Peace Tower on Earth, Good Will to All People

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A Tower Called Peace

 

At the center of Parliament Hill stands

Peace on earth, good will to all people

A tower that someone named Peace

 

A Maple Leaf flag flies above this tower

Peace on earth, good will to all people

The symbol of a nation called Village

 

This Village is a colorful and orderly mess

Peace on earth, good will to all people

Of all kinds, pieces from all over making a mosaic

 

Trying for harmony, we hit some off notes

Peace on earth, good will to all people

As we struggle to read a score half-written

 

This village has its bad days and hits rough patches

Peace on earth, good will to all people

Despite its “Sorry” reputation

 

And this Village has its dark bits, closeted skeletons

Peace on earth, good will to all people

Of racism, violence, injustice, greed

 

As with any village, perfection is illusory

Peace on earth, good will to all people

An ideal unreachable as we reach from the real

 

Yet there stands that Tower someone called Peace

Peace on earth, good will to all people

Maybe not as a boast, maybe as a prophecy

 

Not a prophecy as in “fortune” like in a cookie

Peace on earth, good will to all people

But prophecy as a Voice of one crying in the wilderness

 

A Voice speaking truth to the Village

Peace on earth, good will to all people

Saying, “To claim peace you must first be peace”

 

Perhaps that Tower towers over the Village

Peace on earth, good will to all people

As a marker to make Peace impossible to forget

 

When everything but Peace seems to rule the day

Peace on earth, good will to all people

The Tower seems to say, “Pay attention.”

 

“Stay frosty, Village. Keep keen and sharp as blades.”

Peace on earth, good will to all people

“Peace isn’t easy, or cheap, or postcard material.”

 

Peace only comes after the battle, after bloodshed

Peace on earth, good will to all people

And Peace, truly, takes a Village

 

Everyone, everywhere, every day, every moment

Peace on earth, good will to all people

Fighting to be harmony in a discordant world

 

On Parliament Hill is a Tower called Peace

Peace on earth, good will to all people

In a big World that needs a little Village

 

To help it know: Peace on earth, good will to all people

 

 

  • Ronald Kok, December 2018

 

A Year of Creating Dangerously, Day 294: A Tribute to Gord

Gord Panorama

Tuba

If I was your tuba 

you’d take me everywhere 

I’d be designed to 

make you smile.

– Gord Downie

Canada lost its unofficial Poet Laureate this past week. Practically unknown outside his native land, except to other musicians and artists of the world, he was as Canadian a rock star as you could imagine: Quirky, intelligent, funny, humble, compassionate, weird, former goalie, hockey fan, and small town Ontario boy with a heart as big as all the provinces put together. He was an icon who shunned icon-hood and you can’t get much more Canadian than that. He wrote songs that told Canadian stories, featured Canadian heroes and villains, and named Canadian places (“Bobcaygeon” comes to mind). He was unashamed to be from Canada but not at all in-your-face about it… and you can’t get much more Canadian than that, either.

For me, Gord Downie was the artist who introduced me to Canada. Gord was the lead singer/song-writer for the band the Tragically Hip. The Hip have been making music together for over 30 years. I came to this country seventeen years ago. I had only heard of the Tragically Hip because, back in the late ’80’s, I had a Canadian roommate in college who played their debut album for me. Other than that, I never heard them on the radio in the United States and I didn’t think much about them during my years there.

Arriving in Canada in 2000 and flipping through radio stations, I became aware that it was the Hip that was being played on many, many formats – Classic rock, “real” rock, alternative rock, 80’s & 90’s, and the public broadcasts of CBC – their music seemed to be the soundtrack of the country, way more than that of any other Canadian musician or band. I didn’t get it at first. It was just another band, not particularly unique in sound or song structure. They didn’t chart any new musical waters. But I couldn’t help absorbing their music, trying to figure out their hold on this new country of mine.

It took my awhile but over the years I started to pick up on things, songs that made reference to this country, to events and places. Tom Thomson paddled past at the beginning of one song, Bill Barilko disappeared after winning the Cup for the Leafs in another, prisoners escaped from Millhaven maximum security prison in another, and the haunting sound of a loon eased me into the beginnings of  one of my Hip favorites: “Wheat Kings”, a song that spoke of a late-breaking story on the CBC.

