ARE WE READY FOR SOME GOODNESS?

I hope you experienced some remarkable and wildly enjoyable moments of love and friendship during this unusual lockdown season of Christmas.

In last week’s blog, we centered our thoughts around the idea of the extraordinary gift we call “goodness” that is offered to our varied cultures of this planet. The Christmas season, and the beginning of a new year, is a perfect time to have a conversation about this amazing phenomenon that is offered to a world desperately looking for a glimmer of hope and a possibility of fulfilment.

I was gratified at the response that we received following last week’s blog. It was a confirmation that there are a lot of people who are really ready for a huge dose of “goodness” at this time in our culture.

I have been asked to expand on some additional ideas regarding this concept of goodness. So, for the next few weeks, we will try to center our thoughts on the only investment that never fails – “goodness.”

More next week:



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HERE COMES NEXT YEAR!

Christmas is the great gift of goodness to a world looking for hope and fulfilment. The New Year that follows, seven days later, brings with it the opportunity to see just how a thing like that all works out.

Who would have correctly guessed what the year 2020 was going to drag along with it when we were all enjoying Christmas 2019? I heard a fellow say the other day that, “Just about the time I have learned the way to live – life changes.” Indeed, it does.

Over the past four-score years, I’ve come to believe that Because things are the way they are, things will not stay the way they are! That’s just the way it is. Christmas, however, is still delivering the gift of goodness to a world looking for hope and fulfilment. That shan’t change!

Too many of my fellow sojourners traveling along the freeways of this culture, take personal consolation in the notion that they are basically the victims of what is happening to them. They find themselves experiencing breakdown of basic law and order in the largest and most sophisticated cities. Physical terrorist attacks like the 9/11 tragedy, as well as electronic cyber-attacks on our financial and national defense institutions are growing realities. A weird pandemic with strange characteristics, and even stranger origins, has killed and sickened hundreds of thousands of our neighbors and left millions of job holders and small business-owners bankrupt. They all watch as traditional political and economic structures begin to falter and collapse into chaos.

Wow! What a perfect time for Christmas – just when the great gift of goodness is being offered to a world desperately looking for hope and fulfillment!

I once heard Dennis Prager tell an audience here in Denver that, “Goodness is about character, integrity, honesty, kindness, generosity, moral courage, and the like. More than anything else, it is about how we treat other people.”

In my opinion, there is nothing in the world stronger than the gift of goodness, that has been given to us by a loving God, with the expectation that we will freely share that awesome gift with every other person in this needy world. If you accept the gift, then keep it to yourself, it will always be little. If you accept the gift and make it about other people by lavishly giving it away to everyone you know, it will grow, and return in exponential measure.

For my Christmas gift to you this year, I would like to help us expand the horizon of our spiritual and behavioral possibilities for goodness in this coming year of 2021.

I would like to challenge us – me included – to commit to answering this simple question:
What accomplishment of goodness would you dare to pursue
this next year, if you were assured you would not fail?

I would invite you to let me know just how this all works out during 2021.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!


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LOVE LETTERS IN A BLACK ENVELOPE

The envelope is black. The color is ominous. The contents seem foreboding. We assume that whatever is inside can’t be good. After all, this is the color of funerals and all things sad. Slowly, we rip open the envelope and expose the message. Certainly, it must be unthinkable. After all, what news could be contained in such a dark, haunting method of disclosure?

And then we read the contents. It’s a love letter. The words are kind and encouraging. The message is for our benefit. The purpose is kindness, peace, wholeness and all things Shalom. And how could that be? How could something that seemed so dark be the vehicle for something that is loving and enabling?

In our darkest hours, we seem to naturally assume that the message is likewise unpleasant. We fear the content. Our imagination is more than capable of creating the creatures that haunt us.

But what if the looming threat contained a message that was wonderful? That is often the case. I have a friend and colleague. In the early days of March at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic, she contracted the virus. She got really sick. Her first test took a week to decipher. It came back negative. She suffered at home until the first test was declared in error and she was told to retest. The next series of tests came out positive and she remained sick, getting sicker. We wondered at her prognosis, feared the worst and hoped for the best.

Over the course of the next several weeks, she regained strength, and the virus lost it’s hold on her body. She began to beat back the threat of a terminal infection. Slowly her fever subsided and her senses of smell and taste returned. She was blessed with the type of medical attention that is only available to those of us lucky enough to live in resource-rich jurisdictions.

