Archive for May 3rd, 2012

May 3rd, 2012

News from Author Judith Dickerman-Nelson

by PaulM

Writer and poet Judith Dickerman-Nelson is a 1991 graduate of UMass Lowell, former editor of the campus literary magazine, and long-time staff member at the Cambodian Mutual Assistance Association in Lowell. She also has a master’s degree from Emerson College. She sent us this update about her recent and upcoming literary activities related to publication of her first book, a memoir about being a teenage mother. The book received national attention when the Associated Press picked up a Sun article about the book.–PM

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Upcoming Speaking Events:

Friday May 18, Image Theater Presents: City Stories at Old Court Pub on Central Street, 8 pm (various writers will be reading & another group on May 19)

Friday June 22, UMass Lowell Downtown Bookstore, 5 pm (B. Morrison and J D-N)

Saturday June 23, World Eye Bookshop, 1-3 pm (B. Morrison and J D-N)

My book “Believe in Me: A Teen Mom’s Story” was released in February by Jefferson Park Press, a publisher out of Charlottesville, Virginia. The book looks back to my high school years when I was a cheerleader and an honor student. I attended a Catholic girls’ school in Massachusetts, and it was the summer before my senior year. My boyfriend gave me a diamond, and we started planning for our life together. But my pregnancy changed everything, and when his parents wanted me to get an abortion, I had to make decisions that would alter my world. The book looks at my journey, internally and externally, and I hope that my story helps others remember the difficult times of high school and young love.

Since the book came out I’ve been traveling some to promote it. I went to Pennsylvania to the Write Stuff Conference and sold books at their book fair. Then I traveled to the Virginia Festival of the Book where I presented on a panel called Memoirs: Women on the Edge with B. Morrison, author of “Innocent: Confessions of a Welfare Mother.” Later, I presented to two different groups of students at St. Anne’s-Belfield, a prep private high school in Charlottesville.

One of the interesting things I’m discovering is that my book crosses all age groups. When I wrote the story, I did hope that it would resonate beyond a teen readership. So I was thrilled when a woman contacted me and told me that her ninety-year old dad told her about my book and that he’d loved the writing in it. And then when I presented to a group of students at Chelmsford High, a teacher’s mom came to hear me speak. The eighty-year-old woman had downloaded the book to her Kindle! Back in Lowell, I presented to a group of teen mom’s at the Pollard Memorial Library. I was honored to hear their stories, too, learning how they deal with the challenges of being young moms. I’ll be meeting with another group of young parents in mid-May at the library, and I plan to get out and speak to more schools, too. At UMass Lowell, I spoke to a group of writers in a Personal and Reflective Writing class, talking about my writing process and reading from the book. Like the students I’d spoken with at high schools, these students also had great questions for me. I’m available to talk to church groups, high schools and colleges, non-profits and others and plan to present at conferences.

I’m open to suggestions and ideas and can be reached via e-mail at jnelson_302@ hotmail.com. Or look me up on Facebook (Judith Dickerman-Nelson) and send me a message. “Believe in Me: A Teen Mom’s Story” is available on Amazon in paperback and on Kindle. It’s also available from the publisher. But you can shop locally and find the book at the UMass Lowell Downtown Bookstore, Brewed Awakening, and St Joseph the Worker Shrine’s Gift Shop (you might want to call first to make sure they have copies). My next book, “Spirits Dancing Into Light” will be published later this year by Loom Press in English-Khmer bilingual edition. I hope to have the chance to meet some you as I’m out and about reading. Peace.

 

 

May 3rd, 2012

Increasing cooperation among local access TV stations

by DickH

Several months ago Comcast on very short notice dictated to Lowell Telecommunications Corporation, the city’s public access television and technology organization, that local government programming that had long appeared on Channel 10 on Lowell cable would be switched to Channel 99. Although that transition seemed to have gone smoothly, I and many others at LTC saw it as an omen of future dictates to come. As one of several ideas on how to respond to such eventualities, we decided to invite representatives from other local cable access stations in Greater Lowell to meet for a variety of reasons. There is strength in numbers so five or six local cable stations responding to a disagreeable move by Comcast (or any other corporate monolith) might be more effective than just one. There was also interest in sharing cable TV content across municipal boundaries.

The first meeting of this Greater Lowell local access television consortium occurred yesterday at LTC. Representatives from Chelmsford TeleMedia, Billerica Access TV, Dracut Access TV, Tyngsborough Community Television, Westford Community Access TV and the Groton Channel all attended.

