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Brad Lander’s Inauguration at the Prospect Park Picnic House

On Sunday January 17 at 2 PM, Brad Lander was sworn in as City Council representative for the 39th district at the Picnic House in Prospect Park. Opening the event was the very articulate Meg Barnette, the wife of Lander. Steven Flax and Kali Ndoye were hosts of the event.

Before the oath of office was administered by Fritz Schwarz, Jr, there were speeches a-plenty by local politicians, including Senator Chuck Schumer, Borough President Marty Markowitz, NYC Comptroller John Liu, Public Advocate (and former City Councilman for the 39th) Bill di Blasio, Congresswoman Nydia Valezquez, Congresswoman Yvette Clarke Congressman Jerrold Nadler.

Best of all performers from the MS 51 choir, dancer Samantha Speis of Urban Bush Woman, the Bangladeshi Institute for the Performing Arts, and sax and bassist Ravi Coltrane and Massimo Biolcati gave their all on behalf of Brad’s big day.

In just about all the speeches, Brad was lauded for his listening skills, his huge skill set, his vast experience in advocacy for equity and affordable housing at the Fifth Avenue Committee and at the Pratt Center for Community Development, his big heart and head.

Senator Charles Schumer: “Brad is a man of dedication, knowledge and soul. He is an amazing addition to the City Council. This is a great day for Brad, a great day for the district, a great day for his family, a great day for the USA.”

NYC Comptroller John Liu: ” Today we celebrate the ascension of a community organizer and a family man at heart…it’s a magical recipe: a policy wonk, a whip, a community organizer…”

Public Advocate Bill Di Blasio: “You have 150,000, activist, opinionated, strong willed and wonderful people in the 39th district.”

Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz: “I was happy to support someone who did it the old fashioned way: he earned it. You will try to please everyone but it’s impossible. People will question everything you do. Make decision that you believe are right, do the right thing for those you serve…Those you help may remember you. Those you don’t help: they never forget.”

HPD Commissioner Rafael E. Cestero: “Brad is an incredible listener. He will listen to your side of the discussion to inform his own judgement. I can’t think of a better quality.”

Congressman Jerrold Nadler: “You can change the world from the City Council. You can do that. Brad will do that.”

Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn (in a note): “It’s hard to believe that you are just now becoming a city council member. You have amazing courage: you have never shied from your commitment to the LGBT community.

Saxophonist Ravi Coltraine spoke briefly before playing: “Heart and soul have been sort of a theme here today. I won’t be playing “Heart and Soul” but I will play “Body and Soul.’ And indeed he did and it was an incredibly powerful and ravishing improvisation on the jazz classic.

Lander’s family, including his wife, kids, parents, sister, nieces and nephews, came to the stage for his swearing in and the young children held up a Bible while Lander took the oath.

Then it was Lander’s turn to speak. Here are the last minutes of his speech. For the complete text of his inaugural speech go here.

I come to this moment as someone who has worked only outside of government, often frustrated with current policy, committed to organizing to demand change.  And I will certainly hold onto that approach.

But I also see a challenge here.  For democratic government must also be the space in which groups with different points-of-view meet to debate, in effect to organize against each other … and then to figure out what to do with those differences.

I am mindful of the fact that some of the things I plan to organize for – paid sick days for all workers, congestion pricing to prevent us from choking on traffic, full civil rights for the LGBT community – do not have the support of all the people in this room, much less all New Yorkers.

Of course we don’t always agree.  After all, we’re Brooklynites.  But our shared commitment, our diverse civic energy – even our arguments – help us understand the common treasure that is this city.

In an essay he wrote last week about the opening of the Prospect Park Armory, a fantastic new community resource, my son Marek wrote the following:  “The best part of the Armory is the location and the community it’s in.  The location of the Armory is very good because it is very near my house.  The community it’s in is great, because everyone likes to help with this kind of thing.”

At a time of harsh budgets and scarce funds, there is one resource that is vast: the creative, collective energy of the people in this room, the people in our community, the people of this city.

Tapping into that vast resource is my pledge – and my challenge – to everyone here.

Somehow, even with all we are already doing, we must redouble our efforts to strengthen the institutions and spaces where community residents come together – community and civic groups, religious and chesed organizations, labor unions, cultural groups, coops, PTAs – and now for relief efforts for our brothers and sisters Haiti as well.  To help meet basic needs, to create vibrant communities, and to wrestle with our disagreements toward public policy that will yield a city that offers real hope and opportunity to everyone who calls it home.

I started campaigning more than two years ago, believing in the possibility of local democracy both to improve our neighborhoods and to advance a broader vision of social justice.

Over the past two years, in thousands of conversations on stoops and at subway stops, in parks and classrooms and small businesses, over too much coffee and every type of food the world has brought to Brooklyn, that belief has deepened into the awe, the deep sense of responsibility, and the profound feeling of hope that I feel at this moment.

