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It must be Fall.

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The Beirut in Toledo, Ohio: Authentic as it Gets

The Beirut in Toledo, Ohio: Authentic as it Gets

Lentil soup, stuffed zucchini, chicken shawarma wrap, Turkish coffee, and baklava.

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The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace by Jeff Hobbs

Is it possible to reinvent yourself?  To rise above or descend below to a place of equilibrium where you are fulfilled and satisfied in your life’s choices to attain a level of peace, prosperity, and even happiness to yourself and to those who matter to you?

If this is the consummate American question, then this book, sadly, does not offer a resounding answer in the affirmative.  Because what we find in the story of Robert Peace is an unsettling and sad commentary of personal traits so deeply ingrained from one generation to another and reinforced by social constructs that seemingly overpower the best of intentions and actions.

“During Rob’s early childhood,” notes Hobbs, “East Orange represented the second-highest concentration of African-Americans living below the poverty line in America, behind East St. Louis.”  A neighborhood rife with crime and steeped in poverty and segregation is the only life that Rob “Shawn” Peace has known, and yet he struggles mightily to rise above his circumstances to make his mother — whom he calls “my heart” — proud, by being the brightest of bright students excelling in his private Catholic high school in both academics and athletics, gaining admission to an Ivy League school, attracting the eye of a wealthy man who offers to become his benefactor, and yet despite all of this, it is almost as if Rob is unable to make something of himself.

Is that his fault?  Or that of his environment?  What is the pull to the world of drugs and crime?  When is it a losing battle? 

It is not possible to overstate just how completely Rob’s personal choices were shaped and governed by his environment. There is no doubt that he was a product of his neighborhood.

Inasmuch we enter Rob’s world of segregated poverty and fractured home dynamics, we do learn of some of his peers who are able to ward off succumbing to the life that Rob chooses for himself after graduating with a science degree from Yale University.

Which makes it even more saddening to accept that such a brilliant mind and able body is a most terrible thing to waste.

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November 17, Ecclesiastes 12:13

“But regarding anything beyond this, dear friend, go easy. There’s no end to the publishing of books, and constant study wears you out so you’re no good for anything else. The last and final word is this: Fear God. Do what he tells you.”

Ecclesiastes 12:13 MSGA verse of the day from the Bible presented in Eugene Peterson’s contemporary version called The Message. Accompanied by a personal reflection below.

Does this not bring to mind the verse, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge”?  It is the beginning, and it is a solid foundation for all the other knowledge that is to be gained over the course of one’s lifetime.  And in this verse of the day, the author, King Solomon, takes it one step further to say there’s only so much knowledge to be had because there’s no end to it.  But every so often, it would do us well to pause and take stock of what we’ve learned and what we must do with it.  Listening to that “small still voice” that is God’s would be one of the smarter things that we would want to do.