Friday, October 24, 2014

October Tales: Part 2 of 3 -- United Nations Day



Dear Members, Alumni, & Friends of the James Scholar Media Team:

In part two of my three-part series of “October Tales,” we celebrate the 69th birthday of the United Nations. On this date in 1945, the U.N. Charter was signed by the founding members in San Francisco. The ideals enshrined in the U.N. Charter, however, were far from new. The framers of the charter took inspiration from many sources, including the United States Constitution (drafted in 1787) and the Law of Great Peace (the constitution of the Iroquois League of Native American nations, which was adopted in 1142). Democracy, the rule of law, and peacemaking are universal values that have sprung forth in many times and climes around the globe – not only in ancient Greece and Rome, but also in protohistoric North America. Here, then, are the preambles to these three founding documents, which form a golden chain of freedom, linking the past to the present and the future of the human race.

Opening Articles of the Iroquois Constitution (1142)
Spoken by the Prophet Deganawidah and His Chief Disciples, Hiawatha (Chief Orator) and Jikonhsaseh (Mother of Nations)

1. I am Dekanawidah and with the Five Nations' Confederate Lords I plant the Tree of Great Peace. I plant it in your territory, Adodarhoh, and the Onondaga Nation, in the territory of you who are Firekeepers. I name the tree the Tree of the Great Long Leaves. Under the shade of this Tree of the Great Peace we spread the soft white feathery down of the globe thistle as seats for you, Adodarhoh, and your cousin Lords. We place you upon those seats, spread soft with the feathery down of the globe thistle, there beneath the shade of the spreading branches of the Tree of Peace. There shall you sit and watch the Council Fire of the Confederacy of the Five Nations, and all the affairs of the Five Nations shall be transacted at this place before you, Adodarhoh, and your cousin Lords, by the Confederate Lords of the Five Nations.

2. Roots have spread out from the Tree of the Great Peace, one to the north, one to the east, one to the south and one to the west. The name of these roots is The Great White Roots and their nature is Peace and Strength. If any man or any nation outside the Five Nations shall obey the laws of the Great Peace and make known their disposition to the Lords of the Confederacy, they may trace the Roots to the Tree and if their minds are clean and they are obedient and promise to obey the wishes of the Confederate Council, they shall be welcomed to take shelter beneath the Tree of the Long Leaves. We place at the top of the Tree of the Long Leaves an Eagle who is able to see afar. If he sees in the distance any evil approaching or any danger threatening he will at once warn the people of the Confederacy.

3. To you Adodarhoh, the Onondaga cousin Lords, I and the other Confederate Lords have entrusted the care taking and the watching of the Five Nations Council Fire. When there is any business to be transacted and the Confederate Council is not in session, a messenger shall be dispatched either to Adodarhoh, Hononwirehtonh or Skanawatih, Fire Keepers, or to their War Chiefs with a full statement of the case desired to be considered. Then shall Adodarhoh call his cousin (associate) Lords together and consider whether or not the case is of sufficient importance to demand the attention of the Confederate Council. If so, Adodarhoh shall dispatch messengers to summon all the Confederate Lords to assemble beneath the Tree of the Long Leaves. When the Lords are assembled the Council Fire shall be kindled, but not with chestnut wood1, and Adodarhoh shall formally open the Council. Then shall Adodarhoh and his cousin Lords, the Fire Keepers, announce the subject for discussion. The Smoke of the Confederate Council Fire shall ever ascend and pierce the sky so that other nations who may be allies may see the Council Fire of the Great Peace. Adodarhoh and his cousin Lords are entrusted with the Keeping of the Council Fire.

Preamble to the United States Constitution
Adopted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1787)

We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

Preamble to the United Nations Charter
Adopted in San Francisco, California (1945)

WE THE PEOPLES OF THE UNITED NATIONS DETERMINED
·        * to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, which twice in our lifetime has brought untold sorrow to mankind, and
·        * to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and small, and
·        * to establish conditions under which justice and respect for the obligations arising from treaties and other sources of international law can be maintained, and
·        * to promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom,
AND FOR THESE ENDS
·        * to practice tolerance and live together in peace with one another as good neighbours, and
·        * to unite our strength to maintain international peace and security, and
·        * to ensure, by the acceptance of principles and the institution of methods, that armed force shall not be used, save in the common interest, and
·        * to employ international machinery for the promotion of the economic and social advancement of all peoples,
HAVE RESOLVED TO COMBINE OUR EFFORTS TO ACCOMPLISH THESE AIMS

Accordingly, our respective Governments, through representatives assembled in the city of San Francisco, who have exhibited their full powers found to be in good and due form, have agreed to the present Charter of the United Nations and do hereby establish an international organization to be known as the United Nations.