As big as the challenges are, I am certain that we will rise together to meet them – because in this place, as Marek wrote, everyone likes to help with this kind of thing.

Jan 21 at 8PM: Tin House at the Old Stone House

Matthea Harvey

Brooklyn Reading Works presents Tin House at the Old Stone House curated by Tin House editor-in-chief Rob Spillman.

Tin House is an American literary magazine and book publisher based in Portland, Oregon and New York City that has a reputation for presenting “what’s still righteous and nervy in American writing.”

For this special Brooklyn Reading Works event, Spillman brings together a stellar group of Tin House authors, including Brenda Shaughnessy, Matthea Harvey and Elissa Schappell. They will be reading their own work plus one poem each by Heather Hartley, the Paris editor of Tin House.

Thursday, January 21, at 8 PM.

The Old Stone House. Third Street and Fifth Avenue. Suggested donation of $5 includes refreshments. Tin House magazines and books will be offered for sale.

And here’s BRW’s winter/spring schedule. All events at 8 PM at the Old Stone House in Park Slope:

January: 21: TIN HOUSE AT THE OLD STONE HOUSE curated by Rob Spillman

February 11: MEMOIRATHON curated by Branka Ruzak. We are accepting submissions for memoir pieces about life during the recession of 2009/2010 (send to louise_crawford(at)yahoo(dot)com ASAP).

March 18: BLARNEYPALOOZA curated by Michele Madigan Somerville

April 15: TRUTH AND MONEY curated by John Guidry

May 20: 4TH ANNUAL EDGY MOTHER’S DAY curated by Sophia Romero, Michele Madigan Somerville & Louise Crawford (note new date for this event).

June 10: FICTION IN A BLENDER curated by Martha Southgate

The White Ribbon

During a mid-nineties Charlie Rose interview, Quentin Tarantino claimed that his practice with new works from filmmakers he loved (Brian DePalma was his example) was to see the film several times before coming to an opinion on it. His solid reasoning is that it takes a viewing or two to understand the story and the characters and at that point he could then focus on technique or what else the movie might be saying.  Had I the time and opportunity to apply this to the directors I love (and still manage to see anything else), Michael Haneke would be on even the shortest list that would require such filmgoing rigor. In fact, there’s no movie I’ve seen in a theater more than his original Funny Games and I was so amazed after my first viewing of The Seventh Continent that I went back and saw it the following night.  I write here after my first viewing of White Ribbon, Haneke’s latest and a work deserving of multiple viewings, currently playing at Film Forum and Lincoln Plaza.

White Ribbon is like a confounding puzzle that remains unsolved (similar to Cache and Code Unknown in that way). The story centers on a small German village on the eve of World War I. While the action takes place in chronological fashion and there is narration—the memories of elderly man who we see as a young school teacher in the story—the movie is intentionally never clear or straightforward. Often we see images that are not explained or the significance of which is not revealed until much later in the film. The thread that ties them together is a series of events demonstrating the brutality of the villagers, including a mystery surrounding several acts that appear to be attempts at homicide.  Shot in stark black and white, the film depicts the actions with most of the violence (again, like Funny Games) happening off screen and with barely a drop of blood or scratch on its victims.

Haneke’s work brilliantly operates on two levels. Often he delivers a movie—a thriller, usually—that can be enjoyed as a genre piece by a masterful manipulator. Another level of aesthetics and subtext usually provides more to chew on and often more manipulation, notably direct audience addresses (implications? attacks?) that make him such a divisive artist. With White Ribbon, the genre fan enthusiast is certain to be confounded; the story’s key mystery remains unsolved, major story elements are skipped or told in passing narration.  The deeper level lovers of Haneke may be driven just as crazy. The simple read of the film is that it is showing the atmosphere that will lead to the German atrocities of the next generation—the film is subtitled “A Children’s Story”—but there are so many more themes at work here—rites of passage, religion, repression, authority figures, male and female roles in society. My desire for multiple viewings is to put these themes into a greater context. In one of my favorite scenes, the narrator-as-a-young-man takes a carriage ride with his fiancée, their suppressed/repressed romance one of the few rays of light in the film. Steering the carriage off the intended path, tension grows as it seems the school teacher has decided upon an unexpected physical act. His fiancée pleads with him to turn back, but he calmly insists that he is only taking her to a secluded picnic spot. They partake in their first kiss and continue.  We never are sure of his actual intentions, nor do we even find out what happens. We are left to determine what his dogged determination means?  Is it an act of desire, love, an untying repressive binds, a rite of passion? Does her kiss indicate that she has given in to his desire?  It is easy to withhold narrative information, the achievement is getting us to care enough to put it all together.

OTBKB Music: There’s Something Every Night This Week

This is a very busy week with something worth your while every night.  Tonight, George Usher performs his 2009 album, To Have and Not Have in its entirety over at The Lakeside Lounge.