I didn’t hear any other music made by a Canadian band quite like this. It made me realize that there was, in fact, something very unique that the Tragically Hip brought to music – They brought Canada. In a land renowned for its ability to say “Sorry”, they were unapologetic about their subject matter. Amazing.

This, I came to realize, was all because of Gord.

Gord died this past week at the age of 53. About a year and a half ago we were given the sad news that he was diagnosed with inoperable brain cancer. This news seemed to take the breath away from so many Canadians. It was then I realized how important this man was to the country. The Tragically Hip would embark on one more tour across the Canada, finishing in their hometown of Kingston, Ontario to perform a show broadcast live all over the country. I sat out in a park in Ottawa with about 2,000 other people, sitting on blankets and lawn chairs, watching the concert beamed in by satellite. Millions of Canadians watched that show all over the country, in big gatherings under the stars, in city parks, in bars, in basements. We all were there for Gord, for the crazy guy who wrote eccentric songs about the place and people he loved. And Canada loved him back. Amazing.

His legacy includes his work near the end of his life to make his own country aware of the need to repair the damage of residential schools and the dysfunctional and harmful relationship European Canadians have had with Native Canadians. He did it through words and music and by infusing himself into it, as he had always done. A “Secret Path” it is called, the true story of a young indigenous boy who escaped his residential school and attempted to walk the 600km back to his reserve; he died of exposure in route. The story had haunted Gord for many years. In his final show, it was clear the message he all wanted to give us: Work to make this better. He did his part and, in death, it feels like he’s passing the baton on to the rest of us.

Gord helped make Canadians proud of who they are, but not in any jingoistic sense. He made us proud that we can be strong but also compassionate people; that we can have a history to celebrate but also the strength to be willing to change the parts of our country that are sick and in need of a do-over.

When I think of  it that way, the man has a remarkable legacy. Not bad for a strange kid from Amherstview, Ontario.

So long, Gord. Thanks for the whimsy. Thanks for the authentic madness. Thanks for being our tuba. Thanks for being someone we can take with us anywhere. You walk among the stars, now, where you belong.

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A Year of Creating Dangerously, Day 182: Resilience and Resistance

Reid-Haida_Dog_Salmon

Haida Dog Salmon, Bill Reid, 1974

Today is Canada’s 150th birthday, a day of celebration for most in the country. But lately I have been reminded that for many, many thousands of indigenous Canadians there is very little to celebrate. The past 150 years for them has been filled with horrific events that are only just beginning to be addressed and admitted on a national scale. Whether it is the shameful history of residential schools or the shameful impoverished conditions so many live with today, their story both past and present should not be ignored, especially on a day like today.

Over the course of my year of discovering creativity in myself and around me, I have encountered the powerful, gracious and elegant art of Native Canadians. In their expressions the spirit remains strong and the story endures. They are a crucial part of the nation and we are blessed that this people continue to shine despite the wounds inflicted on them.

I went searching for Canadian Aboriginal poetry and came upon a poet who resides in my city, Ottawa. Her name is Vera Wabegijig and she is from the Unceded Reserve of Wikwemikong, Ontario in Georgian Bay. Her poem “Hunting” is the art I want to share with you today. In her own words, Vera Wabegijig says this:

“‘Hunting’ has a lot to do with resilience and resistance and the reason why I wrote it was because I was thinking a lot about salmon how the salmon will teach, will give us teaching to help us, will give us insights or give us a way to overcome and to persevere, to live.

No matter what comes your way, no matter what the obstacles are, the salmon will teach me to just overcome, and to keep on going no matter what the obstacles are and to also learn from those obstacles and to integrate them into my life and to just move forward.”

 

Hunting

A raven flies, wings with long blue-black feathers drifting on the wind

Currents under body and hovers in the air

Raven dives into the creek below that brims with sockeye.

