Saturday, December 6, 2008

Event # 3- If you only had 30 minutes left, what would you say?

If you only had 30 minutes left, what would you say?

That was the question that Dr. Waites had to answer in her speech that she gave at the Last Lecture Series. This event took place the library fourth floor in room 4039. The Last Lecture Series is a semi-annual program sponsored by the Spiritual Life Council. Each year, the students here at Nova nominate the professor they would like to hear speak in the Last Lecture Series. And this year the selected professor was my current First Year Seminar professor Dr. Kathleen Waites. She had to give a speech about what she has learned about what matters most in life, and the people and events that have impacted them.
Dr. Waites, in her speech, talked about her mom and her death. Her mom used to be the town reporter because she would go around getting stories and information for her grandmother. Therefore, her mom used to have a lot of stories to tell. Unfortunately her mom died recently. She had to care of her mom before she died, and she admitted that she was not very excited a first because of her busy life. However, as her mom got worse and she was the only one there by her side when she died made her feel more attached to her mom than she ever was. Dr. Waites said being by her mom side as she passed away was the one of the best thing that happened to her. She said she would not trade it for nothing.
I selected this event because Dr. Waites is a great professor and I wanted to hear her speech. This event is connected to the college theme of life and death because Dr. Waite speech was about what matter most in life and her mom death. I will definitely encourage every one of my classmate to participate in the Last Lecture Series because they are very educational. Dr. Waites speech was very inspiring and emotional, and I am certain that every one that attended the event gain something from it.

Is it necessary?

Racism in America has been around since the beginning of time. In the 1960s, Dr. Martin Luther King fought to stop the discrimination against people of color which led to the passage of the Civil Right Movement in 1964. However, until these days there is still racism. Many people are closed minded when it comes to changing their feelings about people of other races or getting to know them. A perfect example to support that leads me to the movie Lone Star which we recently watched in class. The movie took place in Texas border town in the 1990s. It’s a story about people of different ethnicity's (Black, White, and Latino) who face with difficult social problem because of racism.
As an immigrant living in the U.S., I witnessed racism. It was laughed at and teased in school because of my foreign accent. It was difficult for me to pronounce the words properly because of my French accent. Today, one can believe that racism doesn’t exist anymore in the U.S. since we have an African American as president. But many people predict that he will be assassinated just like Martin Luther King was. Isn’t that still racism? Racism has been around since the beginning of time and I don’t think it’s going away anytime soon because most American are intolerant of other races and think they are superior to everyone.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Event # 1- Invisible Children-

Invisible Children is a documentary about children in Africa. It focuses on children between the ages 5-12 that are being abducted from their families. They are taken into a place called “Bushes”. There they are brainwashed and trained how to kill people using guns, machetes, and knives. The children that are not abducted leave their houses because they fear that they might get abducted if they stay there. As a result, they are force to live on the streets. Some of them escape to go sleep under a hospital floor because they feel safer there. They don’t have any clothes, food or a place to stay. Teenage girls are raped by the kidnapers and others get sexually active at a young age using dirty plastic bags as condoms.
This documentary was shown in the Health Professions Division on Monday October 6. The members of the Rotary Club here at Nova show the documentary because they were trying to raise money to go visit and donate to the children in Africa. I attended this event because I wanted to see why the children in Africa were called invisible. However, I decided to write about this event because after watching the documentary that was the only thing I could do since I don’t have any money to donate to the organization. I wanted everyone to know what these children go through and encourage them to donate if they can.
The documentary, Invisible Children is connected to the college theme of life and death because it is about children dying in Africa. It’s also about children that have their lives taking away from them, they don’t have anywhere to stay, they barely get a meal per day and worse they not in school. Even though they alive, it’s like they don’t have nothing to live for.

Event # 2-The Fifth Diamond-

This event took place in the Parker building in room 123 on the 25th of November. Irene Weisberg Zisblatt is the Holocaust survivor and the author of The Fifth Diamond. She gave a speech about her life story and how she survived the Holocaust. She grew up in Hungary, but her world soon failed apart when Hitler recommended that all Jews were killed. She talked about her family and recounted the last time she saw them alive. She was taken into a concentration camp and was forced to give all her belongings. Her mom gave her five diamonds so she could buy bread when she gets hungry. Since she didn’t want to give the only memories that her mom gave her, she had to swallow them. She witnessed and experienced unspeakable cruelty at the camp. However, she survived. It took her fifty years to let go of the terror of her experience and speak about it. She encourages us, children and teenagers of today to tell her story. Her exact words were: "You are the last generation to meet a Holocaust survivor, so help me share the story when I am no longer here." Everybody that was listening to her speech was in tears as she told her painful life story.
I selected this event because my composition professor told me about it and I was curious to see what Irene Weisberg Zisblatt, the Holocaust survivor, had to say. This event contributes to the college theme of life and death because it’s about the life experiences of Irene and the death of all her family members and everyone she cared for. It shows how important life can be to someone once they experience death. I will definitely encourage other students to go listen to her speech if she ever comes back to the school, to read her book -The Fifth Diamond- and to watch the documentary-The Last Days-.