The rest of the week includes the following shows: Maura Kennedy (Tuesday), City Winery’s Haitian Benefit Concerts (Wednesday and Thursday), a come early, stay late night at The Rockwood Music Hall with Poundcake, Amber Rubarth, Coby Brown, and Sister Sparrow and The Dirty Birds (also Thursday); The Disclaimers (Friday); Demolition String Band (Saturday) and Carrie Rodriguez (Sunday).

For more details, check Now I’ve Heard Everything.

–Eliot Wagner

The List: Some Brooklyn Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Events

All of these events are going on today, Monday, January, 18:

Old First Church and Spoke the Hub present: Peace Finding & Keeping Workshops from 9:00 AM – 4:30 PM. These family workshops will be held at both the newly renovated Spoke the Hub Re:Creation Center, located at 748 Union Street at 6th Avenue and at Old First Reformed Church, located at 729 Carroll Street at 7th Avenue in Park Slope, Brooklyn.

–10:30am at the BAM Howard Gilman Opera House keynote speaker Danny Glover, the acclaimed actor with musical performances by The New Life Tabernacle Mass Choir and special guest Kenny Muhammad The Human Orchestra, who is widely regarded as one of the best beatboxers. After the program, BAM Rose Cinemas will present a free screening of the documentary Soundtrack for a Revolution, executive produced by Danny Glover and shortlisted for a 2010 Oscar nomination.

Words Have Power at the Brooklyn Childrens Museum for ages 6 and up at 11:30 AM. Examine the impact of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and how his famous words “I have a dream” have affected change in America. Explore the power a speech can hold and  create unique poem collages to take home!

Park Slope Parents is sponsoring The Second Annual MLK Day Sing-Along, Bake Sale, Food Pantry Stocking, Animal Shelter Drive, Art/Letter-Writing and Winter Gear Drive at the The Church of Gethsemane, 1012 8th Avenue (btw 10th & 11th Street). Sing-Along and Art/Letter writing from 12:00 to 2:00. Donations accepted from 10:30 and 3:00

Now I’ve Heard Everything: Updated List of Haiti Benefit Concerts

Eliot Wagner at his blog,  Now I’ve Heard Everything is staying on top of some of the benefit concerts in the city for Haiti. Keep checking with him for updates and line-ups. City Winery is doing 4 nights to raise $100,000. Performers include, Patti Smith, The Swell Season, Roseanne Cash and many, many more.

We need your help to raise $100,000 in four nights to help the victims of Haiti’s catastrophic earthquake. No country in the Western Hemisphere has been battered more than Haiti in the last 500 years—the nearly complete annihilation of its native population over two decades, a brutal slave regime, ongoing foreign military interventions over hundreds of years, brutal dictatorships supported by western powers, blockades of aid and more recently, devastating natural disasters from hurricanes to this latest earthquake.

100% of proceeds from this benefit will be donated to Wyclef Jean’s YELE to fund the Emergency Mobile Hospitals initiative administered by the U.N. We ask that you give any way you can.

Coming Soon: Bell House Benefit for Haiti

Thanks to Eliot Wagner on Now I’ve Heard Everything for this information about a Bell House Benefit for Haiti. 100% of the proceeds will be split between Save The Children and Partners In Health.

All performers will be playing abbreviated and stripped down sets. Scheduled to appear:
JIMMY FALLON
New York State Senator DIANE SAVINO
COLD WAR KIDS
TED LEO
THE WRENS
SONDRE LERCHE
EUGENE MIRMAN
AC NEWMAN of NEW PORNOGRAPHERS with RHETT MILLER of OLD 97s and NICOLE ATKINS as THE SEEKERS.

More performers and ticket information to be announced on Monday, January 18.

The Bell House is located at 149 7th Street near 2nd Avenue, Brooklyn (F or G Trains to 4th Avenue, R Train to 9th Street)

Babies & Bands at Vox Pop in Ditmas Park

We drove out to Ditmas Park on Saturday night to hear Bad Teeth, my son’s band, as well as three bands that his friends are in: Mother Courage, Radiates and Large Lady (making their debut) at Vox Pop, the cafe/bookstore/performance space on Cortelyou Road.

The show was set to start at 8 PM but when we got there the bands were waiting outside with all their equipment because a jazz band was finishing up inside. So we decided to grab some dinner at Purple Yam, the new Philippine restaurant we’ve been hearing about.

When we got to Purple Yam I introduced myself to the owner, who explained that they were very crowded with a big birthday party and invited us to come back after the show at Vox Pop. We told her we’d probably be back on another night. My friend The Shiksa from Manila raves about the food there, as do others who know the chef/owners from their closed SoHo restaurant, Cendrillon.