A salmon leaps out of the water, with reds and silver arcs

Back fins wag and build a momentum, ascending further upstream

Bears with pigeon-pawed trot over with a swaying, heavy head, climb on top of rocks

Where the water flows and falls with mouth wide open

They bite the springing salmon, canine teeth pierce into the silver belly

Eagles swoop, massive wings slow the body down with talons wide open

Preying in the creek, rising with salmon in its golden grip

Yet the salmon move, push, and endure, through broken skin and hanging entrails

This gathering place is encoded in memory, bringing salmon home

This long journey that nothing can stop, not even eagles, ravens or bears

A Year of Creating Dangerously, Day 181: An Ode to Canada

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“Sea to sea to sea and there and back again,
Draws from each soul a simple, “It’s a beauty, eh?”
And in truth beauty, beauty truth
C, A, N, A, D, and A”

Tomorrow is a momentous Canada Day, deserving of a take on a momentous poem. Three years ago I took John Keats’ masterpiece “Ode on a Grecian Urn” as a template and wrote my Ode to my adopted country. Here ’tis:

An American Ode on Canada Day

Thou still unravished bride of whiteness,
Thou foster-child of Britain and of France,
Mowat and Atwood likely could express
A better ode than this American putz:
What maple leafed –fringed legend haunts thy shape
Of Gretzky and mortals or both
In Toronto or the dales of Burnaby?
What men or Mufferaws are these? What Acadians loth?
What Trivial Pursuit? What pass from tape-to-tape?
What fiddles and bagpipes ? What tepid Red Rose tea?

Shaped dough of Tim’s is sweet, but flowing syrup
Sweeter, therefore, trees tap on;
Not just for sensual tongue but, more endear’d,
Feed our spirits with thy rich tone.
Fair youth on outdoor rinks cannot yet go
Home though supper-time be called
No winning shot has yet been tallied
Skate on despite wind and cold
Warmth will flood when, arms upraised,
Is heard, “He shoots! He scores!”

What land is this that freezes and boils,
Where deep snow yet blistering sun is seen?
Toques, Mukluks and tanks of heating oils
Exist with swimming trunks, AC and sunscreen.
In span of but weeks the snowshoers tread
On waters now solid and still;
Only now calm from the cottagers play,
From Ski-dos, canoes, loons and kabooms.
From evergreen to seemingly dead,
A cycle no death can kill.

O Canuck land, fair and free, doth teem
Of men authentic, maidens fair overwrought,
With forests, lakes, rivers and trodden paths,
Your vast form dost tease us out of thought.
Cities rumble, roll and flow; highways stretch beyond
Imaginings; people red and white and black and tan
Make a tapestry draped in full humanity.
Sea to sea to sea and there and back again,
Draws from each soul a simple, “It’s a beauty, eh?”
And in truth beauty, beauty truth
C, A, N, A, D, and A

by Ronald Kok, Ottawa, ON, July 1, 2014

A Year of Creating Dangerously, Day 25: Canada’s Greatest Painter

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He’s the greatest Canadian painter you’ve never heard of. Well,  maybe that’s unfair. If you are Canadian and you are reading this, you probably know who that is in the photo and also have a good guess at the name of the painting beside him. If you are clueless about him and also a Canuck, turn in your Tragically Hip t-shirts to the first Mountie you see: You’re not worthy.

Relax! I’m joking, eh? However, he is the greatest and most influential painter Canada has ever produced. That is the humble opinion of this transplanted ‘Merican. Even though I got my Bachelor of Fine Arts degree and took all those art history courses, I don’t remember ever talking about him or ever seeing his work. But two years into my time here in Ottawa, I went to see his paintings on display at the National Gallery of Canada. I will never forget seeing his paintings live and in person: To paraphrase Bono when speaking of the first time he saw the Clash perform: It wasn’t life or death; it was more important than that.

Tom Thomson (1877-1917) is his name and his story is inspiring and tragic. He was a man of the wilderness and he loved the solitude of a hike in the woods or a canoe ride on a still and silent Ontario lake. He was a mostly self-taught artist who conveyed the natural beauty of his country better than anyone before or since. And he inspired so many, including some of his contemporaries who became known as the Group of Seven. He was a quiet, kind, introspective soul who was a master of color. Every landscape painter in Canada since is a reflection of Tom Thomson and his genius.

