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- Where Do We Go From Here? by Martin Luther King Jr. - Plough
Excerpts from King’s speech “Where Do We Go From Here?” delivered at the 11th Annual SCLC Convention, Atlanta, Georgia, August 16, 1967 I’m concerned about a better world I’m concerned about justice; I’m concerned about brotherhood; I’m concerned about truth And when one is concerned about that, he can never advocate violence
- Powerless at the Foot of the Cross by Sheila Cassidy
The dying know we are not God They accept that we cannot halt the process of cancer, the inexorable march of that terrible army that takes over a human body like an occupying force, pillaging, raping, desecrating without respect and without quarter All they ask is that we do not desert them: that we stand our ground at the foot of the cross
- Should ER Doctors Treat Bodies or People? by Abraham M. Nussbaum
Go, go, go ” She feels bolstered by the staff’s encouragement, even as doubts creep in “I don’t know how time works when you’re doing that,” Megan said, “but after thirty seconds or a minute, that was when they stopped everything and said, ‘OK, we’re going to check one more time for a pulse,’ and asked if anyone could think
- Money Free Medicine by Monika Mommsen and Milton Zimmerman - Plough
We get no pay, so whatever I do or don’t do doesn’t affect my income In conventional medicine nowadays, doctors have to see twenty to twenty-five patients in a day, every ten to fifteen minutes, and there’s just no time that they can actually take to listen Here we have that time and we’re not driven by economics
- Who Are You? by C. W. Howell - Plough
The woman, who we later come to learn is Helly R (played by Britt Lower), grows increasingly distressed as she realizes she cannot answer any of the questions addressed to her She does not know her name, she does not know the state in which she was born, she does not know the color of her mother’s eyes “What did you do to me?” she asks
- Poem: We Know How It Works by Jennifer Wallace - Plough
“We Know How It Works,” first published here, is included in her fifth book, Almost Entirely (Paraclete Press, 2017) 1 Comments You have ${x} free ${w} remaining
- King David’s Blues: A rabbi translating the Psalms finds . . . - Plough
Here Samuel models one way for dealing with depression He receives the Lord’s word; he doesn’t like it but he doesn’t brood – he howls and argues with the Lord all night about it There is no record of the Lord taking a blind bit of notice – unlike, for instance, his encounters with Abraham – but Samuel apparently feels better
- The School that Escaped to the Alps by Marianne Wright
Without our educational work we cannot exist If we have understood the demands of the state correctly, our school is to be dissolved or placed under National Socialist direction We would not find a dissolution acceptable … The upbringing and instruction of children in the spirit of the Christian church is a moral obligation for us ”
- Return to Vienna: A Kindertransport Child Comes Home by Norann Voll
Do you still remember when I taught you to ride a small bike? It is nice to do some sport I also ride my bike sometimes Do you remember when we went ice skating? Perhaps the time will come when we can do this together again It is very hot here now; always when I see the children eating ice cream I think of you, as I know how much you liked
- When Roads Are Washed Away by Amanda Held Opelt
The existence of roads is an indication that we cannot and should not live in isolation Roads prove that we need to move toward something, and that something is usually community Were we as self-sufficient and individualistic as we fancy ourselves, we would need no movement, require no paved way from house to house, or house to town
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