Bedlam Farm Blog Journal by Jon Katz

18 April

Flower Art, Thursday, April 18, 2004. The Beautiful March Of The Misspelled: Calla Lily’s, White Roses, And A Curious Cat

by Jon Katz

This was a landmark day for me. Sue Silverstein wrote her first weekly column for my blog. I’m thrilled she will be a columnist each week, writing about her art, her students, and her unique ideas about teaching and working from the donations she always gets from the Army Of Good. This was a brilliant idea of hers. She is revolutionizing the teaching of art in schools.

Sue is the first writer other than Maria to have a column on my blog; I couldn’t be happier.

I was also thrilled by the Army of Good’s response to the Cambridge Food Pantry and the Children’s Food Drive this week, which ends today and tomorrow. I’m grateful and proud. We sent much-needed food and hoped to continue this good work. Nothing makes me happier than helping feed children whose families are struggling.

For me, that is what it means to be an American, not anger, hatred, and cruelty.

I sat down today with beautiful things whose names I misspelled. I thought it would make a glorious parade, and I was right. Two things seemed to provoke a min-firestone of cruel and foolish messages; they deserved a parade, including Zip, one of the more controversial cats in my life, and in edgy and often hostile America. What could be better than a March Of The Misspelled? See you tomorrow; I hope you enjoy the pictures. I loved making them.

I love Calla’s and, now, White Roses. They are the flower of good and compassion.

I’m happy to explore the idea of flowers as sculptures in their way. I see them in that way.

Thanks for the good words many of you are sending me. It’s not the fault of the flowers or the cat.
I look forward to seeing you tomorrow.

 

This is a flower of sorrow, I think.

This is a flower of grace to me, which most Calla Lily’s are.

 

This is a meditation flower, a deep well.

This is a community of flowers talking to one another.

To me, this is a sculpture, as many flowers are. I’m always looking for that feeling.

Zip is a famous cat because I often confused his name with my dog Bud’s. This outraged many people, who decided I either had Dementia or was just evil. It was good for me. I learned a lot about myself, my Dyslexia, my age, my life, and my humanity beyond my pretty little farm.

It taught me to respect myself, not the opinions of strangers. It was a wakeup in some ways.

I called him Zud just to be safe. He didn’t seem to mind.

I had a tuna fish sandwich for lunch and saved some for Zip for our afternoon meeting. He was pretty happy.

18 April

Thanks For Working Miracles For Children’s Food Week: “Your Army Of Good Is A Bless To Us…” Compassion And Love Lives, All Over America.

by Jon Katz

What the Army of Good did this week is nothing short of a miracle, one of its high water marks.

I’m struggling with words to describe what I saw today. I hope you can see it and feel it in these pictures. You did it, you and the incredible volunteers at the  Cambridge Food Pantry. They were hauling and unpacking boxes all morning. “We’re all in this together,” said Sue, one of the volunteers.

The photograph above shows the inside of a food backpack for a family of five, which was sent home this afternoon.

(Today’s requests, the two most in-demand that are gone are Peanut Butter and  Ravioli. See below)

The Amazon boxes are still pouring in. The backpack bags belonging to 66 families and 188 children were stuffed to the stretching point. Scott and Sue were tearing boxes up for arts; this after, dozens more kept coming. I had yet to learn how this week was going to turn out. I could not be happier or more grateful.

Scott, a longtime and hard-working volunteer, approached me this morning and said, “Your people are a blessing to us.” So true.

Late this afternoon, a group of 5th graders (not in the pantry program) came from the central school to distribute the bags to the families and children who needed them.

Thanks to your efforts, this children’s food week has been tremendously successful. The volunteers were shocked and happy, knowing these families and their children would eat well tonight and through the weekend. No substitutes were needed today. This is a cause of the heart, the true America revealed.

Sue Preces (a hero at the pantry), a super volunteer, the director of the back program, and a key orderer at the pantry were beaming. She has kept the pantry going in some tough times. They posed, holding up three of the goods that got her today because of you.

The backpacks contained everything one could wish for and asked for, from soup to fruit juice to noodles and Chicken Noodle Soup.

This is the last day of the children’s food campaign, and we can end with a bang:

(Sarah told me today that the pantry is entirely out of two things Chef Boyardee Beef Ravioli, 15 oz. 4 Pack, $3.79, and Skippy Super Chunk Peanut Butter, 16.3 ounce (Pack Of 12), $30.This could be a grand finale for Children’s Food Week At The Cambridge Pantry.)

It was a joy to pack those bags today.  Maria was there also.

Everyone was full of everything wanted and requested, which was unprecedented. What an honor to be there and see the joy, happiness, and smiles. And that’s before the food even gets to the families and kids. While there, the peanut butter and ravioli, two favorites for the children, ran out. See below. They will be preparing a full and rich dinner as I write this. I can’t imagine doing anything more gratifying.

