We visited Munchen (Munich) to honor the White Rose members at their memorial and exhibition.
5.8.09
die Weiße Rose
We visited Munchen (Munich) to honor the White Rose members at their memorial and exhibition.
25.7.09
Mainau Island
Camp Hill - Lehenhod
The road is blocked off with ropes while the cows "stroll" from the grassy meadow back to the barn, with it's impressive pile of "black gold". Demeter sign above the door way....bio dynamics is here!
Sunday with Andreas and Family
Then we visited the Mist Caves in the area and had lunch in the forest above the cave. We then met Andreas' wife and two daughters in town and walked along visiting a small Renaissance Fair, a mini-zoo, a very old mill wheel, and the town's history museum. Rain came and we headed back to their house instead of the beer garden we had planned to visit in. Here are a few photos from the castle...


homeschool friends
"Make new friends and keep the old...."
Last summer we followed our Ohio homeschool friend's blog as they lived in Stuttgart for the summer. They are in Stuttgart again and we were able to visit twice. A few weeks ago, they visited us in Tuebingen...where we spent the afternoon in the New Botanical Gardens. Then last week, I visited them in Stuttgart, where I enjoyed the International Market and several churches that were rebuilt after the war. Here are a few of my favorite photos from our first visit.

22.7.09
Schwarzwalder Freilichtmuseum Vogtsbaurnhof

16.7.09
Heart of Jenin
Heart of Jenin - Introduction
I mentioned this film when I wrote of the anti-war/peace talk we attended. At the talk, we heard Ahmed's father speak. Last week, we attended the film at an outdoor movie summer theatre. Here's the story and web connections.
When a 12-year-old Palestinian boy was killed in the West Bank city of Jenin by Israeli soldiers who mistook his toy gun for the real thing, it could have been just one more blip on the news: one more war, one more child, one more human tragedy that ripped the heart out of a family and a community, but rippled no further into the world’s consciousness.
But something extraordinary happened that turned Ahmed Khatib’s tragic 2005 death into a gift of hope for six Israelis whose lives were on the line: while overwhelmed with grief, Ahmed’s parents consented to donating their son’s organs. Suddenly, amid the violence and entrenched hatred surrounding an intractable conflict, a simple act of humanity rose above the clamor and captured worldwide attention.
Heart of Jenin tells the story of Ahmed’s tragic death and his father Ismael Khatib’s journey to visit three of the organ recipients two years later. One of Ahmed’s kidneys went to an Orthodox Jewish girl and his other kidney went to a Bedouin boy. While his parents hesitated to donate Ahmed’s heart, it now beats in the chest of a Druze girl.
“I see my son in these children,” Khatib says.
Crossing from northern Israel to the Negev desert and ending up in Jerusalem, Khatib encounters every complexity of the conflict: deep-seated animosity, hardened judgments, and heartfelt generosity. While laying bare the deep divisions between Israelis and Palestinians, Heart of Jenin offers a rare vision of common humanity and hope.
Watch the movie and the epilogue here online - please note there are some upsetting images...
http://www.pbs.org/video/video/1176693725/program/1154691044
OR.... if you do not have a lot of time, here are two short you-tubes:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=wfthxyNLfvM -
www.youtube.com/watch?v=74Kpg-Xa6XE -





















