Arthur Turfa's Blog
July 11, 2020
Bi-lingual Blog from Miriam Gross
This bi-lingual blog comes from my friend and pastoral colleague, Miriam Groß, wh serves a German Lutheran (EKD) parish in Manhattan. Not everything is in both languages. Regardless of language, one can read well-written, cogent reflections on a variety of contemporary events and wide-ranging issues.
https://miriamgross.blog/?fbclid=IwAR1mVBII3bb_yEDsxkVCnVFpBRE8vByHkabLI3_NI2RTk8dXXoKcim5ZaUw

https://miriamgross.blog/?fbclid=IwAR1mVBII3bb_yEDsxkVCnVFpBRE8vByHkabLI3_NI2RTk8dXXoKcim5ZaUw
Published on July 11, 2020 08:42
July 2, 2020
Poem from "Saluda Reflections" on SoundCloud! And there are Others!
https://soundcloud.com/arthur-turfa-1/sounds-from-wednesday-morning
A popular one from Saluda Reflections! Available from the usual vendors. Here's a link to Amazon for all of my books! Thanks!
https://www.amazon.com/Arthur-Turfa/e/B00YJ9LNOA?
ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_2&qid=1593725754&sr=1-2
A popular one from Saluda Reflections! Available from the usual vendors. Here's a link to Amazon for all of my books! Thanks!
https://www.amazon.com/Arthur-Turfa/e/B00YJ9LNOA?

Published on July 02, 2020 14:37
June 24, 2020
From the Los Altos Pubic Library- Art and Poetry
https://www.instagram.com/p/CBgfiu1p0hp/?fbclid=IwAR1IpByRPXBi-BqsZmUDO_eqRemubgLTS1P96Kb0va7fFwGnOJ3wP4w56PE
Carol Worthington-Levy is expanding our All in the Family. She has a show at the Los Altos Library!
Congrats, Carol!
Carol Worthington-Levy is expanding our All in the Family. She has a show at the Los Altos Library!
Congrats, Carol!

Published on June 24, 2020 17:49
Five Stars on Goodreadsfor "The Weight of Lkiving" by Michael Stephen Daigle
The author avoids sensationalism here. As dark as the plot gets, what stands out, as usual, are the characters and dialogue. There is never a lack of scandal in Ironton, New Jersey, a city whose glory days are in the past, but where a few good people hope to make real and lasting improvements.<br /> Police detective Frank Nagle is one of them. One of the best things about this series is that readers can start anywhere and not feel like they are missing out on so much. The author is very adept at giving enough of the backstory to whet readers; interest in going back to earlier novels.<br /> Characters who have appeared in earlier novels of the series reveal some surprising things about themselves in this book. The author makes it all fit together in a fast-paced riveting story.
<br/><br/>
<a href="https://www.goodreads.com/review/list... all my reviews</a>
Published on June 24, 2020 06:26
June 17, 2020
A Poem by Bert Brecht on the 17 June 1953 Uprising
https://mronline.org/2006/08/14/brecht140806-html/
Brecht could criticize the German Democratic Republic because of his fame, Austrian citizenship, and his moving to East Berlin voluntarily. A few years back I participated in a fascinating Goethe-Institut seminar Literarisches Berlin/Literary Berlin. We toured his house and attended a reading there. In addition, we saw his grave in the adjacent Dorotheenstädtischer Cemetery, which has the graves of numerous leading figures from all walks of German life.
When I was studying German as both an undergraduate and a graduate student in the 1970s, Brecht was rather grudgingly in the course of study. German departments then were conservative in both the curriculum and politics. That Brecht maintained Austrian citizenship and had a Swiss bank account proved to some that he was a hypocrite. The Communists offered to build a theater for him, so he went East. After that, he wrote little but mentored future playwrights and actors.
I prefer to let this work speak for itself. While I do not consider myself a Brecht expert, I am comfortable with that. A link to his life:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertolt_Brecht#Cold_War_and_final_years_in_East_Germany_(1945%E21956)
Brecht could criticize the German Democratic Republic because of his fame, Austrian citizenship, and his moving to East Berlin voluntarily. A few years back I participated in a fascinating Goethe-Institut seminar Literarisches Berlin/Literary Berlin. We toured his house and attended a reading there. In addition, we saw his grave in the adjacent Dorotheenstädtischer Cemetery, which has the graves of numerous leading figures from all walks of German life.
When I was studying German as both an undergraduate and a graduate student in the 1970s, Brecht was rather grudgingly in the course of study. German departments then were conservative in both the curriculum and politics. That Brecht maintained Austrian citizenship and had a Swiss bank account proved to some that he was a hypocrite. The Communists offered to build a theater for him, so he went East. After that, he wrote little but mentored future playwrights and actors.
I prefer to let this work speak for itself. While I do not consider myself a Brecht expert, I am comfortable with that. A link to his life:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertolt_Brecht#Cold_War_and_final_years_in_East_Germany_(1945%E21956)

