Grace Lee Boggs and Grace Lee talk to Melissa Harris-Perry about history, revolution, and American Revolutionary: The Evolution of Grace Lee Boggs.
The Singh family needs your help. Call ICE today and help bring Gurmurkh Singh back to his family. He’s having a hearing today and he could get prosecutorial discretion and close the case today!
John Sandweg, Acting ICE Director: (202)732-3000
Leslie Ungerman, SF Chief Counsel: (415) 705-4604
Tell them:
“Hi my name is ____. I’m calling to ask ICE to agree to reopen and administratively close Gurmukh Singh’s case, A# 077-432-044, under Director Sandweg’s August 2014 parental interests directive. Although Gurmukh was released from detention after 5 ½ months, he still faces imminent deportation and separation from his family. I strongly urge you to exercise prosecutorial discretion during Gurmukh’s November 18 court mediation and agree to reopen and administratively close his case. Gurmukh is the parent and primary caretaker of two minor U.S. citizen children and his elderly parent, is married to a U.S. citizen, and is a contributing member to the community. His deportation will cause emotional, psychological, and financial hardship to his children and family. Please do not let the Singh family be separated. I urge you to administratively close Gurmukh’s case. Thank you.“
Nina Kaur, to the Sikh Art and Film Foundation
Nina’s standing up for the representation of women and girls in the Sikh Art and Film Foundation’s Heritage Gala and Film Festival. Since 2004, their inclusion of the voices of women leaders and filmmakers has been lacking.
A little cuteness goes a long way, so we got you a big heap of cute to start your week.
Check out this parent’s awesome instagrams of their baby and their kitten. So cute. Can’t breathe.
I Need To Tell You…
November 13, 2013 at 8:17pm
I need to tell you: The typhoon was worse than any of us could ever have imagined. The Philippines receives 20+ typhoons every year; floods, landslides and partly-blown off roofs are par for the course. Believe me when I say we have never before seen the likes of Yolanda/Haiyan.
I need to tell you: Everyday, I read the news and reports from the field, thinking we’ve reached the bottom of suffering and despair, only to find new depths. Just when I think my heart can’t break any further from the stories of loss and tragedy, something new turns up to break it all over again.
I need to tell you about the bodies decomposing on tree branches, under piles of rubble from collapsed houses, in churches, on the sides of roads, wrapped in blankets or straw mats. I need to tell you that the news cameras cannot show their faces – features frozen in fear as they died.
I need to tell you about the storm surge – the 6-meter wall of water that rose out of the sea, rushed several kilometers inland and crashed over every building and house by the coastline. You need to understand that our nation is made up of 7,107 islands; nearly everything is by the coastline.
I need to tell you how the storm surge swept in and out four times during the typhoon. Imagine the tremendous force of the sea, surging forward, crushing walls and foundations – and then that same force, sucking everything back in with it. I need to tell you how children were pulled from their mothers’ arms; how people clung desperately to rooftops or tree branches as friends and neighbors sped by, drowning or screaming for help; how today, bodies are still washing up on shore.
I need to tell you about the woman who had to bury 9 of her family members after the typhoon; about the man who lost 30 of his family members to the storm; about the husband and wife who lost their three daughters, and have only located the bodies of 2.
I need to tell you about the man who told his wife to stay in their house because it would be safer there. He found her body after the waters had subsided, embracing their dead son with one hand and clutching the rafters of their one-story home with another. The water had risen too high.
I need to tell you how the smell of death permeates the shattered cities and towns all along the Visayas islands. How relief workers cannot reach people quickly enough due to destroyed roads, airports, bridges. How even to this day, we do not know the full extent of the damage – communications are still down, particularly in the more remote islands and areas of the Visayas.
I need you to understand how helpless we feel – how our boxes of mineral water, biscuits, candlesticks and matches seem like such a weak salve against the brutal violence that nature has unleashed upon our brothers and sisters.
I need to tell you I am driven to distraction, wishing there were more I could do.
***
At the same time, I need to tell you about the amazing NGOs, universities, corporations and individuals that launched into action immediately after the typhoon.
I need to tell you about the telcos that worked around-the-clock to restore connectivity to at least the main hubs in the Visayas.
I need to tell you about the large international NGOs that opened their websites for donations and began mobilizing relief services, the day after Haiyan struck.
I need to tell you about the universities and schools that have launched various initiatives to raise funds and supplies for the victims; I need to tell you how, from 6am-12mn, there are students and volunteers tirelessly packing bag after bag of relief goods to be sent to the survivors.
