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Pleased To Meet You, Mr. Abdul-Jabbar!

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The highest scoring player in the NBA?  That would be Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. 

I had the pleasure of seeing this great athlete yesterday at a very grand function at the Max M. Fisher Theatre Building in Detroit, courtesy of WSU’s annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Tribute.

Firstly, the man is tall.  Very tall.  He had to remain seated in order to have pictures taken!  But beyond his height and legendary record as one of the NBA’s greatest players, he is also a very articulate speaker, passionate about civil rights and social justice.  Incidentally, he’s 7″2′. 

The program was a most interesting one that brought to attention a number of social causes that are currently underway at WSU, with faculty and students partnering with the community in several school and social projects.

An article that appeared in this morning’s South End, WSU’s campus newspapers may be found here.

My “official” photograph w/ Mr. KAJ is here.  The white-haired gentleman on the left is Allan Gilmour, WSU’s President.

I took pictures, of course, and a slideshow of the same is right here:

You’ll notice my VIP ticket which meant that I had access to the reception prior to the program, and to the luncheon following it.  🙂  BTW, minor thing:  they misspelled my name on my name-tag:  it should’ve been Isaac, not Issac.  🙂 

One of the highlights of the program preceding Mr. Abdul-Jabbar’s speech was a musical number called Renaissance State of Mind performed by the Detroit Academy of Arts & Sciences choir.  If you’re at all familiar with the hugely popular Empire State of Mind song by Alicia Keyes and Jay-Z, you’ll recognize this right away.  Click on the audio-clip below to listen for yourself.  Oh, and it takes about 20 seconds before the song starts up, so don’t give up!

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Mr. Abdul-Jabbar was also promoting his new book On The Shoulders Of Giants, which is apparently also coming out as a movie next month.  The official website for the book may be found here.   I received an autographed copy of the book, BTW.  Incidentally, they made this quite simple:  the VIP tickets entitled you to pick up an already-autographed copy of the book. I’m looking forward to reading it!

 

Incidentally, Mr. KAJ’s official website is here.

The title of the book is a reference to a quote attributed to Sir Isaac Newton (January 4, 1643March 31, 1727) an En glish physicist, mathematician, astronomer, alchemist, inventor and natural philosopher. He is often regarded as the most influential scientist in history and is most famous for discovering the Laws of Gravity.  The quote goes:  If I have seen further it is only by standing on the shoulders of giants.

This entire event was, of course, in tribute to the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the great Civil Rights activist who was assasinated in 1968.  His most famous I Have A Dream speech may be found here.

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More Than Just Chutney

Pastasuprema1

Time to dig up these old posts… this one from a couple years ago, first published on Tuesday, December 09, 2008.

So, I’ve been experimenting with creating chutneys of different kinds: tomato, coconut, peanuts, different dals, pudina, and other green chutneys. And its been a load of fun. It’s truly a work of art each time! Seriously.  And what’s more, and I’ve known this all along, really, but still: a chutney isn’t just a condiment to enhance flavor on the side. It can actually become a key ingredient in the creation of a dish all to itself.

Take for example this absolutely fantastic pasta dish I created yesterday: I added as the key seasoning several dollops of my tomato chutney (made with tons of roasted garlic, cumin, onions, dry red chillies, karipatta, some chana dal, and tomatoes of course– all blended together and then tempered with a tadka of desi ghee) to a stir-fry of mixed veggies and diced boneless chicken tenderloin (marinated in homemade yogurt and spices), and folded it all in with whole-wheat spaghetti cooked separately.

The result? Fantastico! The Italians would kill for it. As would the Greeks, the Argentinians, the Chinese, the Japanese, the Koreans, the Indonesians, and of course, the Indians!

See for yourself! Is that art, or that art?! And if you think the sight of this is an assault on the eyes, I wish that you could have only smelled the gorgeous flavors that wreaked havoc on the rest of the faculties!

So, here’s to chutney today. Remember, its so much more than just that. It’s the very essence of the dish, without which this pasta suprema dish would be nothing more than a bland weekday dinner.

May it be, that just like this chutney, we pause to look for and recognize the various things in life that may appear ordinary and peripheral, but are, in fact, what makes life special.