The topic that was most discussed was the possibility of creating a weekly regional news magazine program. The consensus was that this would be desirable but that it would also require some pooling of financial and personnel resources so it might not be a goal that is realized quickly. There was also interest, in the meantime, of sharing existing content among the various cable organizations. For example, someone in Chelmsford might already be producing a political/public affairs program that would be of interest to surrounding communities. It seems that the mechanics of getting a program from one public access station onto another’s programing schedule are completely doable. The challenge seems to be how to identify such programs and then ask for them. There are a variety of ways to accomplish that without too much additional effort on anyone’s behalf. So hopefully we here in Lowell in the not too distant future will begin seeing more content produced at neighboring public access stations on our own cable channels.

May 3rd, 2012

Women’s rights are human rights, but will “backward” nations see them as keys to success? by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog.

High-level State Department work requires intelligence, sensitivity, and a healthy dose of optimism. This is what I took away from last week’s State Department briefings of 22 members of the Association of Opinion Journalists, formerly the National Conference of Editorial Writers. Diplomats whose portfolios cover everything from Western Hemisphere Affairs to the Middle East, from North Korea, China and Japan to human rights and global women’s issues, were all highly analytical, had evolved policies for resolving conflicting interests among disparate world players, and seemed determined to measure success in very tiny increments. But will certain intractable problems be resolved even during their lifetimes?

Take, for example, Ambassador Melanne Verveer, who heads the Office of Global Women’s Issues. Contemplating the transitional period in Afghanistan and the status of women after U.S. disengagement, she observed, “No one has suffered more in Afghanistan than women,” who “are the key to the future.” Their “survivability has grown,” as measured by a reduction in the maternal mortality rate, greater numbers of women going to school, availing themselves of economic opportunity including access to microcredit, more participation in the military and in parliament and the provincial councils.

All hopeful signs, to be sure. But the problem of violence against women is deeply entrenched, whether because of national cultural practices or misinterpretation of the Koran. Verveer says women’s strength is knowing of their own dignity. They are working with imams, mullahs and some community leaders to clarify what the proper reading of religious rules should be. Verveer’s optimism in the face of U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan assumes continuing efforts to build women’s capacity to remain engaged in civic life. But it’s hard to believe there will not be substantial backsliding under increased Taliban influence.

Improvements in life, especially in economic activity and education, have “the highest positive value for continuing the changes,” insisted Verveer. It’s a slender reed of hope that education and greater economic sustainability will put an end to genital mutilation, that most barbarous culturally and religiously promoted process that afflicts women’s health and ability to shape their own lives. Verveer left us with the admonition of a new Afghan’s women’s network, a coalition of women’s organizations urging that people “stop looking at us as victims and look at us as the leaders we are.” I hope she is right. I wish I shared her optimism, especially considering the 142 million girls worldwide who have been subjected to this particular atrocity.
Human rights are repressed in different ways in different nations. Will “Arab awakening” movements make a difference? U.S. diplomats are closely watching Egypt and Yemen, among the nations where 80 percent or more of women have been victims of genital mutilation. What about Libya, where progressive activists have been tortured or made to “disappear?” We have less leverage with Libya than elsewhere because they have oil and don’t need our money.

We depend on oil from Saudi Arabia, which forbids women to vote or even drive and were barred from participating in the 2008 Olympics. We trade with China, which bans internet access, jails political dissidents, and restricts religious minorities and press freedoms.

The Obama Administration has just announced sanctions against companies and governments that use digital technology to deprive its people of human rights. So we’ are taking steps here and there, and moving forward incrementally to improve rights for women, political activists and religious and ethnic minorities.

Last night President Obama talked about the prolonged withdrawal from Afghanistan and “protecting human rights, men and women, boys and girls.” But our goal there, he said, is “not to rebuild the country in America’s image, but to defeat Al Qaeda.” The emphasis is clearly on military security and ending the war “responsibly,” whatever that turns out to mean. Human rights and opportunities for women may be pushed down the priority list when the Karzai government’s rampant kleptocracy and ill prepared troops still have yet to be properly addressed.

Managing international relations is a tough job, dependent not only on our government’s unsentimental pragmatism and technological sophistication but also on the healthy dose of optimism that characterize its diplomatic practices. That leaves experts and onlookers alike to ponder a time of great uncertainty.

I’d greatly appreciate your thoughts in the comments section below.
Photo AP/Charles Dharapak