Next week, the third and final installment of our “October Tales” series will be released – on the Keltik New Year’s Eve! J

Until then –
Rob

Friday, October 17, 2014

October 2014 Leadership Reflection



Leadership Reflection for October 2014
Leadership in the Home: Family Relationships
      In my writings about leadership, I usually expound on how we can exercise leadership through exerting a positive influence in our workplace, often with reference to great leaders of the past and present and the lessons that they have to teach us. I’m going to make a departure from this customary point of view by sharing something with you about how the way we exercise leadership at home – in our family relationships – can transform society in a positive way. In honor of Sweetest Day (coming up on Saturday, October 18th), I’m going to expound on the medieval ideals of “courtly love” and how its practice changed how people thought about love and family relationships, both within and beyond their households.
        One major assumption behind the ideals of “courtly love” was the equal partnership of men and women in building a better society and handing down these chivalric values to future generations. In the egalitarian ideals of “courtly love,” we can glimpse a foregleam of the women’s rights movement that was spearheaded by such luminaries as Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797) in the United Kingdom and Sojourner Truth (1797-1883) in the United States. The ideals promulgated by the troubadours of medieval Europe have ultimately led to the opening of leadership roles to women in many levels of society, 800 years later.

The Occitan Culture of Love
By Rob Chappell, M.A., JSMT Advisor
Reprinted (and Slightly Revised) from Cursus Honorum (Course of Honors) VII: 3 (October 2006)
        With Sweetest Day (the third Saturday in October) just around the corner, let’s take a few moments to reflect on where the Western world got its basic ideas about romantic love. An overview of this topic could fill an entire book, but in brief: our Western notions of romantic love really began to take shape in 12th-century Occitania, a once-autonomous region in southern France that included the French Pyrenees and the Riviera.
        The spark that lit the flame of the Occitan “Culture of Love” was its cosmopolitan outlook. Occitania was a multicultural melting pot during the High Middle Ages, and its vibrant society was rather progressive for its time. In 12th-century Occitania, for example, religious tolerance was extended to all Christians (both Catholics and Cathars), Jews, and Muslims; and women were allowed to own property, engage in commerce, enjoy literary activity, and rule sovereign territories on their own. Within this tolerant atmosphere, the arrival of new belief systems (such as Catharism) from Eastern Europe, the importation of sophisticated love poetry from the Arab world, and the recovery of Classical Latin texts on the ancient Roman art of love profoundly impacted all levels of Occitan society: the nobility, the newly emergent middle class, and the peasantry.
        A new breeze was blowing in this open-minded corner of Europe that would forever change the Western outlook on romantic love. Instead of treating women as property that could be carried off or bartered away at will, the “Culture of Love” placed women on an equal par with men. Gentlemen had to practice “courtly manners” to woo the ladies of their choice, and “being courtly” included such things as serenading ladies from beneath their windows and exchanging gifts as tokens of love on a regular basis. To be successful suitors, gentlemen also had to become well versed in the Seven Liberal Arts, undertake heroic deeds of chivalry, and compose love poetry!
        The “Culture of Love” and its lofty romantic ideals quickly spread to royal courts and noble households across Europe. A new generation of love poets – the French troubadours and German Minnesingers – introduced their audiences to the new ideals of courtly love by composing and performing versified stories of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. The chivalrous characters in these popular stories modeled the “art of courtly love” and held forth a new set of ideals for people to emulate.
        The “Culture of Love” has been preserved for us in countless Latin and vernacular books and songs from the Late Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Here are some links to online resources about the “Culture of Love” that is still influencing us today, eight centuries after its zenith in Occitania.

