship, but also to encourage the working class and the people through the tactics of armed propaganda, to launch into the fight against their oppressors.

    Alberto, as he was known in the subversive and revolutionary militancy, while he could, never stopped being part of the processes of emancipation and political-military training that were developed at a continental level in recent decades; the cities and mountains of the Latin American Caribbean and of course the class-conscious and combative youth of Chile, learned of his combative experience and hundreds of militants from various detachments went through his cadre training schools, many were guided by the old man in the streets of Havana, in those beautiful afternoons of reflection on the shores of the Malecón on the fight to definitively end this order of injustice and misery and for the construction of socialism and a classless society.

    Today, when the old man is no longer among us, it is not the sorrow or the pain that overwhelms us, on the contrary, his lessons, his life experience, his actions are the best memory for those who made his revolutionary militancy his life, surely now, together with Arcadia, Arturo, Lucia, Hugo and so many others who fell while being part of the Central Force, he will become an example for the new generations of young combatants who join the fight and who fight day by day for the end. of capitalism and the construction of a new classless society, communism.

    Honor and Glory to Old Alberto… may his death be transformed into energy for the class-conscious and combative youth

    Revolutionary Communist Organization

    Chile, May 9, 2026

    Resumen Latinoamericano, 9 May 2026.

    abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p= #chile #communist #cuba #guerrilla #latinAmerica #mir #rip #SergioHernándezDiaz #southAmerica
  3. Here are some clips taken from our interview with Author Caira Benson author of Salt Covered Lies

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q9MdHuEiiTs https://www.youtube.com/shorts/uYK1E7_HLsk https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q9MdHuEiiTs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiP4kyVPhk8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krwmuT8w_xM https://allthingsbooksandpublishing.riverside.com/ go to this website and hit the subscribe button it is our podcast website https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GPQN1XV5 Since the day she buried her four-year-old daughter, professional researcher and historian Dr. Isa Reynard […]

    midnight-publishing.org/2026/0

  4. Here are some clips taken from our interview with Author Caira Benson author of Salt Covered Lies

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q9MdHuEiiTs https://www.youtube.com/shorts/uYK1E7_HLsk https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q9MdHuEiiTs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiP4kyVPhk8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krwmuT8w_xM https://allthingsbooksandpublishing.riverside.com/ go to this website and hit the subscribe button it is our podcast website https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GPQN1XV5 Since the day she buried her four-year-old daughter, professional researcher and historian Dr. Isa Reynard […]

    midnight-publishing.org/2026/0

  5. Here are some clips taken from our interview with Author Caira Benson author of Salt Covered Lies

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q9MdHuEiiTs https://www.youtube.com/shorts/uYK1E7_HLsk https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q9MdHuEiiTs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiP4kyVPhk8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krwmuT8w_xM https://allthingsbooksandpublishing.riverside.com/ go to this website and hit the subscribe button it is our podcast website https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GPQN1XV5 Since the day she buried her four-year-old daughter, professional researcher and historian Dr. Isa Reynard […]

    midnight-publishing.org/2026/0

  6. Here are some clips taken from our interview with Author Caira Benson author of Salt Covered Lies

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q9MdHuEiiTs https://www.youtube.com/shorts/uYK1E7_HLsk https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q9MdHuEiiTs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiP4kyVPhk8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krwmuT8w_xM https://allthingsbooksandpublishing.riverside.com/ go to this website and hit the subscribe button it is our podcast website https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GPQN1XV5 Since the day she buried her four-year-old daughter, professional researcher and historian Dr. Isa Reynard […]

    midnight-publishing.org/2026/0

  7. Here are some clips taken from our interview with Author Caira Benson author of Salt Covered Lies

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q9MdHuEiiTs https://www.youtube.com/shorts/uYK1E7_HLsk https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q9MdHuEiiTs https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiP4kyVPhk8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krwmuT8w_xM https://allthingsbooksandpublishing.riverside.com/ go to this website and hit the subscribe button it is our podcast website https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GPQN1XV5 Since the day she buried her four-year-old daughter, professional researcher and historian Dr. Isa Reynard […]

    midnight-publishing.org/2026/0

  8. Utah man arrested for allegedly threatening to shoot Utes football fans at BYU game

    The 28-year-old man allegedly made threats on the social media platform X. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #NCAAFootball #athletics #BrighamYoungUniversity #BYU #Cougars #Football #NCAA #Sports
    newsbeep.com/us/227276/

  9. Utah man arrested for allegedly threatening to shoot Utes football fans at BYU game

    The 28-year-old man allegedly made threats on the social media platform X. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #NCAAFootball #athletics #BrighamYoungUniversity #BYU #Cougars #Football #NCAA #Sports
    newsbeep.com/us/227276/

  10. A walk at Coney Island. The park is really old school and a bit rotten by time and salt. #NYC #ConeyIsland #LunaPark

  11. I have reached the age where, not only do I have a favorite spatula, but it broke a month ago and I am still salty about it.

