Year: 2019

(2019) On Gleaning

This powerpoint was stimulated by an article that Josh Ridley sent to Adam Geha: Bruce Baker and Tom Parks, ‘The Book of Ruth Can Transform the Way We Do Business Today’, Christianity Today, 21 June 2019. I presented these slides to the informal “Eggs No Bacon” ‘Abrahamic faiths and beyond’ ecumenical breakfast club.

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Photo from the funeral booklet, circa 2014.

(2019) Margaret June (“Betty”) Mariani (1931-2019)

Today we not only bury mum, we celebrate her life, reflect on what she meant to each of us, we give thanks, we seek to understand. With my brother Shane, I thank in particular our magnificent sisters, Maree and Karyn, who cared so deeply, who were mum’s bedrocks, always a great comfort for mum over so many decades.

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Photo supplied by Vic Alhadeff from the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies and published in the Sydney Morning Herald with the obituary.

(2019) “Tell Them Your Memories…”: Jeremy Spinak (1982-2018)

Jeremy Mark Spinak, Jewish communal leader, businessman, politics aficionado, US Presidential history buff, husband, father – “Jez” to family and friends – passed away aged 36 just five months after diagnosis with pericardial mesothelioma, a phenomenally rare cancer associated with proximity to and inhalation of asbestos.

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(2019) Why We Lost – A Letter to Rodney Cavalier

All parties exist to win. I felt from the beginning of the campaign that there was no great mood for change, despite the shambles of the last three years. I expected, though, at the start that we would narrowly win because of the mess the government was in, not due to us.

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In Michael Danby’s parliament house office in Canberra after his valedictory speech on 2 April 2019. From left to right, Zeke Solomon, Shane Easson, Mary Easson (sitting), Michael Danby, and Michael Easson.

(2019) Michael Educated Me: Notes of Danby Speech

Welcome to the Canopy Bar celebration. The back bar, front bar, and middle bar tributes are awaiting scheduling. I first met Michael Danby 42 years ago in the Trades Hall pub on the eve of a Young Labor conference. He was boisterous, opinionated, excited, and interesting.

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Front cover of the Pabst book.

(2019) Story of Our Country

Story of Our Country is an important book on the Australian Labor legacy and modern challenges. This review considers the challenge set out by the author and the gap between task and accomplishment.

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