I’m back!

We are finally home. I did not have chance to blog in my travels. We had a lot of fun and I have tons of “stuff” to write here. Since we have been home we have been attending to our garden and other things that needed immediate attention. Garden photos coming soon!

I have managed to post photos on the first day of our trip at:
Summer Trip.

I’ll be writing more as time permits!

The ultimate activist: Harriet Tubman

There are many people throughout history who are revered for their bravery and deserve to be honored for their activism in standing up for their principles and the preservation of what is right in this world. Harriet Tubman was one such person.

While I was in Maryland on vacation, Tom and I traveled to Cambridge, Maryland for a 3 day mini-vacation with my dad, my brother and his wife and two sons, my son and my daughter.

In all my growing up in Maryland and learning about slavery and Harriet Tubman, I had forgotten that she had been born in Dorchester County, Maryland and that her birthplace was just outside of Cambridge, just 130 miles from my Middletown home. This area had been rich in tobacco plantations during the civil war. Before we left Cambridge to return to Middletown, we visited Tubman’s birthplace, a farmhouse set far off a windy country road on Maryland’s eastern shore, the lane to which was gated off to cars, in the middle of cornfields surrounding the property. It looked like no one had visited the two-story brick structure in awhile. We also visited a memorial garden honoring her life. Here are some photos:



I cannot help but think that, as we struggle with our internal issues in trying to decide how to grow the peace movement and build the Green Party, actions are what matter. We can talk and argue and plot and vision. Those things all have their place. The bottom line in this world is that when something needs to be rectified, only action will do the trick. We can start in our personal lives with our consumer power and daily habits and writing letters to our representatives and newspapers. From there we can move to larger, more visible actions, such as standing on a street corner with a sign displaying a prominent message. Then moving on to larger actions such as boycotts, mass rallies, organizing, and civil resistance.

Tubman did not have the luxury of being able to appeal to the masses. She took action on her own accord, displaying courage and conviction. We should use her, and others’, actions as an example of “walking the talk”.

Here is an account of Tubman’s life, found on the PBS site, Africans in Amercia.

Harriet Tubman
c.1820 – 1913
Harriet Tubman is perhaps the most well-known of all the Underground Railroad’s “conductors.” During a ten-year span she made 19 trips into the South and escorted over 300 slaves to freedom. And, as she once proudly pointed out to Frederick Douglass, in all of her journeys she “never lost a single passenger.”

Tubman was born a slave in Maryland’s Dorchester County around 1820. At age five or six, she began to work as a house servant. Seven years later she was sent to work in the fields. While she was still in her early teens, she suffered an injury that would follow her for the rest of her life. Always ready to stand up for someone else, Tubman blocked a doorway to protect another field hand from an angry overseer. The overseer picked up and threw a two-pound weight at the field hand. It fell short, striking Tubman on the head. She never fully recovered from the blow, which subjected her to spells in which she would fall into a deep sleep.

Around 1844 she married a free black named John Tubman and took his last name. (She was born Araminta Ross; she later changed her first name to Harriet, after her mother.) In 1849, in fear that she, along with the other slaves on the plantation, was to be sold, Tubman resolved to run away. She set out one night on foot. With some assistance from a friendly white woman, Tubman was on her way. She followed the North Star by night, making her way to Pennsylvania and soon after to Philadelphia, where she found work and saved her money. The following year she returned to Maryland and escorted her sister and her sister’s two children to freedom. She made the dangerous trip back to the South soon after to rescue her brother and two other men. On her third return, she went after her husband, only to find he had taken another wife. Undeterred, she found other slaves seeking freedom and escorted them to the North.

Tubman returned to the South again and again. She devised clever techniques that helped make her “forays” successful, including using the master’s horse and buggy for the first leg of the journey; leaving on a Saturday night, since runaway notices couldn’t be placed in newspapers until Monday morning; turning about and heading south if she encountered possible slave hunters; and carrying a drug to use on a baby if its crying might put the fugitives in danger. Tubman even carried a gun which she used to threaten the fugitives if they became too tired or decided to turn back, telling them, “You’ll be free or die.”

By 1856, Tubman’s capture would have brought a $40,000 reward from the South. On one occasion, she overheard some men reading her wanted poster, which stated that she was illiterate. She promptly pulled out a book and feigned reading it. The ploy was enough to fool the men.

Tubman had made the perilous trip to slave country 19 times by 1860, including one especially challenging journey in which she rescued her 70-year-old parents. Of the famed heroine, who became known as “Moses,” Frederick Douglass said, “Excepting John Brown — of sacred memory — I know of no one who has willingly encountered more perils and hardships to serve our enslaved people than [Harriet Tubman].”
And John Brown, who conferred with “General Tubman” about his plans to raid Harpers Ferry, once said that she was “one of the bravest persons on this continent.”

Becoming friends with the leading abolitionists of the day, Tubman took part in antislavery meetings. On the way to such a meeting in Boston in 1860, in an incident in Troy, New York, she helped a fugitive slave who had been captured.

During the Civil War Harriet Tubman worked for the Union as a cook, a nurse, and even a spy. After the war she settled in Auburn, New York, where she would spend the rest of her long life. She died in 1913.

Harriet Tubman’s days as a conductor for the Underground Railroad had long past when this photograph was taken, believed to be sometime around 1880.

Image Credit: Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, Howard University

Interesting read on Chloryphyll

A Green Party of Utah member has posted an article on Chlorophyll, entitled

Thoughts on “Red-Baiting” within the GPUS National Committee.

This is in response to a series of allegations at the national level of “red-baiting” (defined by Wikipedia, as “the action of accusing someone of being communist, socialist or, in a broader sense, leftist,mainly with the intention of discrediting his/her political views.”) on the part of folks who challenge certain perspectives.

