“To Kill a Mockingbird” Turns 50

Have I ever mentioned that I don’t like to read?  This morning the CBS Sunday Morning Show covered the 50th anniversary (birthday) of To Kill a Mockingbird. Katie Couric reported on the celebration of publication of this novel by Harper Lee.  Click here to visit the CBS website to read the entire article or watch the video.

I don’t remember having to read To Kill a Mockingbird in high school.  Many people did.  Lisa can’t believe that I was not required to read it except to say that I did go to public school in Texas. She grew up in Virginia.  Given what the state of Texas is doing with textbooks during the last decade she may be right to be suspicious of the education I received.  I am concerned for my sister’s kids.  My family moved around while I grew up.  Here are the cities and towns where I attending primary, middle and high school: Garland, Paris, Sour Lake, and Waco.  Anyway, the first time I read this book was in October 2004 on our 15th wedding anniversary trip.  It took me three days.  I had seen the film several times, even on the big screen, and own the DVD.

A favorite quote.  “They’re certainly entitled to think that, and they’re entitled to full respect for their opinions,” said Atticus, “but before I can live with other folks I’ve got to live with myself.  The one thing that doesn’t abide by majority rule is a person’s conscience.” -Atticus (114)

I’m a film person.  I watch To Kill a Mockingbird at least once a year and sometimes a few times more.  I enjoy the moment when the kids shame the adults into returning home rather than hanging Tom before the trial.  I also like the scene where Atticus and Scout are on swinging on the porch after Scout has a bad first day at school.  Atticus give sage advice about needing to see something from another persons point of view.  Finally, I like the scene where a neighbor tells Jem that the world needs people to do the hard things that other folks don’t want to do or can’t do.  His father, Atticus, is one of those people.

If you have not read To Kill a Mockingbird pick up a copy and do so.

Waiting for Gandhi

On Sunday evenings I catch up on my New York Times OP/Ed page.  Nicholas Kristof has been traveling in Israel and the West Bank for a couple of weeks.  His column this week notes that his family is traveling with him.  His kids had the experience of being tear gassed by IDF troops and had stones thrown at them by Palestinian youth.  Here are a few paragraphs of his post from July 9, 2010.

Waiting for Gandhi
Nicholas Kristof | The New York Times | July 9, 2010

Despite being stoned and tear-gassed on this trip, I find a reed of hope here. It’s that some Palestinians are dabbling in a strategy of nonviolent resistance that just might be a game-changer.

The organizers hail the methods of Gandhi and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., recognizing that nonviolent resistance could be a more powerful tool to achieve a Palestinian state than rockets and missiles. Bilin is one of several West Bank villages experimenting with these methods, so I followed protesters here as they marched to the Israeli security fence.

Israeli security forces knew how to deal with bombers but were flummoxed by peaceful Palestinian women. Even when beaten and fired on with rubber bullets, the women persevered. Finally, Israel gave up. It rerouted the security fence to bypass nearly all of Budrus.