Seeing his artwork in person was a profoundly moving experience. I know that sounds cliche but I am not joking when I say I got emotional standing in front of some of the most incredible paintings I had ever seen. Part of that was because I felt I just met someone who I could relate to so strongly; part of it was because at that time I was so far removed from being an artist and found I missed it dearly; and part of it was the sheer power of the work that came from the hand of this master.

Tom Thomson’s life was brilliant and brief. He died, ironically yet fittingly, on a canoe trip on Canoe Lake in Algonquin Park, Ontario at the age of 39. The presumed cause of death was drowning, despite his vast experience in the wilderness. His life and death are part of Canadian lore. But the real treasure he left behind is his passion: his painting.

Below is a small gallery of his artwork. Photos on a blog cannot do justice to the color and energy in these pieces. If you ever get a chance to see his work in person, Go! See! Experience! It may help you discover just how life-changing a work of art can truly be.

morning-cloud-1913

Morning Cloud, 1913

northern-river-1915

Northern River, 1915

pine-island-georgian-bay-1916

Pine Island, Georgian Bay, 1916

the-jack-pine-1917

Jake Pine, 1916

woodland-waterfall-1916

Woodland Waterfall, 1916

path-behind-mowat-lodge-1917

Path Behind Mowat Lodge, 1917

maple-saplings-19177

Maple Saplings, 1917

the-west-wind-1917

The West Wind, 1917

‘Merican Thanks Givin’ to Canada

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As a native of the U.S.A. who has lived in Canada for over sixteen years, I’ve come to appreciate so much about the country. I’ve also come to accept Thanksgiving in early October – no mean feat for a ‘Merican! So in honor of Canadian Thanksgiving Day, I present the following…

I am thankful for Canada, a country where a three-month election is viewed as interminably long.

I am thankful for Canada, a place where coffee drinking is seen as an inalienable right and decaf is deemed sacrilegious.

I am thankful for Canada, a land of great natural beauty: vast forests, majestic mountains, thousands of lakes and rivers, and millions of Canadian women.

I am thankful for Canada, a country that produces more funny people per capita than any other nation in the world (You can look it up! I’m sure that statistic exists somewhere!)

I am thankful for Canada, where a moose may just be seen running down your suburban street (Hey, it happened in my suburb! It was on CBC and everything!).

I am thankful for Canada, a peaceful and harmonious land where people beat the crap out of each other on ice… while wearing sharp skates… and carrying big sticks.

I am thankful for Canada, where a young child can grow up to be Tragically Hip.

I am thankful for Canada, a land flowing with milk, honey and thousands of micro breweries.

I am thankful for Canada, the country that gave us the canoe and poutine and sometimes canoes full of poutine.

I am thankful for Canada, home of famous fictional characters like Wolverine, Deadpool and Pamela Anderson.

I am thankful for Canada, home of famous historical figures like Billy Bishop, Pierre Trudeau and Pamela Anderson.

I am thankful for Canada, where young men named Justin can grow up to be Prime Minister or dreamy pop star. Or possibly both.

I am thankful for Canada, a country so polite it makes the Brady Bunch look like the Kardashians.

I am thankful for Canada, where there is no “i” in “team” but there is in “Blue Jays Win! Blue Jays Win!”

I am thankful for Canada, the warmest place on earth that is famous for snow and ice.

I am thankful for Canada, a country that gave me my wife, my favorite Canuck.

I am thankful for Canada, my (adopted) home and native land!

Happy Thanksgiving, eh?

 

 

An Ode On Canada Day

Happy Canada Day! A year ago I published an ode to my adopted country based on Keats’ “Ode On a Grecian Urn”. It seemed appropriate to publish it again.

Thou still unravished bride of
American putz:
What maple leaf–fringed legend haunts thy shape
Of Gretzky and mortals or both
In Toronto or the dales of Burnaby?
What men or Mufferaws are these? What Acadians loth?
What Trivial Pursuit? What pass from tape-to-tape?
What fiddles and bagpipes ? What tepid Red Rose tea?

