Thursday Tidbits

Posted on June 7, 2018 under Thursday Tidbits with 2 comments

 

Every once in a while, when I’m at loose ends, I’ll listen to a sports talk radio show, which is televised as well. It is NOT riveting television but the host, the other anchors and their guests really know their stuff. The other evening, they were talking about salaries for sports broadcasters. They estimated that some of the top television people earn between $5-10 million dollars a year. While this seems like a handsome sum, it pales in comparison to the athletes that they cover on a regular basis.

Lebron James, the talented NBA basketball player, earns around $80-90 million a year from a variety of sources according to Forbes magazine. Boxer Floyd Mayweather who fought exactly one fight last year, earned $285 million in 2017. He’s also a promoter of the sport. I can see why. Apparently the former CEO of Disney was earning in the neighborhood of $400 million dollars a year before he left the company.

If you go back in history, there has always been a disparity between the rich and the poor but it seems in modern time, the gap has become a chasm, and getting worse. A very small number of billionaires hold a disproportionate amount of the world’s wealth. You can feel the restlessness brewing as the middle class shrinks. Something has got to give.

How can one individual earn more than the population of some towns and cities?

One of my all -time favourite short stories is called “How Much Land Does a Man Need?” It was written by Russian novelist, Leo Tolstoy and published in 1886. I used this story with an eighth grade class when I taught school in Alberta back in the late 70’s to explore the notion of greed. The protagonist, Pahom, makes a deal with Satan. He begins to acquire vast tracts of land. His empire grows making him a wealthy man but his appetite for land is insatiable. He is introduced to the Bashkirs . He has been told that they are simple minded and goes to them to buy as much land as he can get, at the lowest price.

For the sum of a thousand rubles, he can walk around an area as large as he wants starting at daybreak, marking his route with a spade along the way. If he returns to his starting point that day, all the land his route encloses will be his but if he does not reach the starting point, he will lose his money and receive no land. He believes that he has negotiated a great deal with the slow witted Bashkirs. That night, Pahom experiences a surreal dream in which he sees himself lying dead by the feet of the devil who is laughing.

He starts at sunrise the next day and stays out as late as possible, marking out land until just before the sun sets. Toward the end, he realizes he is far from the starting point and runs back as fast as he can to the waiting Bashkirs. He finally arrives at the starting point just after sunset. Exhausted from the run, Pahom drops dead. His servant buries him in an ordinary grave only six feet long, thus answering the question posed in the title of the story.

How much land or money or real estate does one person need? Good question but at the end of the day, we’ll all get our own six feet.

I’m not here to trash capitalism or those who accumulate wealth. Many of these people are philanthropic and do a lot of good for communities.

The world is a pretty crazy place these days and much of the insanity can be linked to the gap between the rich and the poor.

Have a great weekend.

 

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Monday Morning Musings

Posted on June 4, 2018 under Monday Morning Musings with no comments yet

Len and Rev. Donald MacGillivray

 

Art begets art.

Antigonish is blessed with many, many gifted artists. This group includes people who have been showing us their incredible talents for decades as well as a significant number of individuals who are getting to show us their creative genius at places like the Antigonish Art fair and several local galleries.

One of our most distinguished and recognizable artists is Anna Syperek. A few years ago, she was commissioned to do a painting of James MacPherson, the beloved organist and choir director at St. Ninian’s Cathedral who passed away in November of 2017. Her depiction of James sitting at the organ is magnificent. The painting appeared on James’ memorial card and afterwards, several people inquired about the possibility of getting a copy of the work.

In consultation with Anna and the MacPherson family, it was decided that copies of the print would be made available to the public with the idea that any proceeds from the project would go towards the ongoing restoration work of the Leduc paintings of the saints at St. Ninian’s Cathedral. The stretched canvass rendering is available for purchase at the Antigonish 5 to $1.00 store in Antigonish. Two sizes are available: the 8×10 version is $75 which includes taxes and the 11×14 is $100 including taxes. To contact the 5 to $1.00 visit their website: https://www.antigonishfivetoadollar.ca/ or call the photo shop at 902-863-2571.

Through the generosity of Anna Syperek and the Antigonish 5 to $1.00, 100% of the proceeds of sales will go towards the restoration of the Saints at St. Ninian’s.

As mentioned in an earlier post, James MacPherson was a passionate supporter of the art restoration at the Cathedral. He spoke about it often and was especially thrilled when the patroness of music, St.Cecelia, was the first of the Saints to get a facelift. Her image appears on Anna’s painting, looking down at James. When this work began a few years back, he discussed the possibility of having a concert in the cathedral to raise awareness and funds for the work being done.

It seems only fitting then that the parish and the broader community now has an opportunity to not only celebrate James’ life and his nearly 50 years of dedication to St.Ninian’s but at the same time, carry out his wishes to raise money for art restoration at the cathedral. In case you missed it, Pastoral Airs: A Concert in Memory of James MacPherson will be held at St.Ninian’s Cathedral on Saturday, July 7th at 8:00 p.m. Tickets are available at St.Ninian’s Parish office, Antigonish 5 to $1.00 and MacKinnon Pharmasave as well as on line by going to the Antigonish Highland Society website at https://www.antigonishhighlandsociety.ca/

Members of James’ family will be in attendance at the concert and there will be an unveiling of a copy of the Syperek painting which will become a permanent fixture in the cathedral.

Art begets art.

Have a great week.

 

 

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