    #GenX
    #Xennial
    #OldPersonToot
    #old
    #spatula
    #WeirdAl

  12. Man. Jimmy Buffett passing on.

    Quite ironic that Old Parrothead goes through the Pearly Gates right about the time that #Idalia brushes Key West en route to the Florida coast.

    Hope he finally finds that lost shaker of salt.

    #Presente

  13. The Tale of the Leaves’ Comfort

    The Sea Ghost, in those times, had a deck wizard named Punketah, of the wind/sea school. The school is in the old city of Huzuz.

    Punketah was sitting together with me, and with a group of men, in a place of Ajiya when the wind made her stop, and stand up. She saw that I was weary of the sea, sick of the endless waves, so she offered me some leaves of the catastrophe tree to chew.

    To go to where rivers flow, overlaid with sand and covered with a kind of paradise where there is no water and where nothing can be said between the paths of the sacred sand.

    Only the sun with its fierce rays and the moon with its waning days and nights, and nights and days, and the two of them are my companions.

    We are here together in a place of dry, soft sand, in a kind of paradise where there is no water and where Punketah sleeps with her head in my lap, and with her hands in her pockets, tightly grasping the remaining leaves, and where the water is only marked as the kingdom of the Crowded Sea and of the three-eyed god.

    #boatmode #velvethorizon #saltmarsh #alqadim

  14. 📍 Sidetrack: A Wortley Café Cafe · London, Ontario, CA I am just getting a regular old cappuccino and some French sourdough bread, not this salty business. They do make decent coffee, though! https://beaconbits.app/beacon/2cxgdrgtsmrbqnjkwyplmp43/3mlogozdn522d #BeaconBits

  15. Scattered tongues, or: If I forget thee

    A ‘Garland’ Shadorma

    midnight flights 
    cracked heels crossed Sudan 
    mothers prayed 
    stars concealed 
    trembling elders kissed the ground
    Zion after storms
    
    eagles’ wings
    sea salt and deserts
    Aden called
    sandstorms passed
    old caravan hymns endured
    the sky roads opened
    
    ash-choked trains
    numbered arms recalled
    exiles rose
    ships arrived
    displaced children spoke again
    names returned ashore
    
    Tigris dusk
    courtyard lamps faded
    passports stamped
    children borne
    tears by Babylon’s waters
    locked homes gathered dust
    
    winter queues
    visa refusals
    gray buildings
    mouthed Hebrew
    each scattered tongue remembers
    snow melted slowly
    
    banks collapsed
    Buenos Aires mourned
    glass shattered
    sirens wailed
    Spanish carried Sabbath songs
    our Jerusalem
    
    midnight flights
    sea salt and deserts
    exiles rose
    children borne
    each scattered tongue remembers
    our Jerusalem

    ‘Garland’ Shadorma?

    The ‘Garland’ Shadorma was created by Sylvia Cognac, modeled after the ‘Garland’ Cinquain. Essentially, it is a Shadorma series of seven stanzas, with the seventh and final stanza being composed of lines from all six previous stanzas.

    Tanka Tuesday

    For Tanka Tuesday, Yvette encourages us to compose resilience-themed syllabic poems. My above shadorma is about the resilience of Jews from around the world who repatriated to our ancient homeland under difficult and often dangerous circumstances.

    The first stanza is about Ethiopian Jews who crossed Sudan and were flown to Israel in secret rescue missions. The second stanza is about Yemenite Jews who traveled through deserts and through Aden before flying to Israel. The third stanza is about Holocaust survivors who came to Israel after surviving Nazi camps and war.

    The fourth stanza is about Iraqi Jews who were forced to leave behind their ancient homes and communities in Babylon and Iraq. The fifth stanza is about Soviet Jews who kept Jewish identity and Hebrew alive even when the Soviet Union tried to suppress it. The sixth stanza is about Argentine Jews facing terror attacks and economic collapse while still carrying Jewish traditions with them.

