
Joe
Catching up on the last month(s)… I wrote a newspaper article series on a workshop collective of 15 Rwandan women who, in trying to recover from the genocide, do extremely beautiful, and painstaking, embroidery art (using multi-color fine thread) to capture different aspects of cultural life in Rwanda. One piece will take up to three months, the artisan working full-time, to make. Rwanda is one of the poorer Third World countries, and some of these women were widowed during the genocide and have found a creative way to take care of their families. Our administration would try to find a series of ‘creative’ ways to help take care of Rwanda, and other struggling Third World countries as well. *See our foreign policy position paper… Staying with helping internationally: I also interviewed a local woman who is a pharmacist, and went to help in the immediate aftermath of the March, 2025, 7.7 magnitude earthquake in Myanmar. Some 5,352 people were killed, and thousands more were severely injured. She was part of a Samaritan’s Purse Field Hospital that did triage there for a month. She said, as just one example, she dispensed a good deal of pain medication, but not as much as she anticipated. She said that in impoverished countries, like Myanmar, people don’t have a lot of access to strong pain medication — so they simply bear suffering the pain… On the lighter side: I also interviewed a woman who grew up in rural Iowa during the 1940’s. She went to a one-room school-house for the first eight years of her education, with the most students in the school, ever, being: 15. She said what she particularly remembers is each of these one-room school houses in that area forming baseball teams, and they would play each other. What’s more, the farmer fathers, if you will, would clear out their pick-up trucks and take the players, spectators, and so on, in the back beds of those trucks. “You couldn’t do that today,” she smiled. For our take on education, see…