But, the concern with the COVID-19 virus is the long-term impact of the illness. They checked her blood. It was negative for the virus. The problem came when they looked for myocardial infarction. That is a swelling of the heart and it could be life-threatening. When they took a good, hard look at the images of her heart, they discovered an emergency. Her arteries were stuffed with plaque, and the blood was not flowing into the ventricles. It had nothing to do with her COVID infection. It was hereditary, the thing that had killed her dad. In short, she was a candidate for an immediate heart attack.

Within weeks, she was in the hospital. The doctor scheduled an emergency surgery. The only possible alternative was a triple bypass. I called her a couple days before the surgery to encourage her and to pray with her. Again, we were all hoping for the best and wondering why someone who had just survived COVID would be cursed with the black envelope of open-heart surgery. I asked if she was disappointed, frustrated or concerned.

Her response took me aback, “No. I am grateful for my journey. COVID just saved my life.”

The COVID diagnosis was the black envelope. The love letter was the discovery that she had a very bright future, and that she had a reason to be on this earth, and with a little cardiac re-plumbing, she would be good to help lots of other people. There would be lots of work to do. But her black envelope of COVID contained a letter that she was loved, and there was a brilliant plan for her life. Hers is the ultimate example of love letters in black envelopes.

We are coming up on nearly a year of pandemic lock-down. It has been something that seems dark and ominous. Staying in and hunkering down wasn’t pleasant when we were told it was fourteen days. It has now been months, and there is no end in sight.

One approach would be to see the past months as the ultimate black envelope. What good could come from the pandemic? And what of the unintended consequences? When the annuals of recent history are written, was this a time when our family, friends and co-workers have become the ultimate threats, and could actually infect us with a disease that could potentially kill us? Who do we turn to for security? Who can we trust?

Or what if we asked a different question? What if all of this could be interpreted as something good? What if a love letter came from opening a black envelope? What if the ominous, frightful situation was written for our benefit?

Personally, our story is not as scary as was our friend’s. She is fine. And we are fine. Actually, we are better than fine. And that’s the point of our thoughts today.

Before COVID, Dana and I were travelling like crazy people. In any given year, she and I would log between 450,000 and 500,000 air miles between the two of us. But on March 15th of 2020, that lifestyle all came to an end. No more TSA Security Lines, or Red Carpet Clubs or red-eye flights. We flew United Airlines home to wait for the COVID-19 “Shelter at Home” regulations to run their course. We were told it would be a couple of weeks. We bought toilet paper and tuna fish. We learned Zoom calls and tele-health. It was going to be manageable.

In that course of non-activity, we drove to Evergreen to check in on my folks. We would take dinner and help with chores. It was planned as a visit twice a week, for fourteen days. That is a total of four times, for people who do quick math. I could find four great recipes to make. Who couldn’t? Martha Stewart did that the week before she went to jail. How hard could it be to find four main dishes, a couple of sides and a salad? And then we would go back to the airport, board our flights and carry on. The black envelope was only a shade of gray at that point.

Eight and a half months later, we have been visiting Evergreen with dinner. Twice a week. And never the same meal twice. We have been cooking healthy, which means no red meat, no pork and no venison. We have visited continents and countries by virtue of their cuisine. We have visited some of our favorite places to travel, from Hungarian Goulash to Jamaican Jerk Chicken. And our time together has been the miracle of a lifetime.

What came in a black envelope as an lockdown and a change of lifestyle was actually a love letter to our family. We have spent more time together since March 15th than most families spend after the kids go off to college. The family table has been full of food, conversation and celebration. Love abounds. Ideas are exchanged. Blogs are written. Stories galore.

My thought as I guest-write this Blog post for my Dad on the eve of a Christmas holiday in the middle of Hanukkah is that we all have blessings. At the time, a blessing may seem like a black envelope, dreadful to open. We are scared for what might be inside. We shun the contents and avoid breaking the seal. But inside the foreboding cover may just be the gift of a lifetime.

Whether it is health and a second chance as in the case of my colleague, or the incredible gift of time well spent, we can recognize what was scary at first as a love letter for something much greater. Something that was Divinely inspired, Cosmically orchestrated. And intended for Eternity. All of that in it’s purist sense.

So, my gift to you this Holiday season is a simple question. Will you be faithful in looking beyond the envelope and seeking for the letter inside? Will you have the courage to open the black envelope? Will you read a love letter to you and your family, friends and colleagues?

It is there.

It is for you.

Open the envelope. There is a letter inside.

It is for you.