    The final stanza brings all the journeys together into one shared story of exile, survival, memory, and return to Jerusalem.

    Let’s write poetry together!

    When it comes to partnership, some humans can make their lives alone – it’s possible. But creatively, it’s more like painting: you can’t just use the same colours in every painting. It’s just not an option. You can’t take the same photograph every time and live with art forms with no differences.

    Ben Harper (b. 1969)

    Would you like to create poetry with me and have a completed poem of yours featured here at the Skeptic’s Kaddish? I am very excited to have launched the ‘Poetry Partners’ initiative and am looking forward to meeting and creating with you… Check it out!

    #Aliyah #Diaspora #Exile #History #Israel #Jewish #JewishHistory #Poem #Poetry #Resilience #Shadorma
  16. Scattered tongues, or: If I forget thee

    A ‘Garland’ Shadorma

    midnight flights 
    cracked heels crossed Sudan 
    mothers prayed 
    stars concealed 
    trembling elders kissed the ground
    Zion after storms
    
    eagles’ wings
    sea salt and deserts
    Aden called
    sandstorms passed
    old caravan hymns endured
    the sky roads opened
    
    ash-choked trains
    numbered arms recalled
    exiles rose
    ships arrived
    displaced children spoke again
    names returned ashore
    
    Tigris dusk
    courtyard lamps faded
    passports stamped
    children borne
    tears by Babylon’s waters
    locked homes gathered dust
    
    winter queues
    visa refusals
    gray buildings
    mouthed Hebrew
    each scattered tongue remembers
    snow melted slowly
    
    banks collapsed
    Buenos Aires mourned
    glass shattered
    sirens wailed
    Spanish carried Sabbath songs
    our Jerusalem
    
    midnight flights
    sea salt and deserts
    exiles rose
    children borne
    each scattered tongue remembers
    our Jerusalem

    ‘Garland’ Shadorma?

    The ‘Garland’ Shadorma was created by Sylvia Cognac, modeled after the ‘Garland’ Cinquain. Essentially, it is a Shadorma series of seven stanzas, with the seventh and final stanza being composed of lines from all six previous stanzas.

    Tanka Tuesday

    For Tanka Tuesday, Yvette encourages us to compose resilience-themed syllabic poems. My above shadorma is about the resilience of Jews from around the world who repatriated to our ancient homeland under difficult and often dangerous circumstances.

    The first stanza is about Ethiopian Jews who crossed Sudan and were flown to Israel in secret rescue missions. The second stanza is about Yemenite Jews who traveled through deserts and through Aden before flying to Israel. The third stanza is about Holocaust survivors who came to Israel after surviving Nazi camps and war.

    The fourth stanza is about Iraqi Jews who were forced to leave behind their ancient homes and communities in Babylon and Iraq. The fifth stanza is about Soviet Jews who kept Jewish identity and Hebrew alive even when the Soviet Union tried to suppress it. The sixth stanza is about Argentine Jews facing terror attacks and economic collapse while still carrying Jewish traditions with them.

    The final stanza brings all the journeys together into one shared story of exile, survival, memory, and return to Jerusalem.

    Let’s write poetry together!

    When it comes to partnership, some humans can make their lives alone – it’s possible. But creatively, it’s more like painting: you can’t just use the same colours in every painting. It’s just not an option. You can’t take the same photograph every time and live with art forms with no differences.

    Ben Harper (b. 1969)

    Would you like to create poetry with me and have a completed poem of yours featured here at the Skeptic’s Kaddish? I am very excited to have launched the ‘Poetry Partners’ initiative and am looking forward to meeting and creating with you… Check it out!

    #Aliyah #Diaspora #Exile #History #Israel #Jewish #JewishHistory #Poem #Poetry #Resilience #Shadorma
  17. Scattered tongues, or: If I forget thee

    A ‘Garland’ Shadorma

    midnight flights 
    cracked heels crossed Sudan 
    mothers prayed 
    stars concealed 
    trembling elders kissed the ground
    Zion after storms
    
    eagles’ wings
    sea salt and deserts
    Aden called
    sandstorms passed
    old caravan hymns endured
    the sky roads opened
    
    ash-choked trains
    numbered arms recalled
    exiles rose
    ships arrived
    displaced children spoke again
    names returned ashore
    
    Tigris dusk
    courtyard lamps faded
    passports stamped
    children borne
    tears by Babylon’s waters
    locked homes gathered dust
    
    winter queues
    visa refusals
    gray buildings
    mouthed Hebrew
    each scattered tongue remembers
    snow melted slowly
    
    banks collapsed
    Buenos Aires mourned
    glass shattered
    sirens wailed
    Spanish carried Sabbath songs
    our Jerusalem
    
    midnight flights
    sea salt and deserts
    exiles rose
    children borne
    each scattered tongue remembers
    our Jerusalem

    ‘Garland’ Shadorma?

