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 Post subject: NPR: This I Believe
PostPosted: Mon Apr 04, 2005 12:35 pm 
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NPR is reviving an old segment called "This I Believe" which asks individuals to submit 500-word essays about their personal philosophy, some of which are read on air by the author. Some famous contributors have been Jackie Robinson, Hellen Keller, and President Truman.

I thought some of the folks who post here might have some prolific thoughts to send in, and I'll be listening for you on the radio ...

http://www.npr.org/thisibelieve/

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PostPosted: Mon Apr 04, 2005 6:08 pm 
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speaking of NPR...

I just wanted to mention that Corey Flintoff used to be my next-door neighbor. He got his start here on small-town AK radio, but he went big-time when I was still a kid.

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 05, 2005 12:52 am 
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Have any idea when they're gonna be playing the segment? I love NPR but sadly get a crappy signal in my house. =( Maybe I'm odd, but Sophomore year of highschool, I listen to Talk of the Nation and Forum on an almost daily basis. Who needs to pay attention in class when we have Neil Conan and Michael Krasny?


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PostPosted: Tue Apr 05, 2005 12:53 am 
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simple schoolboy wrote:
Have any idea when they're gonna be playing the segment? I love NPR but sadly get a crappy signal in my house. =( Maybe I'm odd, but Sophomore year of highschool, I listen to Talk of the Nation and Forum on an almost daily basis. Who needs to pay attention in class when we have Neil Conan and Michael Krasny?


Good for you. Keep it up!

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 05, 2005 1:23 am 
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Quote:
They will share these statements in weekly broadcasts on NPR's Morning Edition and All Things Considered.

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 05, 2005 3:51 am 
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I heard this afternoon someone say that it would be on Friday.

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 05, 2005 4:03 am 
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simple schoolboy wrote:
Have any idea when they're gonna be playing the segment? I love NPR but sadly get a crappy signal in my house. =( Maybe I'm odd, but Sophomore year of highschool, I listen to Talk of the Nation and Forum on an almost daily basis. Who needs to pay attention in class when we have Neil Conan and Michael Krasny?


You are odd. I did the same thing, I am odd; how odd...

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 1:35 pm 
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This was a really good one!!

Quote:
Iranian-born writer Azar Nafisi was fired from the University of Tehran for refusing to wear a veil. Her book, Reading Lolita in Tehran, is based on the years she secretly taught literature to female students in her home. Nafisi now works at the Johns Hopkins School for Advanced International Studies.

The Mysterious Connections that Link Us Together
by Azar Nafisi

Morning Edition, July 18, 2005 · I believe in empathy. I believe in the kind of empathy that is created through imagination and through intimate, personal relationships. I am a writer and a teacher, so much of my time is spent interpreting stories and connecting to other individuals. It is the urge to know more about ourselves and others that creates empathy. Through imagination and our desire for rapport, we transcend our limitations, freshen our eyes, and are able to look at ourselves and the world through a new and alternative lens.

Whenever I think of the word empathy, I think of a small boy named Huckleberry Finn contemplating his friend and runaway slave, Jim. Huck asks himself whether he should give Jim up or not. Huck was told in Sunday school that people who let slaves go free go to "everlasting fire." But then, Huck says he imagines he and Jim in "the day and nighttime, sometimes moonlight, sometimes storms, and we a-floating along, talking and singing and laughing." Huck remembers Jim and their friendship and warmth. He imagines Jim not as a slave but as a human being and he decides that, "alright, then, I'll go to hell."

What Huck rejects is not religion but an attitude of self-righteousness and inflexibility. I remember this particular scene out of Huck Finn so vividly today, because I associate it with a difficult time in my own life. In the early 1980s when I taught at the University of Tehran, I, like many others, was expelled. I was very surprised to discover that my staunchest allies were two students who were very active at the University's powerful Muslim Students' Association. These young men and I had engaged in very passionate and heated arguments. I had fiercely opposed their ideological stances. But that didn't stop them from defending me. When I ran into one of them after my expulsion, I thanked him for his support. "We are not as rigid as you imagine us to be Professor Nafisi," he responded. "Remember your own lectures on Huck Finn? Let's just say, he is not the only one who can risk going to hell!"

This experience in my life reinforces my belief in the mysterious connections that link individuals to each other despite their vast differences. No amount of political correctness can make us empathize with a child left orphaned in Darfur or a woman taken to a football stadium in Kabul and shot to death because she is improperly dressed. Only curiosity about the fate of others, the ability to put ourselves in their shoes, and the will to enter their world through the magic of imagination, creates this shock of recognition. Without this empathy there can be no genuine dialogue, and we as individuals and nations will remain isolated and alien, segregated and fragmented.

I believe that it is only through empathy, that the pain experienced by an Algerian woman, a North Korean dissident, a Rwandan child or an Iraqi prisoner, becomes real to me and not just passing news. And it is at times like this when I ask myself, am I prepared -- like Huck Finn -- to give up Sunday school heaven for the kind of hell that Huck chose?


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/stor ... Id=4753976

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 1:54 pm 
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I love NPR and listen to about 2+ hours a day. We're also members for our local station.

I think the best thing is that this segment allows people to express beliefs that are spiritual in nature without having to be classified as belonging to a particular religion.

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 2:16 pm 
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One of my favs on NPR is To the best of our Knowledge and Fresh Air

I realize that some of you may have great NPR programming in your town, I know Nashville's is pretty good. We have an AM and a FM station. During the day our AM station runs pretty good stuff and has it all online. So if anyone on here lives in BFE go to http://www.wpln.org and listen to some streaming audio.


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PostPosted: Mon Jul 18, 2005 2:31 pm 
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jacktor wrote:
One of my favs on NPR is To the best of our Knowledge and Fresh Air

I realize that some of you may have great NPR programming in your town, I know Nashville's is pretty good. We have an AM and a FM station. During the day our AM station runs pretty good stuff and has it all online. So if anyone on here lives in BFE go to http://www.wpln.org and listen to some streaming audio.


Car Talk & This American Life

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