By Dr. W. Douglas Jackson, Project C.U.R.E. President/CEO




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CONFLICT AGAIN IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH: Part 9 Project C.U.R.E.'s Recent Help

Thank you for taking the time to review with us the sad story of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. It has been nearly twenty years that I have personally been involved in the lives and national history of the country. In previous years, it was Project C.U.R.E.’s privilege to see to it that hundreds, and hundreds of thousands of dollars-worth of desperately needed medical goods were donated and delivered to the hospitals and clinics of both, Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia. Only eternity will reveal how many lives were saved and broken bodies made well over that 20-year period.

I viewed the recent pictures of the people of Stepanakert, Martakert, and various hillside villages, fleeing their homes with only the few belongings that they could manage to carry out by hand. I studied the photos of their burning homes and outbuildings they were leaving behind them as they were forced to walk the long and treacherous road back to Yerevan, Armenia – where they had nothing at all waiting for them. My heart was broken. Many of them were my friends.

In the midst of all that chaos, some beautiful things have been happening over the past few weeks. As you are aware, Project C.U.R.E. has huge warehouses and collection/distribution operations, not only in the Denver area, but also, in Phoenix, Nashville, Houston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Kansas City, and additional “collection sites” in a dozen other U.S. cities.

A talented and dedicated lady named Janet Thomason, was the Executive Director of Project C.U.R.E.’s Houston operation. A short while back, Janet Thomason was promoted by our President/CEO, Dr. Douglas Jackson, to the position of Director of National Procurement for our whole operation. Guess what?! Janet’s grandparents are Armenian Christians. You might say, that Janet has a tender heart toward the Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh situation!

Janet got busy and teamed up with our international contacts, like: American Healthcare Association of the Bay Area (AHABA), the Armenian International Women’s Association (AIWA), and the Armenian American Medical Association (AAMA). Over 50 pallets have been delivered, or on their way, by air into Yerevan, including such needed items as critical surgical supplies and wound-care devices. Some of the critical medical supplies have been shipped out of Houston, as well as Los Angeles. Medical doctors who were individually headed to the disaster area, were loaded up with “CURE Kits” that were taken directly to the crisis areas. Over 120 brand new Stryker Emergency Relief beds have been shipped by sea, with another two ocean-going cargo containers full of beds already on their way from our Philadelphia operation.

Janet Thomason remains in continual contact with the health organizations and Armenia’s Minister of Health, who keep her updated with the current needs. To close out this series of blogs on Nagorno-Karabakh, I would like to share with you a letter we just received from the President of the Board of Directors of AHABA, one of the health organizations with whom we are working during this current crisis:
       

       November 2, 2020       

        Project  C.U.R.E. 
        10377 E. Geddes Avenue
        Centennial, CO 80112 

       Dear Project C.U.R.E.,

       I am moved to write this letter of gratitude for all you have done to help the Armenian Health  Care Association of the Bay Area (AHABA), a 501 (c)(3) (46-5168594) charitable organization led by Armenian-American physicians in the San Francisco Bay Area.  You  have been an invaluable partner as we work to provide aid, medical equipment and  medical supplies, as well as medications to the people of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh), who find themselves in a healthcare and humanitarian crisis caused by the aggression of  Azerbaijan  over Armenian ancestral land.

      In the midst of this devastating war, C.U.R.E  has worked with AHABA to provide high quality emergency lifesaving equipment and supplies at tremendous discounts from your surplus depots in Houston and Dallas. Included, was a sonogram machine, that will allow surgeons to quickly and accurately diagnose and triage civilians and soldiers with cluster  bomb wounds, that cause devastating internal damage to the heart, the lungs and other  organs, enabling more lives to be saved.


     Hundreds of wound vacuum-assisted closing devices that have also been shipped, are now being used by the Armenian surgeons to treat complicated wounds to prevent infection from setting in. The specialized suture materials we have shipped thanks to you, allow Armenian  plastic surgeons to repair instead of having to amputate limbs, which would leave the adults and children injured with lifelong disabilities. The orthopedic surgical supplies  we have sent will be used to treat patients with open bone fractures. This is in addition to  the hundreds of basic surgical supplies such as tourniquets, sponges, surgical instrument  sets, IV infusion supplies and personal protective equipment to prevent the spread of  COVID  to the frontline workers in the hospitals.

 
   We truly appreciate your acknowledgement of the urgency of our situation and your deep experience working with international disasters, which compelled you to prioritize our needs  and expedite the shipments sent to date. We know that C.U.R.E. volunteers worked through the weekends to make sure that the shipments were sent out as quickly as possible.  Additionally, when we were able to find a pro bono shipper within the Armenian community  to take on that part of the job, your responsiveness to our request for the switch was  impressive and the transition from your shipping department to ours was seamless. You  always had our best interests in mind.