    The ‘Garland’ Shadorma was created by Sylvia Cognac, modeled after the ‘Garland’ Cinquain. Essentially, it is a Shadorma series of seven stanzas, with the seventh and final stanza being composed of lines from all six previous stanzas.

    Tanka Tuesday

    For Tanka Tuesday, Yvette encourages us to compose resilience-themed syllabic poems. My above shadorma is about the resilience of Jews from around the world who repatriated to our ancient homeland under difficult and often dangerous circumstances.

    The first stanza is about Ethiopian Jews who crossed Sudan and were flown to Israel in secret rescue missions. The second stanza is about Yemenite Jews who traveled through deserts and through Aden before flying to Israel. The third stanza is about Holocaust survivors who came to Israel after surviving Nazi camps and war.

    The fourth stanza is about Iraqi Jews who were forced to leave behind their ancient homes and communities in Babylon and Iraq. The fifth stanza is about Soviet Jews who kept Jewish identity and Hebrew alive even when the Soviet Union tried to suppress it. The sixth stanza is about Argentine Jews facing terror attacks and economic collapse while still carrying Jewish traditions with them.

    The final stanza brings all the journeys together into one shared story of exile, survival, memory, and return to Jerusalem.

    Let’s write poetry together!

    When it comes to partnership, some humans can make their lives alone – it’s possible. But creatively, it’s more like painting: you can’t just use the same colours in every painting. It’s just not an option. You can’t take the same photograph every time and live with art forms with no differences.

    Ben Harper (b. 1969)

    Would you like to create poetry with me and have a completed poem of yours featured here at the Skeptic’s Kaddish? I am very excited to have launched the ‘Poetry Partners’ initiative and am looking forward to meeting and creating with you… Check it out!

    #Aliyah #Diaspora #Exile #History #Israel #Jewish #JewishHistory #Poem #Poetry #Resilience #Shadorma
  18. Scattered tongues, or: If I forget thee

    A ‘Garland’ Shadorma

    midnight flights 
    cracked heels crossed Sudan 
    mothers prayed 
    stars concealed 
    trembling elders kissed the ground
    Zion after storms
    
    eagles’ wings
    sea salt and deserts
    Aden called
    sandstorms passed
    old caravan hymns endured
    the sky roads opened
    
    ash-choked trains
    numbered arms recalled
    exiles rose
    ships arrived
    displaced children spoke again
    names returned ashore
    
    Tigris dusk
    courtyard lamps faded
    passports stamped
    children borne
    tears by Babylon’s waters
    locked homes gathered dust
    
    winter queues
    visa refusals
    gray buildings
    mouthed Hebrew
    each scattered tongue remembers
    snow melted slowly
    
    banks collapsed
    Buenos Aires mourned
    glass shattered
    sirens wailed
    Spanish carried Sabbath songs
    our Jerusalem
    
    midnight flights
    sea salt and deserts
    exiles rose
    children borne
    each scattered tongue remembers
    our Jerusalem

    ‘Garland’ Shadorma?

    The ‘Garland’ Shadorma was created by Sylvia Cognac, modeled after the ‘Garland’ Cinquain. Essentially, it is a Shadorma series of seven stanzas, with the seventh and final stanza being composed of lines from all six previous stanzas.

    Tanka Tuesday

    For Tanka Tuesday, Yvette encourages us to compose resilience-themed syllabic poems. My above shadorma is about the resilience of Jews from around the world who repatriated to our ancient homeland under difficult and often dangerous circumstances.

    The first stanza is about Ethiopian Jews who crossed Sudan and were flown to Israel in secret rescue missions. The second stanza is about Yemenite Jews who traveled through deserts and through Aden before flying to Israel. The third stanza is about Holocaust survivors who came to Israel after surviving Nazi camps and war.