·        Courtly Love: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/140814/courtly-love à This article summarizes the origins and spread of the culture of courtly love in Occitania and how its ideals have influenced Western civilization ever since.
·        Dante’s La Vita Nuova (The New Life): http://www.poetryintranslation.com/PITBR/Italian/TheNewLife.htmDante Alighieri (1265-1321) narrates his own experience of courtly love with Beatrice Portinari in this autobiographical masterpiece, composed in both poetry and prose.
·        Eleanor of Aquitaine: http://www.royalty.nu/Europe/England/Angevin/Eleanor.htmlEleanor, originally Duchess of Aquitaine (1122-1204), became Queen of England, chief patron of the troubadours, and mother of King Richard the Lionhearted!


October Tales: Part 1 of 3



Dear Members, Alumni, & Friends of the JSMT:

Today, I’m featuring the first of three “October Tales” for your enjoyment as Halloween is just two weeks away (and with it, the arrival of the Keltik New Year!). This week’s tale is not Keltik in origin – instead, it’s a Continental tale that originated in Scandinavia and then migrated across the English Channel to England, where it was written down in epic verse by an anonymous Anglo-Saxon poet, sometime during the 8th century CE.

Bulfinch’s Mythology
By Thomas Bulfinch (1796–1867)
Volume III: The Age of Chivalry (1913 Edition)

Beowulf

        1. Notable among the names of heroes of the British race is that of Beowulf, which appeals to all English-speaking people in a very special way, since he is the one hero in whose story we may see the ideals of our English forefathers before they left their Continental home to cross to the islands of Britain.
        2. Although this hero had distinguished himself by numerous feats of strength during his boyhood and early youth, it was as the deliverer of Hrothgar, king of Denmark, from the monster Grendel that he first gained wide renown. Grendel was half monster and half man, and had his abode in the fen-fastnesses in the vicinity of Hrothgar’s residence. Night after night he would steal into the king’s great palace called Heorot and slay sometimes as many as thirty at one time of the knights sleeping there.
        3. Beowulf put himself at the head of a selected band of warriors, went against the monster, and after a terrible fight slew it. The following night Grendel’s mother, a fiend scarcely less terrible than her son, carried off one of Hrothgar’s boldest thanes. Once more Beowulf went to the help of the Danish king, followed the she-monster to her lair at the bottom of a muddy lake in the midst of the swamp, and with his good sword Hrunting and his own muscular arms broke the sea-woman’s neck.
        4. Upon his return to his own country of the Geats, loaded with honors bestowed upon him by Hrothgar. Beowulf served the king of Geatland as the latter’s most trusted counsellor and champion. When, after many years, the king fell before an enemy, the Geats unanimously chose Beowulf for their new king. His fame as a warrior kept his country free from invasion, and his wisdom as a statesman increased its prosperity and happiness.
        5. In the fiftieth year of Beowulf’s reign, however, a great terror fell upon the land in the way of a monstrous fire-dragon, which flew forth by night from its den in the rocks, lighting up the blackness with its blazing breath, and burning houses and homesteads, men and cattle, with the flames from its mouth. When the news came to Beowulf that his people were suffering and dying, and that no warrior dared to risk his life in an effort to deliver the country from this deadly devastation, the aged king took up his shield and sword and went forth to his last fight. At the entrance of the dragon’s cave Beowulf raised his voice and shouted a furious defiance to the awesome guardian of the den. Roaring hideously and flapping his glowing wings together, the dragon rushed forth and half flew, half sprang, on Beowulf. Then began a fearful combat, which ended in Beowulf’s piercing the dragon’s scaly armor and inflicting a mortal wound, but alas! in himself being given a gash in the neck by his opponent’s poisoned fangs which resulted in his death. As he lay stretched on the ground, his head supported by Wiglaf, an honored warrior who had helped in the fight with the dragon, Beowulf roused himself to say, as he grasped Wiglaf’s hand:
        “Thou must now look to    the needs of the nation;
        Here dwell I no longer,    for Destiny calleth me!
        Bid thou my warriors    after my funeral pyre
        Build me a burial-cairn    high on the sea-cliff’s head;
        So that the seafarers    Beowulf’s Barrow
        Henceforth shall name it,    they who drive far and wide
        Over the mighty flood    their foamy keels.
        Thou art the last of all    the kindred of Wagmund!
        Wyrd has swept all my kin,    all the brave chiefs away!
        Now must I follow them!”
        6. These last words spoken, the king of the Geats, brave to seek danger and brave to look on death and Fate undaunted, fell back dead. According to his last desires, his followers gathered wood and piled it on the cliff-head. Upon this funeral pyre was laid Beowulf’s body and consumed to ashes. Then, upon the same cliff of Hronesness, was erected a huge burial cairn, widespread and lofty, to be known thereafter as Beowulf’s Barrow.