We ended up at Picket Fence, a cozy restaurant a block away from Purple Yam. Picket Fence describes itself as a “family-friendly restaurant where friends, neighbors and family can share great food and fun times in a relaxed setting.” I’d say that’s a fair description and we both decided to go with sandwiches: me the veggie burger, Hugh wit the salmon BLT. The food was good, the service excellent and we were out of there by 8:45 to hear Mother Courage at Vox Pop.

We were very impressed by the show at Vox Pop, which was for an all-ages crowd. There were, however, some older folks around. A man was sitting in the cafe with his baby, an unbelievably cute 17-month-old. At one point he whispered to me:

“You’re a mom, right?” he asked.

“Yeah,” I said. I guess it was pretty obvious

“I need to go to the bathroom. Would you mind holding my baby.  She’s getting sleepy and she really needs a woman,” he said.

“Sure,” I said.

I took the baby from the man and she immediately melted into my arms. Holding a baby, it’s like riding a bicycle you never forget how to do it. I stood up and rocked her way I used to hold my kids, moving side to side, from one foot to another. Babies seem to love that. I covered her ears with my hands because the second band, Large Lady, was a really loud, noise/punk band. The baby (pictured above) was adorable with jet black hair, pale skin and a doughy, attentive face.

I held the baby through three songs. At one point I had a fantasy that the baby’s father would never come back and I’d get to keep her. It was just a fleeting weird fantasy. I could tell that Hugh was smitten with the tiny girl, as well. When the dad finally returned from the bathroom, he put two fingers to his mouth pantomiming cigarette smoking, and asked if I’d mind holding the baby while he went out for a smoke.

Sure, I said.

The baby seemed incredibly comfortable with me but when she spotted her dad smoking through the front door glass she started waving at him enthusiastically. After his cigarette break, he came back and thanked me profusely and took the baby, put her in her pink down jacket and took her home. I wondered if the baby had a mom or if he was a single dad Somehow I think there was a mom at home but who knows.

Bad Teeth was up next and they delivered a fantastic, high energy show featuring their hard driving, raw, literate and unapologetically catchy songs like Raised by Wolves, Mortal Hands, Same Flame, Hemlock Soul Song and We are Worthless. The crowd went wild. You can hear some of these songs on Bad Teeth’s My Space page.

Enough motherly kvelling. Suffice it to say, I think the band is fantastic and Henry is a phenomenal vocalist/performer.

Radiates, a 4 piece post-punk band, played melodic music with driving rhythm section behind airy guitar chords, light synth melodies, and operatic vocal textures. Mother Courage, have an appealing folk/punk vibe with literate and achingly melodic songs that evoke Wilco, Leonard Cohen, Dylan and the Pixies. Their key board player, Nathan J. Campbell, an excellent singer songwriter on his own sang one of his songs between sets with an impressively soaring operatic voice.

After the show I waited outside for a car service (Hugh had to drive the band’s equipment to the drummer’s house and there was no room in the car). I wandered over to Sycamore, an attractive bar/flower shop was packed with a lively crowd. Finally my car arrived and I was taken home just after midnight.

Like Cinderella. Back to Park Slope.

Have An Affair Or Not: Here’s Smartmom’s Take

From this week’s Smartmom in the Brooklyn Paper:

A few days ago, these plaintive words appeared on Park Slope Parents, that invaluable list-serve for parenting and, er, marital advice:

“I wanted to ask fellow Park Slope Parents how you deal with a spouse cheating. My husband has a real desire to act out on it, and I have caught him browsing the Craigslist ads. He has not actually met with anyone, but I feel that if he continues browsing the ads, it will happen. It very upsetting to me, and I also realize the reality of things that it’s hard to be with the same sexual partner all your life. How do you deal with this? Besides getting a divorce? Any advice would be so helpful.”

Obviously this woman is very upset. Why else would she write to a bunch of virtual strangers about something so personal?

Smartmom pored over the plethora of responses, which expressed many points of view. One person wrote that viewing the Craigslist listings does not mean that he plans to cheat.

“I’ve been married for seven years, have never cheated on my wife, would never consider cheating, but have browsed plenty of Craigslist sections. It’s fantasy fodder.”

It’s tough not to notice that he’s been married seven years …

Another person suggested that the wife should send her husband to strip clubs to get his ya-yas out. “Send him with the understanding this is an outlet for visual stimulation, not permission to go home with anyone,” she wrote.

Smartmom thinks strip clubs are sexist and just plain silly (and they didn’t help Tiger Woods from straying).

Another married woman, who has had affairs mostly with women, said it was OK as long as the affair-haver is honest about it.

“It was amazing. My husband, somehow was fine and I found myself feeling more head over heels in love with him than I had in a long time,” the bisexual adulteress posted. “I felt so trusted, loved and blessed that he would let me have this — and the blast of sexual energy from being with someone ‘new’ just recharged our marriage.”