Ride Board for Anti-War Rallies September 24

The Green Party of Utah has arranged a ride board for people desiring to travel to anti-war rallies around the country.

The ride board can be accessed at: Sept 24 Ride Board. If you need a ride or can offer a ride, simply click “new topic”, enter “guest” as username and post your need/offer.

I’m back!

We have returned from our 18 day travel experience! Right now I am tending to immediate garden needs (we have a little “farm”). Lots of picking, weeding, irrigating, cooking, and drying (and eating!) is in order for the next several days.

I will be providing an account of our travels after that. We are providing an account of the Green Party of Utah’s national convention at: GPUT Live Journal Community.

I spent my 46th birthday in Maryland with my family – we had a great time! I’ll be posting pics as soon as I get some time to do so.

July Peace History

(Sources: Peace Buttons and War Resisters League Calendar)

July Peace History Calendar

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“It is sometimes said that science has nothing to do with morality. This is wrong. Science is the search for truth, the effort to understand the world; it involves the rejection of bias, of dogma, of revelation, but not the rejection of morality.” -Linus Pauling


On Nationalism and Patriotism

 

“Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it.”
— George Bernard Shaw, author

 

“The love of one’s country

is a splendid thing.

But why should love

stop at the border?”
–Pablo Casals, musician

 

“Patriotism is when love of your own people comes first;

nationalism, when hate for people other than your own comes first.”
–Charles de Gaulle, French leader

 

“Flags are bits of colored cloth that governments use 

first to shrink-wrap people’s brains

and then as ceremonial shrouds 

to bury the dead.”
–Arundhati Roy, author

 

“Nationalism is an infantile disease. It is the measles of mankind”.
— Albert Einstein, scientist

 

“Patriotism is the willingness to kill and be killed for trivial reasons.”
–Bertrand Russell, philosopher

 

“Patriotism is loving your country always

and your government when it deserves it.”
–Mark Twain, author

 

“It is not easy to see how the more extreme forms of nationalism can long survive when men have seen the Earth in its true perspective as a single small globe against the stars.”
— Arthur C. Clarke, author

Back to Historical Information

Tulsa report and update

I am on the road traveling about the country and will return to Utah on August 6. I will be writing extensively about our experiences in Tulsa. It was exciting, education, and inspiring. There was also a bit of drama.

In the meantime, one can “catch up” by reading Ken Sain’s account at:

Ken Sain.

Our garden

We will miss our garden while we are gone. We have someone irrigating for us in our absence. I have updated our garden page. things are growing fast! We will miss the opening of our sunflowers, but there are sure to be plenty open upon our return. Some of our corn is now taller than Tom. There will be corn ready to harvest, or near ready, when we get back.

I harvested the first batch of basil and oregano last week and dried it. There will be lots to harvest! There will probably be summer squash and tomatoes ready as well.

Garden 2005

Off on our travels!

We are headed off on our adventure across the country today! We are headed to Tulsa, Oklahoma to attend the nationl Green Party convention, which is being held July 21 – 24.

After Tulsa we will be travelling to my home state of Maryland to spend some time with my family. We plan to spend a few days in historic Cambridge, Maryland, birthplace of Harriet Tubman, in the Chesapeake Bay area. The town actually has the Choptank River running through it – a 70 mile river (running from Delaware to the Chesapeake Bay).

To get to Cambridge we also have to **cross** the Chesapeake Bay over the Chesapeake Bay Bridge. It is a beautful experience to cross this bridge.

My childhood memories include yearly trip (sometimes twice per season or more) to the seashore where we would travel through Cambridge (about an hour from Ocean City, Maryland) and across the Maulkus Bridge which was the only way over the Choptank River. This bridge has now been closed to traffic and a new bridge has been erected to bypass the city. The old bridge is maintained and used for pedestrian traffic and for recreational use (fishing, crabbing, etc.)

We plan to fish and crab some, to revive activities we used to engage in, in my youth. My 76-year-old father is truly ecstatic. There will be about 10 of us on this little excursion while we are in Maryland.
While I hope to blog some during our travels, I’m not sure what computer access I will have. Be assured I will defintely provide a summary upon my return!

Off to Tulsa….and beyond

We are head to Tulsa today! We plan to be in Tulsa by Wednesday evening, in time to attend the Green Party of the United States National Convention from July 21 – 24. (see July 10 blog entry). We hope to be able to visit libraries along the way to check our email and updates on Green Party matters. I will try to write blog entries as I can. At any rate, I’ll have a summary of our trip to post.

After Tulsa we will be travelling to my home state of Maryland to spend some time with my family. We plan to spend a few days in historic Cambridge, Maryland, birthplace of Harriet Tubman, in the Chesapeake Bay area. The town actually has the Choptank River running through it – a 70 mile river (running from Delaware to the Chesapeake Bay).

To get to Cambridge we also have to **cross** the Chesapeake Bay over the Chesapeake Bay Bridge. It is a beautful experience to cross this bridge.

My childhood memories include yearly trip (sometimes twice per season or more) to the seashore where we would travel through Cambridge (about an hour from Ocean City, Maryland) and across the Maulkus Bridge which was the only way over the Choptank River. This bridge has now been closed to traffic and a new bridge has been erected to bypass the city. The old bridge is maintained and used for pedestrian traffic and for recreational use (fishing, crabbing, etc.)

We plan to fish and crab some, to revive activities we used to engage in, in my youth. My 76-year-old father is truly ecstatic. There will be about 10 of us on this little excursion while we are in Maryland.

I will be taking a break from activism during that time – a break well needed and deserved. I hope to have some renewed energy for taking on the world when I return!