    The fourth stanza is about Iraqi Jews who were forced to leave behind their ancient homes and communities in Babylon and Iraq. The fifth stanza is about Soviet Jews who kept Jewish identity and Hebrew alive even when the Soviet Union tried to suppress it. The sixth stanza is about Argentine Jews facing terror attacks and economic collapse while still carrying Jewish traditions with them.

    The final stanza brings all the journeys together into one shared story of exile, survival, memory, and return to Jerusalem.

    Let’s write poetry together!

    When it comes to partnership, some humans can make their lives alone – it’s possible. But creatively, it’s more like painting: you can’t just use the same colours in every painting. It’s just not an option. You can’t take the same photograph every time and live with art forms with no differences.

    Ben Harper (b. 1969)

    Would you like to create poetry with me and have a completed poem of yours featured here at the Skeptic’s Kaddish? I am very excited to have launched the ‘Poetry Partners’ initiative and am looking forward to meeting and creating with you… Check it out!

    #Aliyah #Diaspora #Exile #History #Israel #Jewish #JewishHistory #Poem #Poetry #Resilience #Shadorma
  19. Scattered tongues, or: If I forget thee

    A ‘Garland’ Shadorma

    midnight flights 
    cracked heels crossed Sudan 
    mothers prayed 
    stars concealed 
    trembling elders kissed the ground
    Zion after storms
    
    eagles’ wings
    sea salt and deserts
    Aden called
    sandstorms passed
    old caravan hymns endured
    the sky roads opened
    
    ash-choked trains
    numbered arms recalled
    exiles rose
    ships arrived
    displaced children spoke again
    names returned ashore
    
    Tigris dusk
    courtyard lamps faded
    passports stamped
    children borne
    tears by Babylon’s waters
    locked homes gathered dust
    
    winter queues
    visa refusals
    gray buildings
    mouthed Hebrew
    each scattered tongue remembers
    snow melted slowly
    
    banks collapsed
    Buenos Aires mourned
    glass shattered
    sirens wailed
    Spanish carried Sabbath songs
    our Jerusalem
    
    midnight flights
    sea salt and deserts
    exiles rose
    children borne
    each scattered tongue remembers
    our Jerusalem

    ‘Garland’ Shadorma?

    The ‘Garland’ Shadorma was created by Sylvia Cognac, modeled after the ‘Garland’ Cinquain. Essentially, it is a Shadorma series of seven stanzas, with the seventh and final stanza being composed of lines from all six previous stanzas.

    Tanka Tuesday

    For Tanka Tuesday, Yvette encourages us to compose resilience-themed syllabic poems. My above shadorma is about the resilience of Jews from around the world who repatriated to our ancient homeland under difficult and often dangerous circumstances.

    The first stanza is about Ethiopian Jews who crossed Sudan and were flown to Israel in secret rescue missions. The second stanza is about Yemenite Jews who traveled through deserts and through Aden before flying to Israel. The third stanza is about Holocaust survivors who came to Israel after surviving Nazi camps and war.

    The fourth stanza is about Iraqi Jews who were forced to leave behind their ancient homes and communities in Babylon and Iraq. The fifth stanza is about Soviet Jews who kept Jewish identity and Hebrew alive even when the Soviet Union tried to suppress it. The sixth stanza is about Argentine Jews facing terror attacks and economic collapse while still carrying Jewish traditions with them.

    The final stanza brings all the journeys together into one shared story of exile, survival, memory, and return to Jerusalem.

    Let’s write poetry together!

    When it comes to partnership, some humans can make their lives alone – it’s possible. But creatively, it’s more like painting: you can’t just use the same colours in every painting. It’s just not an option. You can’t take the same photograph every time and live with art forms with no differences.

    Ben Harper (b. 1969)

    Would you like to create poetry with me and have a completed poem of yours featured here at the Skeptic’s Kaddish? I am very excited to have launched the ‘Poetry Partners’ initiative and am looking forward to meeting and creating with you… Check it out!

    #Aliyah #Diaspora #Exile #History #Israel #Jewish #JewishHistory #Poem #Poetry #Resilience #Shadorma
  20. Birds on the Forest Floor: Ovenbird and Veery

    During spring migration season in an old-growth forest like Inwood Hill Park, be sure to look for birds wandering along the park paths or in the dense foliage near the ground. While we are often straining our necks looking for warblers and other small songbirds in the high canopy, some warblers like the Ovenbird or a thrush like the Veery may sometimes be found near our feet. 