Shaped dough of Tim’s is sweet, but flowing syrup
Sweeter, therefore, trees tap on;
Not just for sensual tongue but, more endear’d,
Feed our spirits with thy rich tone.
Fair youth on outdoor rinks cannot yet go
Home though supper-time be called
No winning shot has yet been tallied
Skate on despite wind and cold
Warmth will flood when, arms upraised,
Is heard, “He shoots! He scores!”

What land is this that freezes and boils,
Where deep snow yet blistering sun is seen?
Toques, Mukluks and tanks of heating oils
Exist with swimming trunks, AC and sunscreen.
In span of but weeks the snowshoers tread
On waters now solid and still;
Only now calm from the cottagers play,
From Ski-dos, canoes, loons and kabooms.
From evergreen to seemingly dead,
A cycle no death can kill.

O Canuck land, fair and free, doth teem
Of men authentic, maidens fair overwrought,
With forests, lakes, rivers and trodden paths,
Your vast form dost tease us out of thought.
Cities rumble, roll and flow; highways stretch beyond
Imaginings; people red and white and black and tan
Make a tapestry draped in full humanity.
Sea to sea to sea and there and back again,
Draws from each soul a simple, “It’s a beauty, eh?”
And in truth beauty, beauty truth
C, A, N, A, D, and A

Canada Strong

IMG_3747_1Can a fallen soldier carry a nation on his back?

Can seconds of violence give rise to a lifetime of peace?

Can the Best display a strength in numbers the Worst could never boast?

Canada
Strong and free
Simple, complex, one, many
Peaceful, trustworthy, generous, vast
English, French, Aboriginal, immigrant, refugee
Hardy, hard-working, resilient, robust, proud, brave
Guileless, friendly, obstinate, true
Accepting, embracing
Strong and free
Canada

Where a fallen soldier lifted a nation on his back

Where seconds of violence will strengthen a resolve to peace

Where the Best display a strength in numbers the Worst cannot match

Canada
Strong
Free

Canada

An American Ode on Canada Day

As an American celebrating his fourteenth Canada Day on Canadian soil, here is an ode to my adopted country. Inspired by Keats’ poem “Ode On a Grecian Urn”, this is my hymn of praise to the True North. Written on July 1, 2014.

Canadian Boy

Thou still unravished bride of whiteness,

Thou foster-child of Britain and of France,

Mowat and Atwood likely could express

A better ode than this American putz:

What maple leaf –fringed legend haunts thy shape

Of Gretzky and mortals or both

In Toronto or the dales of Burnaby?

What men or Mufferaws are these? What Acadians loth?

What Trivial Pursuit? What pass from tape-to-tape?

What fiddles and bagpipes ? What tepid Red Rose tea?

 

Shaped dough of Tim’s is sweet, but flowing syrup

Sweeter, therefore, trees tap on;

Not just for sensual tongue but, more endear’d,

Feed our spirits with thy rich tone.

Fair youth on outdoor rinks cannot yet go

Home though supper-time be called;

No winning shot has yet been tallied

Skate on despite wind and cold.

Warmth will flood when, arms upraised,

Is heard, “He shoots! He scores!”

 

What land is this that freezes and boils,

Where deep snow yet blistering sun is seen?

Toques, Mukluks and tanks of heating oils

Exist with swimming trunks, AC and sunscreen.

In span of but weeks the snowshoers tread

On waters now solid and still;

Only now calm from the cottagers play,

From Ski-dos, canoes, loons and kabooms.

From evergreen to seemingly dead,

A cycle no death can kill.

 

O Canuck land, fair and free, doth teem

Of men authentic, maidens fair overwrought,

With forests, lakes, rivers and trodden paths,

Your vast form dost tease us out of thought.

Cities rumble, roll and flow; highways stretch beyond

Imaginings; people red and white and black and tan

Make a tapestry draped in full humanity.

Sea to sea to sea and there and back again,

Draws from each soul a simple, “It’s a beauty, eh?”

And in truth beauty, beauty truth

C, A, N, A, D, and A