Smartmom was intrigued — and annoyed by the overly effusive tone of this post. Sure she knows that there are loads of people out there who engage in some form of polyamory, the practice of having more than one intimate relationship at a time, with the knowledge and consent of everyone involved. But clearly, it’s not for everyone.

If your partner trusts you to go out and fool around a bit because the love is there, then maybe this could work. But if your partner feels the slightest bit of betrayal then the whole thing is a bust.

And why would you want to hurt your spouse that way? “Do no harm” should be the mantra of marriage.

Still another person wrote: “Cheating is almost always more about narcissism, escapism and immaturity than any purely sexual need. For the most part, people who are self-assured and happy with themselves, their lives, their achievements, etc. don’t cheat.”

Smartmom isn’t sure that it’s all together true. All kinds of people have affairs — even self-assured and happy ones. Tiger Woods? David Letterman? Bill Clinton? These are men at the top of their games, for Buddha’s sake.

By the same token: having low self-esteem or being unhappy doesn’t necessarily mark you as an adulterer. For instance, Smartmom has issues with self-esteem, but that doesn’t mean she’s “hiking the Appalachian Trail.” Not yet anyway.

But if it is the mid-life miasma that’s the problem, there are a lot of other things you can do to elevate your mood that might be a tad more constructive like therapy, making a change in your career or creative life, going on a trip, making new friends.

Being married does not mean that you’ll never feel sexual stirrings for another person. Who hasn’t had a teeny, tiny crush on someone he or she met at a dinner party or people they look forward to seeing at school drop off? But having an affair is another order of magnitude.

Managing an affair is a time consuming — and a morally compromising activity. More often than not, it involves lying about where you are and not being where you’re supposed to be.

And what happens if you fall in love? That will almost certainly wreak havoc on your family and hurt your beloved (and your children). You can’t always control the trajectory of what goes on between two people. And this is where the hurt, betrayal and rejection comes in.

OK. But isn’t it possible to be just a little bit unfaithful? What about a frenzy of kisses at a Christmas party or a quick romp while on a trip?

If it’s a one-time thing, Smartmom says, why not? While that might sound flip, the truth is, it doesn’t need to break up a marriage. But if you find yourself doing it again and again, you really need to look at what’s missing in your relationship — and your life. So find a good therapist. In therapy, you can take an incisive look at what’s really going on.

What about doing it the French way? Many married couples there have lovers on the side, and it seems to work out just fine. One former president even had his mistress at his state funeral!

While that sounds tres sophisticated and fun, Smartmom knows she’s not capable of being quite so French.

Truth is, Smartmom is the jealous type. She goes a little bit crazy when Hepcat visits his ex-girlfriend from sophomore year in college to fix her computer.

As for being unfaithful herself, Smartmom knows with certainty that an affair would be very unwise. When she falls in love, she falls big. She’s not capable of Clinton-esque compartmentalization. Plus, she’s a lousy liar. She’d probably become obsessed and stalk the guy or at least Google him until her fingers fall off.

Worst of all, an affair might force Smartmom to question her marriage. While Smartmom loves to analyze and test her marriage, she doesn’t really want to challenge it in such an obvious way. She’s worked good and hard to get along with Hepcat, and they even have a new couch. Who wants to pine for someone other than person with whom she shares her bed?

Truthfully, Smartmom is too much of a pragmatist for an affair. Sure, at the beginning it might be hot and sexy — and a seemingly great panacea for a mid-life crisis. But inevitably, the sparks stop flying and eventually it will be just like her marriage — no better or worse.

Pretty soon, you’ll be discussing hemorrhoids and colonoscopies with your paramour, and it won’t be quite so romantic after all.

Tin House at the Old Stone House on January 21

Brenda Shaughnessy

Brooklyn Reading Works presents Tin House at the Old Stone House curated by Tin House editor-in-chief Rob Spillman.

Tin House is an American literary magazine and book publisher based in Portland, Oregon and New York City that has a reputation for presenting “what’s still righteous and nervy in American writing.”

For this special Brooklyn Reading Works event, Spillman brings together a stellar group of Tin House authors, including Brenda Shaughnessy, Matthea Harvey and Elissa Schappell. They will be reading their own work plus one poem each by Heather Hartley, the Paris editor of Tin House.

Thursday, January 21, at 8 PM.

The Old Stone House. Third Street and Fifth Avenue. Suggested donation of $5 includes refreshments. Tin House magazines and books will be offered for sale.

And here’s BRW’s winter/spring schedule. All events at 8 PM at the Old Stone House in Park Slope:

January: 21: TIN HOUSE AT THE OLD STONE HOUSE curated by Rob Spillman

February 11: MEMOIRATHON curated by Branka Ruzak. We are accepting submissions for memoir pieces about life during the recession of 2009/2010 (send to louise_crawford(at)yahoo(dot)com ASAP).