Helping with this food would be an excellent way to end the week, which is already fantastic and beyond anyone’s expectations. But you’ve done more than enough this week if you can’t.

It looked like this when I got there—a glorious sight.

Scott, one of the backbone volunteers of the Cambridge Food Pantry

 

The breakfast cereal the children wanted arrived in box after box.

So did Campbell’s Noodle Soup, which many families and kids will eat tonight.

This morning, the empty boxes filled up the Pantry’s pantry.

 

Cambridge Pantry Director Sue and Scott Eddy spent hours breaking down boxes and distributing the food.

Volunteer Sue is a bright spot; she works hard, continuously, competently, and cheerfully. The volunteers are a wonderful group; they’ve kept the pantry together for years, good and bad. It is never easy there; the work is never done but desperately needed.

 

This afternoon, two more truckloads of Amazon boxes, one above and one below, arrived at the pantry in two deliveries.

Below, big fat food backpacks were filled with foods for breakfast, dinner, and snacks for kids who like snacks.

Today was one of the most uplifting days of my life. I can’t thank all of you enough. I had a dream that Peanut Butter and Ravioli kicked off the end of a beautiful week.

18 April

Sold, The Meditation Tree Hanging Piece!

by Jon Katz

Maria’s long hanging piece project, the “Meditation Tree” hanging piece, sold almost immediately, as I suspected it would. She worked long and hard on this one. I was happy she sold it, but a part of me was hoping it wouldn’t sell and that I could meditate with it on our living room wall.

She made me a smaller one, and I am grateful and very happy for her. Her heart is in all his work, but this one was special.

She loves the message the buyer sent her, “it’s going to the right place,” she said. Maria took the hanging piece to the Post Office and shipped it out.

18 April

Zip, (AKA Zud) , While I Photograph Flowers. What Is A Happy Cat? Forgiving, But Not Forgetting. You Can’t Love Animals And Hate People

by Jon Katz

He has deinitely landed in exactly the right home for him. He gets adoration and can hunt chipmunks and whatever else he wants to.” – Barbara Mann.

Barbara Mann is an animal lover and blog reader, and I thought her message this morning was right on the money.

I’m not exactly a cat expert, but I’ve lived with Zip for months. He exudes trust, business, affection, and murderous cat skills and has ingratiated himself with every animal on the farm (except Bud, although we haven’t had a chance to find out).

He has three or four good sleeping hideouts, including a heated cat house, and occasionally hunts mice, chipmunks, moles, and birds. Maria spoils him rotten, and so do I.

Bud has everything a cat might want—good food, love, his shots, attention, hunting, brushing (which he needs again), warm places to sleep day and night, dog, sheep, and donkey friends, and even bits of salmon every week or so.

He and Zinnia play in the grass like children in a playground; the donkeys are happy to hang out with him.

He loves to sit on my shoulder and doze, and yesterday, he slept next to me while I photographed a flower on the porch table. At one point, I petted him and said, “I’m glad the animal rights people didn’t get the police to take you away. You seem so happy here, and we are so happy to have you here.” It was a healing and beautiful moment for me.

He is a hellion at times, but one with a big heart.

But the police visit wasn’t really funny. It speaks of the harm well-meaning but poorly informed yet what uninformed but powerful people do all the time in the name of animal rights.

People who know nothing about animals (that would be most of the animal rights people I’ve met) should not be permitted to determine their fates.

That visit, could’ve turned out very differently and has in many places around the country.

Twenty equine vets from all over America have examined the New York Carriage horses and said they are the best cared for horses they have seen; they are healthy, happy, and well protected.

Yet the animal rights movement insists they be sent off to distant sanctuaries that don’t exist because working for people is cruel.

Zip does the same thing they do; he doesn’t sleep in the farmhouse. He could have had the same fate as many horses who lost their jobs, which is important for me to remember. The people who claim to support animal rights wanted to take him away from us—abuse in reverse.

The longer I live with Zip, the angrier I get, and I don’t like or want to be angry. The truth is you can’t hate animals and love people. They go together.

I laughed when the police came and said someone from out of town called them to say I was abusing our cat by not letting him sleep in the house, but in a barn or on the porch.

I thought about it yesterday. It wasn’t funny, and I shouldn’t joke about it. If I hadn’t lived in the country where there is still some sanity about working animals (Zip is our barn cat, rat, and mouse remover service), they might have taken him away, which is a sad thing for him and us.

A California woman who used to give pony rides to children was driven from her work offering rides because one member of a human rights group decided it was cruel.

The police who investigated said the ponies were healthy and well-treated. She was asked to leave the town grounds. She couldn’t take care of the ponies any longer, and they were sold. They are all dead now.

This work with children was her life; she lost it all and her livelihood.

That isn’t funny either.

