Features
Failing on human rights: China watcher Sophie Richardson
China’s crackdown on protesters in Tibet has brought attention to China’s record on human rights—unwelcome attention for the country that hopes this summer’s Olympic Games in Beijing will bolster its image in the world. Protests have accompanied the travels of the Olympic torch as it makes its way to Beijing. Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director for Human Rights Watch, has worked on issues of human rights in China for years. Her book on China’s foreign policy will be published by Columbia University Press.
High anxiety: Dealing with critics
TheAmericanist: An interview with Ken Burns
Ken Burns’s acclaimed documentaries include The Civil War, Baseball, Jazz and, most recently, an account of World War II titled The War. His work has won Emmys, Grammys and numerous other awards and has been nominated for Academy Awards. He is working on a series on the national parks.
What is your own religious background and identity?
Like a child: Reflections on a mission trip
In January of this year I went to the Dominican Republic with Edge Outreach to install water purifiers. We were in the capital city of Santo Domingo. I was surprised to learn that the city does not provide clean water to its residents. Those who can afford it drink bottled water. Poor people drink the water from the tap and are frequently ill. No one knows how many children die in the poor neighborhoods from water-related illnesses.
The world comes to Qatar: Interfaith conversations in an Arab land
Roman de Gare
Claude Lelouch’s 1966 film A Man and a Woman remains the North Star of romantic French movies. It also remains his obit-leader, since Lelouch has done nothing in the past 42 years to approximate that runaway success.
Books
Minor classics
God and Globalization, Volume 4: Globalization and Grace
The Politics of Heaven:America in Fearful Times
From Stone to Living Word: Letting theBible LiveAgain
Special Orders: Poems
Transformed
The Transfiguration provides a window through which the Christian narrative may be viewed.
Departments
Family squabbles: Denominational reunions
Running out of gas: An opportunity for sustainability
My Facebook friends: Connected but lonely
The other Jewish lobby: AIPAC is not the only game in town
Market values: Christian symbols and pagan shrines
News
Canada apologizes for abuse at church-run aboriginal schools: Boarding schools were compulsory
Christian Reformed Church elects a woman as vice president: First Synod with women delegates
Mainline shows shift to Democrats: Most change among centrist mainliners
Century Marks
Faith in the media: Newsweek editor Jon Meacham reports that Meet the Press moderator Tim Russert once implored him to appear on his weekend cable show alongside Christopher Hitchens, who had just published a blistering attack on religion. Russert, knowing Meacham was an Episcopalian, wanted him to come on the show and defend the faith (Newsweek, June 23).