March 18: BLARNEYPALOOZA curated by Michele Madigan Somerville

April 15: TRUTH AND MONEY curated by John Guidry

May 20: 4TH ANNUAL EDGY MOTHER’S DAY curated by Sophia Romero, Michele Madigan Somerville & Louise Crawford (note new date for this event).

June 10: FICTION IN A BLENDER curated by Martha Southgate

The Weekend List: Brad, Sherlock & MLK

Film: Park Slope Films present:  “The Apostles of Park Slope.” How do you think a dinner at Two Toms would be for some old neighborhood kids? Screening at the Brooklyn Lyceum on Saturday, January 16, at 8 PM.

–Sherlock Holmes, Avatar and The Princess and the Frog at  the Pavilion

Shopping: Find something unique at the Brooklyn Flea at One Hanson (the Williamsburg Bank Building). Saturday and Sundays from 10 AM until 5 PM.

–Artisan wares and Farmer’s Market at the Makers Market at the American Can Factory on Third Street and Third Avenue in Park Slope/Gowanus on Sundays from 11 AM until 5 PM.

Theater: Shakespeare’s As You Like It directed by Sam Mendez, part of The Bridge Project through March 13th at BAM

Inauguration: The public is invited to City Council member Brad Lander’s inauguration. ceremony on Sunday, January 17 at 2 PM at the Picnic House in Prospect Park. Space for the Inauguration Ceremony is limited, so please RSVP at www.bradlander.com/jan17.

Martin Luther King, Jr Celebrations:

–At the Brooklyn Museum on Sunday, January 17, 3 PM – 5 PM. Co-hosted by WNYC’s Brian Lehrer and Celeste Headlee of The Takeaway, the event includes panelists that are members of Martin Luther King’s generation—people who would remember him and were directly affected by his work—as well as younger activists, artists, and scholars who have been indirectly influenced by his vision.

–On Monday, January 18: Old First Church and Spoke the Hub present: Peace Finding & Keeping Workshops from 9:00 AM – 4:30 PM. These family workshops will be held at both the newly renovated Spoke the Hub Re:Creation Center, located at 748 Union Street at 6th Avenue and at Old First Reformed Church, located at 729 Carroll Street at 7th Avenue in Park Slope, Brooklyn.

Haitian Times: A Night on Rue Berne

Garry Pierre-Pierre is the editor and publisher of Haitian Times, which he founded in 1999. The English language weekly serves New York’s Haitian community of 500,000. Pierre-Pierre has 20 years of experience as a journalist, including six years as a staff writer at the New York Times. While there, he shared a Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. He also worked as a reporter at The Sun-Sentinel in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

He is now in Haiti sending dispatches back to the Haitian Times, which is located in Brooklyn. Here’s an excerpt from “A Night on Rue Berne, Living on the Streets:

Dusk had barely set and already, the residents of Rue Berne, were making their beds. These bedrooms were makeshifts arranged neatly on one side of the streets, away from shaky walls and fragile home frames that remain so dangerous.

The men, erected barricades, leaving enough room for a vehicle to navigate the tiny canyon. Soon they share whatever pasta, or rice with smoke herring. A few hours later, mothers tucked their children on near their belly and they started lo listen to the news on battery operated transistor radios and by 8 P.M, some people had already began falling asleep.

“You see what we’ve become, “ said Herold Joseph, who was born and raised in this long time middle class enclave. “The streets have become our home, no different from the stray dogs that we used to chase with sticks and stones.”

Be Careful Where You Give for Haiti

I learned on Park Slope Parents that there’s an article on the Smoking Gun about the financial misdeeds of Yele, Wyclef Jean’s Haiti charity. I’m not sure if this information pertains to what’s going on with the Haiti donations but it’s worth a look.  From the Smoking Gun:

“Internal Revenue Service records show the group has a lackluster history of accounting for its finances, and that the organization has paid the performer and his business partner at least $410,000 for rent, production services, and Jean’s appearance at a benefit concert though the Wyclef Jean Foundation, which does business as Yele Haiti Foundation, was incorporated 12 years ago–and has been active since that time–the group only first filed tax returns in August 2009.”

In a text version of the statement published on his blog, Mr. Jean chastised the media for picking up on the accusations made by The Smoking Gun:

I have spent tireless hours working on behalf of my homeland on development issues as well as human and immigrant rights. I have been committed to helping the people of Haiti throughout my life, and that commitment will continue until the day I die.

It is impossible for me to even comprehend the recent attacks on my character and the integrity of my foundation, Yele Haiti. The fact that these attacks come as we are mobilized to meet the greatest human tragedy in the history of Haiti only serves to perplex me even further. I first learned of these baseless attacks when I left Haiti late Friday, where I had been since 12 hours after the earthquake.