 
  With your help, to date we have sent three full shipments of sorted, inventoried and palleted goods to Armenia in response to specific daily requests from Armenia based on their current needs on the ground. Anahit Avanesyan Armenia’s Deputy Minister of Health stated on a recent weekly call to the Armenian Medical International Committee (AMIC), the group that coordinates all Armenian medical aid from the diaspora, “The shipments that came from New York and Los Angeles containing supplies from Project C.U.R.E. non-governmental organization, arrived well-packed, fully organized and catalogued, enabling us to streamline the distribution of individual supplies to hospitals throughout the area where they were most needed.”

Overall, we could not ask for a better partner that was as well-run, more organized,  cost-effective, efficient and caring than Project C.U.R.E. We would especially like to extend  personal thanks to Janet Thomason, Project C.U.R.E. Director of National Procurement, for  sharing her expertise and putting her heart into our project, and to Steven Wagener, Director  of  Logistics for his exquisite attention to detail.

On behalf of our entire Board of Directors and the country of Armenia, thank you again for  your kind generosity and for enabling our fundraising efforts to achieve their greatest impact  on the devastating ongoing medical and humanitarian crisis occurring in Artsakh and  Armenia.

Sincerely,
Elena Sagayan, MD
    President, Board of Directors Armenian Health Care Association of the Bay Area


 
I am so very proud to be even a small part of this amazing organization known as Project C.U.R.E. What a great way to end the year, 2020! May God continue to bless and protect our President/CEO, Dr. Douglas Jackson, the multi-talented staff members, the 30,000 dedicated volunteers, the board of directors, the ever-faithful donors, and all the varied programs and projects that we have going on in the over 130 countries around this needy world. It’s no wonder that I am still the “Happiest Man in the World.”


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CONFLICT AGAIN IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH Part 8: Current Update

In my first blog of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict series, dated October 13, 2020, I gave a cursory overview of the situation, based on my personal visits and candid observations of the geographical area over the past thirty years. The conflict that is taking place in that geographical area of the world did not just start in 1988, as the current media coverage would have you to believe.

The conflict has been going on since the message and influence of Christianity began spreading in the first century. Christianity began moving north from Israel into Greece, Macedonia, Turkey; then eastward toward the Caspian Sea. Turkey and the area of Armenia became strongholds for the spreading of the new Christian faith.

This work has been released into the public domain by its author, MarshallBagramyan. This applies worldwide.

This work has been released into the public domain by its author, MarshallBagramyan. This applies worldwide.

As you can see, in looking at the map, the area known as Nagorno-Karabakh is located in the south-eastern area of Armenia. Throughout the centuries, many Christian cathedrals, monasteries, and shrines have been built in Nagorno-Karabakh. Many of those still stand today. The occupants of the area were generally known as “Armenian-Christians.” Over the centuries, however, there were border and territorial disputes between the Armenian-Christians and their Azerbaijan neighbors.

To heighten and intensify the instability of the area, a fellow named Muhammad was born in A.D. 570 in Mecca, South Arabia. As a young man, he was in a cave and experienced an angel named Gabriel, telling him to record what later became known as the Koran. Eventually, Muhammad became convinced that his calling was to take over the entire Arabian Peninsula for his god, Allah. That expansionism morphed into the growth and formality of the Ottoman Empire for Islam.

The angel Gabriel had instructed Muhammad to be ruthless and aggressive in his battles: “And fight in the way of God with those who fight with you. . . And slay them wherever you come upon them, and expel them from where they expelled you. . . Slay them – such is the recompense of unbelievers – Fight them, till there is no more persecution and the religion is God’s. (Koran 3:190-196)

The Ottoman dominance only slowed down with the defeat of the Ottoman armies at the gates of Vienna, Austria, in 1683. Azerbaijan, Iran, and countries of Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, etc.) fell under Islam rule. Absolute intentionality was there to stop any further Christian expansion to the east of Armenia.

As you can tell, it is extremely difficult to pack two thousand years of history into the 1,000+ words of this blog – but let’s give it a try. As you might imagine, there was more happening in the building up of this current conflict than just religious fervor and theological disputes. As an economist, I have been trained that if you really want to know what is happening – “follow the money.”

In 1917, Russia was embroiled in the Bolshevik Revolution. Vladimir Lenin was determined to replace the Czars with a government that would redistribute all the wealth equally to all the people; where there would be centralized production and centralized distribution – out of the excess of all to the needs of each.

