Thanks to our reader Corey-Jan for sharing her music and wisdom with us this
week.
Click here to listen to this week’s sacred text, “Peace on a Corner.”
Corey-Jan:
I was initially inspired
to write “Peace on a Corner” because, listening to the radio, I heard about a
zillion Christmas songs and very few songs about the holiday my family
celebrates. And the one song that gets played the most is funny and
entertaining—but it doesn’t shed any light on the meaning of the holiday. I was also inspired by the story of what happened in
Billings, Montana in 1993, when a brick sailed through a Jewish family’s window
because the family displayed a Hanukkah menorah
(lamp) in their window. In response, several local churches invited each child
in their congregation to make a paper menorah; these soon appeared in the windows of hundreds of Christian homes. A few days later,
the local newspaper published a full-page drawing of a menorah, along with a
general invitation for people to display it. By the end of the week, there were
an estimated six thousand homes and businesses decorated for Hanukkah. The
message was clear: Hate would not be tolerated.
The idea that hate can
be—really, must be—combated by connection and understanding is so important.
And the idea that everyone has something different to share —even within the same
religion—is very near and dear to me. Particularly at this time of year, my
family reaches out to share our holidays with people of other
religions, and we seek opportunities to share in their holiday celebrations, as well.
That way, the entire month of December is filled with a variety of traditions
and celebrations, not merely with holidays which are narrowly defined as “ours” or
“theirs.”
* * * * * * *
Corey-Jan is an
award-winning playwright, poet and songwriter. Her work has been published and
produced in a wide range of venues, and her unique book Diaspora Journey: A Passover Haggadah Drama has been performed as a Passover Seder in
synagogues, churches and homes for more than a decade.
This is lovely.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Corey, for this song. I am grateful I followed the link from Facebook to this blog.
And I find the work you three women, Grace, Tziporah, and Yasmina, are doing here in this space to be filled with promise and holiness. Thank you for offering your threefold friendship to the world, through this blog.
Karen,
ReplyDeleteThank YOU for your kind words. Please share our blog with your friends. We feel blessed to have found each other and to have created a space to learn together; and we are always seeking to expand the circle of our friendship.
Tziporah, Grace & Yasmina