Let me be clear: I denounce any allegation that I have ever profited personally through my work with Yele Haiti. These baseless attacks are simply not true. In fact, I have, time and again, committed significant amounts of my own money to support the work of Yele Haiti and other organizations in support of our efforts over the years. More than that, I have spent countless hours, days, months and years of my life committed to the country of Haiti, the people of Haiti and the success of Haiti.

These baseless allegations were first put forward by a fringe website with a history of pursuing sensationalist story lines. The mainstream media’s pursuit of them has required Yele to divert precious resources during this critical time in order to answer various inquiries. That must end.

I will continue to commit my focus to what is most important right now: Haiti. Right now, Yele is working with its valuable NGO partners, the U.S. Government, the United Nations and so many others to save lives, honor those who have perished and get aid to the millions of Haitians suffering through the worst human catastrophe of our times.

Until Feb 8: No G Train from Church Ave to Greenpoint on Weekends Nights

From the Brooklyn Paper:

Greenpoint will be cut off from the rest of the city late on weekend nights, as the Metropolitan Transportation Authority eliminates the G train for the next four weekends. The agency says that the nighttime weekend service cut is to accommodate track work and station repair until Feb. 8. Shuttle buses will replace the G train — dubbed “the Brooklyn local” after the MTA extended it all the way to Church Avenue last year — between 10:30 pm and 5 am on Fridays, Saturdays and Sunday. The F train will operate normally between Church Avenue and Bergen Street during those hours.

Jan 21 at 8 PM: Tin House at the Old Stone House

Brooklyn Reading Works presents Tin House at the Old Stone House curated by Tin House editor-in-chief Rob Spillman.

Tin House is an American literary magazine and book publisher based in Portland, Oregon and New York City that has a reputation for turning up “what’s still righteous and nervy in American writing.”

For this special Brooklyn Reading Works event, Spillman brings together a stellar group of Tin House authors, including Brenda Shaughnessy, Matthea Harvey and Elissa Schappell. They will be reading their own work plus one poem each by Heather Hartley, the Paris editor of Tin House.

Thursday, January 21, at 8 PM.

The Old Stone House. Third Street and Fifth Avenue. Suggested donation of $5 includes refreshments. Tin House magazines and books will be offered for sale.

And here’s BRW’s winter/spring schedule. All events at 8 PM at the Old Stone House in Park Slope:

January: 21: TIN HOUSE AT THE OLD STONE HOUSE curated by Rob Spillman

February 11: MEMOIRATHON curated by Branka Ruzak. We are accepting submissions for memoir pieces about life during the recession of 2009/2010 (send to louise_crawford(at)yahoo(dot)com ASAP).

March 18: BLARNEYPALOOZA curated by Michele Madigan Somerville

April 15: TRUTH AND MONEY curated by John Guidry

May 20: 4TH ANNUAL EDGY MOTHER’S DAY curated by Sophia Romero, Michele Madigan Somerville & Louise Crawford (note new date for this event).

June 10: FICTION IN A BLENDER curated by Martha Southgate

Jan 31: Career Networking with Cup Cakes (and Wine) for Parents

Momasphere and Park Slope Parents Career Network present “Wine and Cupcakes Tasting/ Career Networking Event”. Parents of all ages and stages are invited to spend a night away from the kids and enjoy a career networking evening that will engage each of your senses.

Surrounded by works of art at the new Muriel Guepin Gallery, stimulating conversation and live jazz guitarist Chad Coe, sample a variety of fine Brooklyn Oenology wines and Nine Cakes’ delectable cupcakes. The evening is capped off by raffle prizes and Momasphere’s customary goodie bags.

Proceeds of the event will go to support Children Of The City, a Brooklyn charity dedicated to changing the culture of poverty through education and outreach.

Time: 5:30-8:00 Pm
Date: Sunday January 31, 2010
Place:  Muriel Guepin Gallery 47 Bergen Street, between Smith and Court, 718-858-4535
Price: General Admission – $10 in advance online, $15 at the door

RSVP by purchasing tickets online. Tickets at the door are cash only and available on a first-come, first-served basis.

Haitian Women for Haitian Refugees Collecting Goods on Maple Street

Haitian Women for Haitian Refugees, Lakou New York, and MUDHA (Movement of Dominican Haitian Women) are organizing an immediate delivery of first aid relief. MUDHA is traveling to the Dominican/Haitian border, looking at how to reach affected areas.

They are accepting the following donations:

FIRST AID SUPPLIES:
– Ace bandages, gauze pads, bandage & tape
– Water purification tablets & Rehydration salts
– antibiotic and antifungal (Mycology) creams
– anti-allergy medication (i.e. Benadryl)
– anti-parasite medication
– Tylenol; children’s Tylenol
– cold and cough medicine
– diarrhea medication
– eye drops
– insect repellent
– hydrogen peroxide
– skin disinfectant spray

PERSONAL HYGIENE GOODS:
– Toothpaste and tooth brushes
– soap and deodorant
– sanitary napkins
– brand new under wear – adult (small & med.) and children sizes

DRY FOODS & OTHER ITEMS:
– Nutritional bars, fruit & nut bars, cereal bars (NO CANNED FOODS PLEASE)
– Tea Light candles & quality batteries (AA & D)

EVENING DROP-OFF HOURS ARE MON. & WED. 6:30-8:30 P.M.