But by 1922, Joseph Stalin and his Communist movement had quickly and effectively stolen the Bolshevik Revolution away from the economic philosophers. Socialism necessitates and demands an “enforcer.” Stalin was an enforcer. Trotsky, Lenin, Marx, Engels, etc., were on the outside looking in.

Joseph Stalin wasted no time in establishing the Russian Federation and the military might of the Soviet Union. The oil fields of Baku, Azerbaijan, were absolutely necessary for his military control and success. (Recall: that it was Adolph Hitler’s general Rommel, who was headed for the Caspian Sea and the capturing of the oil fields of Baku, Azerbaijan, at the closing of World War II.)

Joseph Stalin was born in Tbilisi, Georgia. I have visited his birthplace and even the schools he attended and the statue that still stands in front of the government buildings in Tbilisi. Another look at the map above will show you just how close the country of Georgia is to the oil fields of Azerbaijan. In trying to solidify his Soviet position, not only with the Islamic held countries of Azerbaijan and Iran, but also, those Islamic countries of the “Stans” just across the waters of the Caspian Sea, it becomes quite clear just why he arbitrarily declared that the little section of Armenia called Nagorno-Karabakh would be given over lock-stock-and-barrel to the Islamic Azerbaijanis. The gift was effective. The entire area became part of the Soviet Union.

Skip ahead now, to the collapse of the Soviet Union, December 26, 1991. Russia was desperate to get a pipeline installed from the oil fields of Baku, Azerbaijan, where the oil would be transported westward to the Black Sea. No longer would the oil need to be moved by ship to the Black Sea or the Mediterranean for processing and distribution. Russia did not want to run the pipeline through their steep and rugged mountains known as the Caucasus Range. They wanted, instead, to run it a little further south through Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.

Instead of having to negotiate with the people of Nagorno-Karabakh, it was determined to simply and quietly eliminate all the people who blocked the newly-chosen route. That is when the people of Nagorno-Karabakh realized that they all were going to end up as victims of genocide. That is when Baroness Carolyn Cox and others form Great Britain started coming to the rescue. That was when Project C.U.R.E. became involved.

International attention was focused on the genocide. Things got messy, but President Putin still needed the alliance and support of Armenia in order to accomplish his oil pipeline project through the area.

In order to bring a solution to the tragedy that was taking place, President Vladimir Putin, suddenly decided to give back the Nagorno-Karabakh area to the Armenian Christians. He did not rescind Joseph Stalin’s act of giving the territory to Azerbaijan, but rather, gave the Armenian Christians the right to set up an Autonomous state of their own in Nagorno-Karabakh, and sent the Azerbaijanis back to Azerbaijan. The Armenian-Christians rejoiced that they once again had their beloved Nagorno-Karabakh back. They settled back into the country and President Putin got his precious pipeline.

Between 1988 and 2020, however, there were numerous disputes and military clashes between the sides. On September 27, 2020, there was a new, large-scale war that erupted between Armenian soldiers and citizens, and the Azerbaijani forces. It is estimated that there may have been several thousand casualties involved in the short war.

During that period of time, international politics and economics had changed. No longer was Putin in the secure position of strength and control he had once enjoyed. Recent political relationships and involvements between Turkey, Russia, Iran, Pakistan and even Israel had changed. Russia was needing to quickly work out some kind of arbitration that would normalize the intensity of the conflict, and also work to beef-up the security of Russia’s shaky oil field situation. He could not afford to get involved in an all-out military operation with anybody.

Putin wanted to avoid any outside aid coming in from the West to complicate his situation. He gambled that Boris Johnson, in Great Britain, who was staving off the worst economic recession in three hundred years, would not come to Armenia’s aid. He also gambled that America was too fragmented, and obsessed with their own internal problems at the time, to send troops into an unknown place like Nagorno-Karabakh. He was right. He moved quickly.

Vladimir Putin worked with Armenia’s Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan. On November 10, 2020, they agreed to a cease-fire. Putin was cancelling his twenty-year-old deal with Armenia and all the people would have to evacuate and return to Armenia. Russia would send military armament and personnel to Nagorno-Karabakh to escort the people out.

The Azerbaijanis were exuberant. Now, the Muslims could return to their long-lost lands. The Armenian-Christians were devastated and felt tragically betrayed by their own government and Nikol Pashinyan. . . “We thought we were winning. . . Where do we go now?” As they retreated, they took with them the few things they could personally carry over the long treacherous mountain road back to “nowhere” in the crowded confines of Armenia. Most everything they could not carry, they torched and left to burn. They were left to start over – once again.

Next Week: Project C.U.R.E. to the Rescue

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