It reminds me that many of the people who call themselves warriors for animal rights are killing off most domestic working animals and persecuting the people who most often love, work with, and need them.

Those people do not have the resources and soapbox I have; they have no way to fight back. Zip reminds me of what many of them have lost and are losing every day.

We need a new way to think about animals, especially those who have worked with human beings for thousands of years and helped us with farming and building protection and companionship.

Animals just like Zip and working horses. We were invaded by rats and mice, rodents that often spread diseases that kill and sicken animals and people.

We have to keep them working with people who care for them, as we care for Zip, so they can keep a place alongside humans in this greedy and disconnected world.

There is no greater right for animals than the right to survive in our world rather than to be sent off to waste and die in some field or be sent to Mexico and have nails drilled into their heads, or euthanized as happens to so many working horses, as well as ponies, elephants and working dogs that animal rights groups have decided should never be allowed to work with people, so are sent off to die or be killed.

I need to keep pointing this tragedy out to people while there are still animals to live with and work with. At this rate, that will be a short time.

Among other things, Zip will also stand out in my mind as a symbol of why we need working animals and should fight for their right to live their natural lives.

My wish for them is to continue to help people, love them, and live with them.

I can forgive the ignorant and broken woman who called the police to get them to take Zip away. She was not alone.

But I won’t forget her. Zip will remind me.

 

18 April

Sue Silverstein’s Weekly Art And Donation Column From Bishop Gibbons. Welcome To The Blog, Good Friend

by Jon Katz

My life always seems to be changing, but one of the things I never want to change is the presence of Sue Silverstein in my life and work.  She is my sister from another mother and my closest friend. Maria and I love her dearly, and I admire her as well; she has done more good in the world than anyone I have ever met. I’m happy and proud that she has agreed to write a weekly column on this blog about her artwork, her deep relationship with the Army Of Good, and her love of teaching and helping those in need. Sue has been a wonderful support for so many students for many years, and the column will give her a chance to talk to her directly and follow her excellent work. I will continue to visit her and see her work regularly. But she knows it better than I do. Love is the real thing for her. Her work with these students is impressive.  Her e-mail is: [email protected]. Her column will appear once a week, on any day she chooses. – We love you, Sue, welcome to my world.

___

By Sue Silverstein

Jon has graciously offered to post some weekly highlights from the ND-BG Art Room every week or so. I wanted a chance to highlight what some of the students have done with materials from Army of Good members,

Andrea from Mass. sent some lovely China teacups a few weeks ago. As you can see in the photos, 11th-grade sculptor Paige is creating again with a chocolate-pouring fantasy landscape!

The 10th-grade gentlemen are in the middle of a go-big or go-home pop art cake project using donated foam, paints, and decorations!

Thanks to all of you, our dedicated donors and supporters, who help the students in every class have fun and create unique art.  Your contributions are invaluable, and we are deeply grateful for your continued support.

Time is passing at warp speed this year here at Notre Dame-Bishop Gibbons. When Jon invited me to share some of the amazing things the students are creating with the fabulous things that you have been kind enough to send,
I began to think about how many of you have helped over the past years.
The time, generosity, kindness, and love humble me. The kindness of strangers… I enjoy the notes and letters and share them with the students.
Earlier this week, Regina from North Carolina sent a box of great supplies and took the time to send a special note to Isaiah, the 12th-grade student who created the Magical Octopus with mixed media. He was tickled that someone had noticed his art.
Now everyone wants to try that project so they can be famous too! That is how it often goes; it is an organic room, and creativity explodes sometimes. None of this would be possible without your help! When the boxes arrive, the kids want to open them, excited to see the next cool thing.
They tuck things away for their next idea. I cannot forget how many of you have helped us with snacks, warm clothing, and other things.
Hunger in the community is real, and you have helped so many. Andrea from Stoughton is famous as the “cooler lady”! Andrea sends some of the most sought-after materials. Recently, lovely China teacups, which my sculpture queen, 11th grade Paige, has turned into a magical creation.
AOG (Army Of Good) Members have driven great distances to drop off donations; people are good in a world with many bad. My goal will be to share as much of what we do with the donations as possible.
We are truly blessed to have such support. We always seek donations of paint, canvas, art supplies, wood scraps, wire, stones, beach glass, jewelry, drawing paper, clothing, or anything else we or you think the students can turn into art.
The call for yarn received a tremendous response, resulting in a whole bunch of new fiber artists in the building.
I tried to send a personal note, but some boxes arrived without a return address; special thanks to the anonymous donors!
With the help of Jon Maria and the blog,  many of you, the ND-BG art students, will keep directing their energy to make the world just that much better through creativity.
I’ll see you here once a week when school is in session or if I have something to say and share. Jon has been bugging me to write a column all summer. — Sue.
Thank you, and here is the address of the School: Bishop Gibbons, 2600 Albany Street, Schenectady, New York, 12304.
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