    Ovenbird. May 2, 2026. Inwood Hill Park, NYC.

    The forest floor contains a diverse concoction of tree debris, rotting leaves, and shade-loving plants, an environment beneficial for insects. Over the past week or so, I have seen some Ovenbirds and Veeries without even trying. I saw both this morning in the low branches of the highest ridge.

    The Ovenbird, named for the covered oven-shaped nest it builds low to the ground, is a New World warbler and the only member of the genus Seiurus. It eats insects and thrives in a mixed forest environment such as in Inwood Hill Park.

    Ovenbird. May 2, 2026

    The Ovenbird is distinguished by bold spots and stripes on its chest, and an orange and black striped crown. The crown is sometimes hard to see, but occasionally it will raise it. The bird will look at you with big eyes. Listen for its tea-cher song.

    Veery. May 5, 2026. Inwood Hill Park.

    The Veery is a thrush that winters in Brazil and visits us in the springtime. This pretty reddish-brown bird with a pale chest may be seen slowly walking along forest paths looking for insects and fruit. Like the Ovenbird, the Veery will build nests close to the ground.

    Veery. May 5, 2026

    Since my last report on April 22, I’ve seen Baltimore Orioles, Gray Catbirds, Turkey Vultures, more Palm Warblers and Yellow-rumped Warblers, Northern Flickers, Tree Swallows, and more. I’ve only caught glimpses of other warblers, but many of them are just arriving this week.

    Brown Thrasher. Lifer! April 24, 2026

    I had a lifer on April 24 – a Brown Thrasher. This fairly large bird, a member of the same family that includes catbirds and mockingbirds, caught me by surprise one morning up on the ridge. It was in the bushes, apparently its favorite place. It can also sing like the mockingbird and be just as aggressive defending its nest. It’s an intense-looking bird, and I gave it plenty of distance.

    Tree Swallow at the Salt Marsh. Inwood Hill Park. April 29, 2026.

    World Migratory Bird Day 2026 takes place Saturday, May 9. The theme is “Every Bird Counts – Your Observations Matter.”

    Cover: Ovenbird in Inwood Hill Park. May 2, 2026. More sightings on the May 2026 Sightings page.

    Recent posts

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    #birding #InwoodHillPark #nature #photography
  21. Birds on the Forest Floor: Ovenbird and Veery

    During spring migration season in an old-growth forest like Inwood Hill Park, be sure to look for birds wandering along the park paths or in the dense foliage near the ground. While we are often straining our necks looking for warblers and other small songbirds in the high canopy, some warblers like the Ovenbird or a thrush like the Veery may sometimes be found near our feet. 

    Ovenbird. May 2, 2026. Inwood Hill Park, NYC.

    The forest floor contains a diverse concoction of tree debris, rotting leaves, and shade-loving plants, an environment beneficial for insects. Over the past week or so, I have seen some Ovenbirds and Veeries without even trying. I saw both this morning in the low branches of the highest ridge.

    The Ovenbird, named for the covered oven-shaped nest it builds low to the ground, is a New World warbler and the only member of the genus Seiurus. It eats insects and thrives in a mixed forest environment such as in Inwood Hill Park.

    Ovenbird. May 2, 2026

    The Ovenbird is distinguished by bold spots and stripes on its chest, and an orange and black striped crown. The crown is sometimes hard to see, but occasionally it will raise it. The bird will look at you with big eyes. Listen for its tea-cher song.

    Veery. May 5, 2026. Inwood Hill Park.

    The Veery is a thrush that winters in Brazil and visits us in the springtime. This pretty reddish-brown bird with a pale chest may be seen slowly walking along forest paths looking for insects and fruit. Like the Ovenbird, the Veery will build nests close to the ground.

    Veery. May 5, 2026

    Since my last report on April 22, I’ve seen Baltimore Orioles, Gray Catbirds, Turkey Vultures, more Palm Warblers and Yellow-rumped Warblers, Northern Flickers, Tree Swallows, and more. I’ve only caught glimpses of other warblers, but many of them are just arriving this week.

    Brown Thrasher. Lifer! April 24, 2026

    I had a lifer on April 24 – a Brown Thrasher. This fairly large bird, a member of the same family that includes catbirds and mockingbirds, caught me by surprise one morning up on the ridge. It was in the bushes, apparently its favorite place. It can also sing like the mockingbird and be just as aggressive defending its nest. It’s an intense-looking bird, and I gave it plenty of distance.