I need to tell you about the restaurants that have offered to donate their profits for this week to relief efforts; the shipping and transport companies that have offered to pick up and deliver relief goods for free; the various corporations and rich individuals that have made sizeable donations, even without public announcements.
I need to tell you about the millions of OFWs whose hearts are bleeding for their countrymen right now; who are almost constantly monitoring the news and social networking sites for the latest developments; who are organizing fundraisers and benefit concerts for the victims and survivors back home.
I need to tell you about the generosity of the whole world – millions of dollars in aid, military or medical support from the governments of the United States, UK, Japan, Australia, Canada, the European Union, and even our neighbors, South Korea, Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia and Vietnam. A pair of young girls in the US set up a lemonade stand to “help typhoon families” – these acts of kindness give us so much comfort and hope during this tragic time. We are immeasurably grateful to be in your thoughts, prayers and hearts.
I need to tell you about the Philippines’ negotiation team to this year’s UN Climate Talks in Warsaw, which is pleading with the global community to wake up to the effects of climate change and take preventative action, while there is still time. I echo the words of lead negotiator Yeb Sano, “If not us, then who? If not now, then when? If not here, then where?”
I need to tell you about our government officials – yes, I know, some of them are corrupt, and yes, perhaps they have not handled this crisis as well as we would have hoped – but I need to tell you, there are good people in government. There are people who have slept very little since the typhoon hit; they have been coordinating aid efforts; they have been trying to fix roads, assess the damage, restore order, and channel goods/services to where they are needed most. They may not be doing a perfect job, but now cannot be the time to criticize them. They are our government officials, just like the people in the Visayas are our countrymen and women – we must help one another right now; the fingers we use to point blame are better used to pack relief goods or click on the “Donate” box.
***
Finally, I need to tell you about Filipinos: We are a happy, easygoing people, who can find reasons to smile, sing and be grateful – even in the humblest of conditions, even in the direst of circumstances. We care a lot about family; that is why 10 million Filipinos spend years living far away from their loved ones, remitting money that will hopefully pay for better lives and futures back home.
Most Filipinos don’t have much by means of material wealth, but we make up for it by sharing what we do have with one another. It will astound you, sometimes, how those with the least are the most willing to give the little that they do have. I recall visiting a Gawad Kalinga village once, where our hosts, a poor family living in a 16 sq.m. house, actually spent the little money they had to buy food to prepare lunch for us. This, when their family of four would normally subsist on just a pack of instant noodles and rice each day. When you hear the word Bayanihan (rooted in the word “Bayani”, which is Filipino for “hero”) this is what it means: Being a hero for one another.
I can think of no better time for this than now.
I didn’t write it, but I found it here and wanted to share it with you.
When her mom collapsed, 8-year-old Iyara Yang kept her wits about her, cared for her younger siblings, and called 911. When the ambulance arrived, she helped her mom, who speaks Hmong and Thai but not English, communicate what was wrong to the paramedics, saving precious time that may have saved her life.
Her mom, now recovered, says, “She’s just a little girl, but is capable of so much.”
She unseated a four-term incumbent on a platform that includes a $15/hr minimum wage and public financing of elections. And she’s an Indian American woman. Congratulations Councillor Sawant!
More, from The Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
Today marks exactly one-month since the end of New York Comic Con when I reported the harassment that had happened to myself and other women by Mike Babchik and his Man Banter film crew. When I first wrote that post, bleary-eyed at 1 AM, I doubted that anyone would listen. Thirty days later, I’ve seen so many people unite to fight against harassment. I didn’t cry when Babchik confronted me, but I have been moved to tears several times these past few weeks by the immense love and support people have shown and the fighting spirit people have displayed against those who bully and hate.
This afternoon, a friend and I went to SiriusXM headquarters to meet with SiriusXM Chief Content Officer Scott Greenstein. We couldn’t hand the petition to him in person, but I did speak to his assistant Matt, who told me that the package we had brought will be delivered to him.
I didn’t think we would have been able to make it so far, but we did. The fight isn’t over yet, but I hope that after reviewing the petition, SiriusXM Radio will make the smart decision and respond to our collective outrage.
People have also asked me: “what’s the next step?” There is no single “next step” really, but a continued awareness that I think we all should share. We can and must protect and support each other when harassment happens. And for cruel bullies and bigots like Mike Babchik: a warning—think twice before picking on someone else. Because the tide is turning, and that joke you played might come back to bite you in the ass.
Diana Pho
18MR Member
New York, NY
If you get through complete Yeb Saño’s COP19 speech without getting a little weepy, I’m not sure if I can help you.
Stand with Saño: http://bit.ly/17RVomX