I began to write a Mother's Day post
focused on the need for peace in the world with references to what is
commonly known as the Mother's Day Proclaimation
by Julia Ward Howe. I started to
think about my own mother who died in 2010. But also swirling around
in my mind are the politics of the day. I started thinking about the
mess with the health care debate, social security, medicare and
medicaid, which brought me to another thought about my mother and
something she once told me.
My
mother lived in a little place called Garden City Idaho.
“Garden
City is nearly surrounded by Boise but retains a separate municipal
government. Garden City was named for gardens raised by
Chinese immigrants who lived in the area. The name of the city's only
main street, Chinden Boulevard, is a portmanteau of the words "China"
and "garden." In the second decade of the 21st century, it
became a haven for artists' studios due to its cheap rents and
eclectic ambiance.” Source Wikipedia
She lived in a trailer court near the
Boise River. Also living there where lots of feral cats. My mother
fed a number of them every day and they were, in my mind, quite a
bother. They lived under and around the trailer except one really
scraggly white one with one eye and matted and patchy fur which she
allowed in the house. She contacted the city many times about them
with no help. She contacted the Idaho Humane Society based in Boise
but they said they had no jurisdiction in Garden City even though
they had tried to take over the animal control duties for them for
years. So my mother was basically stuck.
Which brings me to what she said to me
that has always echoed in my mind since.
I said something like, “Mom, why do
you do this. They smell and crap everywhere and besides you can
barely afford it?”
She said,
“After the depression I
told myself that I would never allow
any person or animal go
hungry as long as I am alive.”
This brought me back around to the
politics of today and thought of what life was like during the great
depression and the New Deal.
"The New Deal
produced a political realignment, making the Democratic Party the
majority.
The Republicans were
split, with conservatives opposing the entire New Deal as an enemy of
business and growth, and liberals accepting some of it and promising
to make it more efficient. The realignment
crystallized into the New Deal Coalition that dominated most
presidential elections into the 1960s, while the opposing
conservative coalition largely controlled Congress from 1939 to 1964.
By 1936 the term "liberal" typically was used for
supporters of the New Deal, and "conservative" for its
opponents." Wikipedia
I am a liberal. So was my
mother. It is clear to me that the New Deal, brought to us by
liberals, puts us on the right side of history. And the conservative
Republicans are still fighting against these liberal values. Which
brings me back to thoughts of peace.
In
closing. Julia Ward Howe called on mother's to stand up against war
with the “conviction that women had a responsibility to shape their
societies at the political level.” In war it is women and children
who suffer the most. Like Howe I ask everyone to think about this on
Mother's Day and every day. Please work for peace not war. Join the Idaho Peace Coalition or any of the many peace organization in the country. Also please visit Kether Muse Peace Resources.
6 comments:
Thank you, Nino.
loved what your Mother said...wise words,tender heart. Love your work!
Stephanie
My Mom grew up during the Great Depression too. I'm grateful that she tried to teach me to be frugal and resourceful. She said they had only one picture on the walls in their house, a portrait of FDR. Wish we had him now.
This post is a great Mother's Day tribute and I feel it's a gift to me to know it's author too.
Wonderful article. Us mothers need to rally for peace again like in the beginning.
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