Haitian Women for Haitian Refugees:
335 Maple Street, 2nd Floor, Brooklyn, NY (this is not a mailing address) (718) 735-4660

Please use rear entrance on Lincoln Road between Nostrand and New York Avenue. Enter through St. Francis Church parking lot

DAYTIME DROP-OFF HOURS ARE MON. – FRI. 11:00-4:00 P.M.

Brooklyn Brainery Semester Begins January 18

Learn something new at the Brooklyn Brainery. The inaugural semester begins at the The Gowanus Studio Space from January 18th – February 10th. Each class meets once a week for a month and only costs $25!

Brooklyn Brainery hosts cheap ($25!) collaborative classes on anything and everything. What’s that mean? Think book clubs on steroids. Brainery classes don’t have real teachers.  Class leaders know a bit about the topic, but they’re mostly just there to keep things on track and guide the learning process.

LK213: Looking at Things

The group is going to look at art and objects of all sorts! and develop a vocabulary to talk about them in a sort-of coherent manner!

SCT133: Scents & Sensibility

Smell things! Extract scents! Steam distillation! Why does smell exist and how do we use it? I promise we will both make ice cream and wear blindfolds at least once.

OPT000: Optical Collusion

Light might be fast but we’re far more clever – let’s do some stuff with it.

MEAT266: Meat!
All of the theory, none of the blood. Cuts, feeds, breeds, we’ll cover it all!

Read more here.

Drop Off Goods at Vox Pop for Haiti

Vox Pop Cafe is a drop off point for goods being collected by Action Now for Project Salvation for Haiti.  They have arranged for a container to be sent directly to Haiti and have infrastructure in place for dissemination.

ITEMS NEEDED:
MEN, WOMEN & CHILDREN:
(new or clean, used clothing)
Pants
Shirts
T-shirts
Skirts
Shorts
Shoes
Sneakers
Socks
Underwear (new only)

SCHOOL
SUPPLIES:
Pens
Pencils
Erasers
Notebooks
Crayons
Rulers
Book bags
BABIES:
Disposable diapers
Baby clothing
Blankets

LINENS/OTHER: (very important)
Washcloths
Towels
Sanitary napkins
Flashlights w/batteries
Travel-sized items:
Toothbrush/paste
Soap
Shampoo
Comb/brush

MEDICAL SUPPLIES:
Aspirin
Alcohol pads
Band-aids
All first-aid items
Latex gloves
Empty plastic pill bottles

FOOD:
Powdered milk
Canned goods
Rice
Beans
Cornmeal
Sugar
Chocolate milk – Quick/Ovaltine

A list of needed goods is also available at http://www.facebook.com/?ref=home#/group.php?gid=247506256628&ref=mf

Many Ways To Give to Haiti, Including by Cell Phone

The tragedy in Haiti deeply affects Brooklyn home to 200,000 Haitian-Americans. Give what you can to help Haiti rebuild after this tragedy.

Here is a list of places where you can give money to help Haiti recover after a 7.0 earthquake devastated the already impoverished nation. Perhaps the easiest way to give is by cell phone.

Yele Haiti by Cell Phone Musician Wyclef Jean, whose homeland is Haiti, is asking people to donate to Yele Haiti to help with disaster relief for earthquake survivors.

Wyclef Jean asks people to please text: Yele to 510 510 and donate $5.

For more information go to: http://yele.org

Red Cross Go to http://redcross.org to learn more about how to donate the the Red Cross to send help to Haiti. The Red Cross has taken immediate action to start to send funding and supplies to Haiti to ensure that earthquake survivors get the help they need.

UNICEF Learn about how to help Haiti recover from the Earthquake at www.unicefusa.org/haitiquake or call 1-800-4UNICEF.

UNICEF helps children and families all over the world survive natural disasters and obtain urgently needed medical care.

Save the Children This organization has been providing help to Haiti since the 1980s. For more information about how to help the Haiti recovery program with Save the Children go to: http://www.savethechildren.org.

World Vision Go to http://www.worldvision.org to learn how to help the children in Haiti. This organization works to help with disaster response resources. The website also provides information about how to sponsor a child in Haiti or other locations.

Doctors Without Borders This group has won a Nobel Prize for their work to save lives during times of disasters. For more information about how the doctors will work to help Haiti go to: http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org.

Mercy Corps The Mercy Corps has created the Haiti Earthquake fund. Send donations to P.O. box 2669, Portland, OR 97208. Go to www.mercycorps.org for more information. You may also call 1-888-256-1900.