Published on June 17, 2020 06:37
June 10, 2020
Story is in German, But My Poem is in English!
file:///C:/Users/Art/Downloads/202005...
You will have to copy and paste the link to see the story, which except for a poem of mine, is in German. My good friend and colleague Pastor Miriam Groß interviewed me recently for the Sonntagsblatt. a weekly publication of the ELKB/ Bavarian Evangelical Lutheran Church
You will have to copy and paste the link to see the story, which except for a poem of mine, is in German. My good friend and colleague Pastor Miriam Groß interviewed me recently for the Sonntagsblatt. a weekly publication of the ELKB/ Bavarian Evangelical Lutheran Church
Published on June 10, 2020 19:41
June 9, 2020
Schola Cantorum Concert Viritual Elijah
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mbdE2IhkWwY&fbclid=IwAR0RJC79GKd65vT3Vua7f56wO73t2Pq9eCtPi-Okys2av_XIkE2FvB8tATo
Stunning poem by Sophia Smith (which I posted earlier), with Eric Tuan's beautiful musical setting, photographs by Lloyd Levy and Carol Worthington-Levy, and Mendelssohn!
Stunning poem by Sophia Smith (which I posted earlier), with Eric Tuan's beautiful musical setting, photographs by Lloyd Levy and Carol Worthington-Levy, and Mendelssohn!
Published on June 09, 2020 06:48
Schola Cantirum Concert Viritual Elijah
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mbdE2IhkWwY&fbclid=IwAR0RJC79GKd65vT3Vua7f56wO73t2Pq9eCtPi-Okys2av_XIkE2FvB8tATo
Stunning poem by Sophia Smith (which I posted earlier), with Eric Tuan's beautiful musical setting, photographs by Lloyd Levy and Carol Worthington-Levy, and Mendelssohn!
Stunning poem by Sophia Smith (which I posted earlier), with Eric Tuan's beautiful musical setting, photographs by Lloyd Levy and Carol Worthington-Levy, and Mendelssohn!
Published on June 09, 2020 06:48
June 6, 2020
"Working with Demons" Hifsa Ashraf Chapbook
https://proletaria730964817.files.wordpress.com/2020/03/working-with-demons.pdf
This is a quick but important read, which I see as serving as a springboard for further discussion not only on Islamophobia (the subtitle is workplace Islamophobia, but on any other phobia used to divide people into groups.
There are seven brief poems in Asian forms, with headings on top of each page. While I do not consider myself proficient enough to critique the forms )I am a poet who writes in other forms), I certainly want to say something about hatred and discrimination.
The world is far from a perfect place. I look at that from a religious point of view (Christian in my case, and more specifically, Lutheran). Even if one wants to examine the world from a spiritual and/or an ethical point of view, the world is still not a perfect place.
In the first poem, that imperfection is captured in these lines:
job orientation…
the lingering cold
after handshakes
The facade of politeness and business-like behavior is very thin and cannot mask the coldness that will always be there.
A later one gives the reader much to ponder. roots could mean hair but more likely origins, background, and not for a good reason. As such the poem sets up an anxious tension/ Is the interview even going to be fair, or is it perfunctory, conducted with a foregone conclusion? Here is the poem:
:
digging out
my roots
job promotion
interview
This chapbook would be useful to you at the workplace or classroom to stimulate discussion on the topic of discrimination. There is also more to the issue, and I would hope that the poet will revisit it in the future.
This is a quick but important read, which I see as serving as a springboard for further discussion not only on Islamophobia (the subtitle is workplace Islamophobia, but on any other phobia used to divide people into groups.

There are seven brief poems in Asian forms, with headings on top of each page. While I do not consider myself proficient enough to critique the forms )I am a poet who writes in other forms), I certainly want to say something about hatred and discrimination.
The world is far from a perfect place. I look at that from a religious point of view (Christian in my case, and more specifically, Lutheran). Even if one wants to examine the world from a spiritual and/or an ethical point of view, the world is still not a perfect place.
In the first poem, that imperfection is captured in these lines:
job orientation…
the lingering cold
after handshakes
The facade of politeness and business-like behavior is very thin and cannot mask the coldness that will always be there.
A later one gives the reader much to ponder. roots could mean hair but more likely origins, background, and not for a good reason. As such the poem sets up an anxious tension/ Is the interview even going to be fair, or is it perfunctory, conducted with a foregone conclusion? Here is the poem:
:
digging out
my roots
job promotion
interview
This chapbook would be useful to you at the workplace or classroom to stimulate discussion on the topic of discrimination. There is also more to the issue, and I would hope that the poet will revisit it in the future.
Published on June 06, 2020 14:13
June 3, 2020
I Finished "Catfish Stew" from the SC Writers Association

In the morning coolness, I sat on the screened porch with a mug of tea and finished this anthology. I am honored to have a poem in here. There are many other excellent poems and works of prose here.
The South Carolina Writers Association produces this anthology. I am a member and want to let everyone know that submissions may come from anyone, anywhere!
You can order a copy using this link:
https://www.amazon.com/South-Carolina-Writers-Association/dp/B087L4JFY5/ref=pd_lpo_14_img_0/138-2585160-8347524?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=B087L4JFY5&p
Published on June 03, 2020 08:37