    Tree Swallow at the Salt Marsh. Inwood Hill Park. April 29, 2026.

    World Migratory Bird Day 2026 takes place Saturday, May 9. The theme is “Every Bird Counts – Your Observations Matter.”

    Cover: Ovenbird in Inwood Hill Park. May 2, 2026. More sightings on the May 2026 Sightings page.

    Recent posts

    Subscribe

    Type your email…

    Subscribe

    #birding #InwoodHillPark #nature #photography
  22. Birds on the Forest Floor: Ovenbird and Veery

    During spring migration season in an old-growth forest like Inwood Hill Park, be sure to look for birds wandering along the park paths or in the dense foliage near the ground. While we are often straining our necks looking for warblers and other small songbirds in the high canopy, some warblers like the Ovenbird or a thrush like the Veery may sometimes be found near our feet. 

    Ovenbird. May 2, 2026. Inwood Hill Park, NYC.

    The forest floor contains a diverse concoction of tree debris, rotting leaves, and shade-loving plants, an environment beneficial for insects. Over the past week or so, I have seen some Ovenbirds and Veeries without even trying. I saw both this morning in the low branches of the highest ridge.

    The Ovenbird, named for the covered oven-shaped nest it builds low to the ground, is a New World warbler and the only member of the genus Seiurus. It eats insects and thrives in a mixed forest environment such as in Inwood Hill Park.

    Ovenbird. May 2, 2026

    The Ovenbird is distinguished by bold spots and stripes on its chest, and an orange and black striped crown. The crown is sometimes hard to see, but occasionally it will raise it. The bird will look at you with big eyes. Listen for its tea-cher song.

    Veery. May 5, 2026. Inwood Hill Park.

    The Veery is a thrush that winters in Brazil and visits us in the springtime. This pretty reddish-brown bird with a pale chest may be seen slowly walking along forest paths looking for insects and fruit. Like the Ovenbird, the Veery will build nests close to the ground.

    Veery. May 5, 2026

    Since my last report on April 22, I’ve seen Baltimore Orioles, Gray Catbirds, Turkey Vultures, more Palm Warblers and Yellow-rumped Warblers, Northern Flickers, Tree Swallows, and more. I’ve only caught glimpses of other warblers, but many of them are just arriving this week.

    Brown Thrasher. Lifer! April 24, 2026

    I had a lifer on April 24 – a Brown Thrasher. This fairly large bird, a member of the same family that includes catbirds and mockingbirds, caught me by surprise one morning up on the ridge. It was in the bushes, apparently its favorite place. It can also sing like the mockingbird and be just as aggressive defending its nest. It’s an intense-looking bird, and I gave it plenty of distance.

    Tree Swallow at the Salt Marsh. Inwood Hill Park. April 29, 2026.

    World Migratory Bird Day 2026 takes place Saturday, May 9. The theme is “Every Bird Counts – Your Observations Matter.”

    Cover: Ovenbird in Inwood Hill Park. May 2, 2026. More sightings on the May 2026 Sightings page.

    Recent posts

    Subscribe

    Type your email…

    Subscribe

    #birding #InwoodHillPark #nature #photography
  23. Birds on the Forest Floor: Ovenbird and Veery

    During spring migration season in an old-growth forest like Inwood Hill Park, be sure to look for birds wandering along the park paths or in the dense foliage near the ground. While we are often straining our necks looking for warblers and other small songbirds in the high canopy, some warblers like the Ovenbird or a thrush like the Veery may sometimes be found near our feet. 

    Ovenbird. May 2, 2026. Inwood Hill Park, NYC.

    The forest floor contains a diverse concoction of tree debris, rotting leaves, and shade-loving plants, an environment beneficial for insects. Over the past week or so, I have seen some Ovenbirds and Veeries without even trying. I saw both this morning in the low branches of the highest ridge.

    The Ovenbird, named for the covered oven-shaped nest it builds low to the ground, is a New World warbler and the only member of the genus Seiurus. It eats insects and thrives in a mixed forest environment such as in Inwood Hill Park.

    Ovenbird. May 2, 2026

    The Ovenbird is distinguished by bold spots and stripes on its chest, and an orange and black striped crown. The crown is sometimes hard to see, but occasionally it will raise it. The bird will look at you with big eyes. Listen for its tea-cher song.

    Veery. May 5, 2026. Inwood Hill Park.