The Scandinavian warrior-hero Beowulf (fl. ca. 6th century CE) battles a fire-breathing dragon in this painting by J. R. Skelton (1908).  (Image Credit: Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons)

Next week, I’ll more October Tales to share in part two of this three-part series! :)

Merry Midterm Day!

Rob

Friday, October 10, 2014

October's Bright Blue Weather!



Dear Members, Alumni, and Friends of the JSMT:

Have you ever sat down to write a research paper and found that you had too much material to fit within the assigned page limit? That’s how I feel about the month of October with regard to Quotemail: I have too much good material on hand to let it go to waste! So from now through Halloween, Quotemail will be distributed on a weekly basis! J

This week, I’d like to share with you some of my favorite autumn-themed poems, all of which I can still remember reading (in my Open Court textbooks – classics!) during the enchanted autumn days of my elementary school years back in the 1970s. It was downright amazing to watch all the changes in Nature during recess from one week to the next!

“October's Bright Blue Weather”
By Helen Hunt Jackson (1830-1885)
O suns and skies and clouds of June,
And flowers of June together,
Ye cannot rival for one hour
October’s bright blue weather!
When loud the bumble-bee makes haste,
Belated, thriftless vagrant,
And Golden-Rod is dying fast,
And lanes with grapes are fragrant.
When Gentians roll their fringes tight
To save them for the morning,
And chestnuts fall from satin burrs
Without a sound of warning.
When on the ground red apples lie
In piles like jewels shining,
And redder still on old stone walls
Are leaves of woodbine twining.
When all the lovely wayside things
Their white-winged seeds are sowing,
And in the fields, still green and fair,
Late aftermaths are growing.
When springs run low, and on the brooks,
In idle golden freighting,
Bright leaves sink noiseless in the hush
Of woods, for winter waiting.
When comrades seek sweet country haunts,
By twos and twos together,
And count like misers, hour by hour,
October’s bright blue weather.
O suns and skies and flowers of June,
Count all your boasts together;
Love loveth best of all the year
October’s bright blue weather!

“A Calendar of Sonnets: October”
By Helen Hunt Jackson (1830-1885)
The month of carnival of all the year,
When Nature lets the wild earth go its way,
And spend whole seasons on a single day.
The spring-time holds her white and purple dear;
October, lavish, flaunts them far and near;
The summer charily her reds doth lay
Like jewels on her costliest array;
October, scornful, burns them on a bier.
The winter hoards his pearls of frost in sign
Of kingdom: whiter pearls than winter knew,
Or empress wore, in Egypt's ancient line,
October, feasting 'neath her dome of blue,
Drinks at a single draught, slow filtered through
Sunshiny air, as in a tingling wine!

“Autumn” (1845)
By Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882)
Thou comest, Autumn, heralded by the rain,
With banners, by great gales incessant fanned,
Brighter than brightest silks of Samarkand,
And stately oxen harnessed to thy wain!
Thou standest, like imperial Charlemagne,
Upon thy bridge of gold; thy royal hand
Outstretched with benedictions o’er the land,
Blessing the farms through all thy vast domain!
Thy shield is the red Harvest Moon, suspended
So long beneath the heaven’s o’er-hanging eaves;
Thy steps are by the farmer’s prayers attended;
Like flames upon an altar shine the sheaves;
And, following thee, in thy ovation splendid,
Thine almoner, the wind, scatters the golden leaves!

Next Friday: “October Tales – Part 1 of 2” will include a condensed version of the earliest known epic poem in Old English! J

Until then –
Rob


“Sight doesn’t define vision. Eyes of the heart will see far beyond any physical force.” – A.N.A., My Youngest Cousin :)
Read my favorite motivational poem @ http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Invictus.