    The Veery is a thrush that winters in Brazil and visits us in the springtime. This pretty reddish-brown bird with a pale chest may be seen slowly walking along forest paths looking for insects and fruit. Like the Ovenbird, the Veery will build nests close to the ground.

    Veery. May 5, 2026

    Since my last report on April 22, I’ve seen Baltimore Orioles, Gray Catbirds, Turkey Vultures, more Palm Warblers and Yellow-rumped Warblers, Northern Flickers, Tree Swallows, and more. I’ve only caught glimpses of other warblers, but many of them are just arriving this week.

    Brown Thrasher. Lifer! April 24, 2026

    I had a lifer on April 24 – a Brown Thrasher. This fairly large bird, a member of the same family that includes catbirds and mockingbirds, caught me by surprise one morning up on the ridge. It was in the bushes, apparently its favorite place. It can also sing like the mockingbird and be just as aggressive defending its nest. It’s an intense-looking bird, and I gave it plenty of distance.

    Tree Swallow at the Salt Marsh. Inwood Hill Park. April 29, 2026.

    World Migratory Bird Day 2026 takes place Saturday, May 9. The theme is “Every Bird Counts – Your Observations Matter.”

    Cover: Ovenbird in Inwood Hill Park. May 2, 2026. More sightings on the May 2026 Sightings page.

    Recent posts

    Subscribe

    Type your email…

    Subscribe

    #birding #InwoodHillPark #nature #photography
  24. Birds on the Forest Floor: Ovenbird and Veery

    During spring migration season in an old-growth forest like Inwood Hill Park, be sure to look for birds wandering along the park paths or in the dense foliage near the ground. While we are often straining our necks looking for warblers and other small songbirds in the high canopy, some warblers like the Ovenbird or a thrush like the Veery may sometimes be found near our feet. 

    Ovenbird. May 2, 2026. Inwood Hill Park, NYC.

    The forest floor contains a diverse concoction of tree debris, rotting leaves, and shade-loving plants, an environment beneficial for insects. Over the past week or so, I have seen some Ovenbirds and Veeries without even trying. I saw both this morning in the low branches of the highest ridge.

    The Ovenbird, named for the covered oven-shaped nest it builds low to the ground, is a New World warbler and the only member of the genus Seiurus. It eats insects and thrives in a mixed forest environment such as in Inwood Hill Park.

    Ovenbird. May 2, 2026

    The Ovenbird is distinguished by bold spots and stripes on its chest, and an orange and black striped crown. The crown is sometimes hard to see, but occasionally it will raise it. The bird will look at you with big eyes. Listen for its tea-cher song.

    Veery. May 5, 2026. Inwood Hill Park.

    The Veery is a thrush that winters in Brazil and visits us in the springtime. This pretty reddish-brown bird with a pale chest may be seen slowly walking along forest paths looking for insects and fruit. Like the Ovenbird, the Veery will build nests close to the ground.

    Veery. May 5, 2026

    Since my last report on April 22, I’ve seen Baltimore Orioles, Gray Catbirds, Turkey Vultures, more Palm Warblers and Yellow-rumped Warblers, Northern Flickers, Tree Swallows, and more. I’ve only caught glimpses of other warblers, but many of them are just arriving this week.

    Brown Thrasher. Lifer! April 24, 2026

    I had a lifer on April 24 – a Brown Thrasher. This fairly large bird, a member of the same family that includes catbirds and mockingbirds, caught me by surprise one morning up on the ridge. It was in the bushes, apparently its favorite place. It can also sing like the mockingbird and be just as aggressive defending its nest. It’s an intense-looking bird, and I gave it plenty of distance.

    Tree Swallow at the Salt Marsh. Inwood Hill Park. April 29, 2026.

    World Migratory Bird Day 2026 takes place Saturday, May 9. The theme is “Every Bird Counts – Your Observations Matter.”

    Cover: Ovenbird in Inwood Hill Park. May 2, 2026. More sightings on the May 2026 Sightings page.

    Recent posts

    Subscribe

    Type your email…

    Subscribe

    #birding #InwoodHillPark #nature #photography
  25. I started to believe the whole Gen Ai Slop thing put out there purely to destroy what's left from the Divine Spark in humans. If you observe Saltman closely, you'll see the darkness in his eyes & black goo running in his veins - in service of the Old Nick.

    #ai #aiAgent #NoAI #genai #genai_slop #generativeAi