VOA – CONNECT EPISODE #168 AIR DATE 04 02 2021 TRANSCRIPT OPEN ((VO/NAT)) ((Banner)) Celebrating Words ((SOT)) ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) The Word Wall is telling the story of where do words come from in the English language. How did they get into English? ((Animation Transition)) ((Banner)) A Rider’s Friend ((SOT)) ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) I love working on bikes. I love taking old bikes and fixing them up so people can use them again. And cleaning them up and I turn them into a thing of beauty in my mind. ((Animation Transition)) ((Banner)) Looking Back ((SOT)) ((Diana Werts, Painter)) I had an idea that, maybe, I should hop a freight train. So, I did that. It was illegal and it was risky. And then the conductor or whoever he was, was standing at the other end of the train going, um, umm. ((Open Animation)) BLOCK A ((PKG)) WORD MUSEUM ((TRT: 05:42)) ((Topic Banner: A World of Words)) ((Reporter/Producer: Marsha James)) ((Camera/Editor: Philip Alexiou)) ((Map: Washington, D.C.)) ((Main characters: 1 female)) ((NATS)) Hey there. Step up to the mic and say hello. ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) Hello. ((NATS)) Hello and welcome to Planet Word. Hello. Yo. Hi there. You’re standing in front of about 1000 words. ((NATS)) ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) I'm Ann Friedman. I'm the founder and CEO of Planet Word, a new museum of words and language in Washington D.C. ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) From an early age, grew up loving to read, grew up being really interested in words and foreign languages. And that's why I started investigating the idea of creating a museum of words and language. ((NATS)) ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) Being able to occupy the Franklin School, it’s a National Historic Landmark, as the home for Planet Word….. ((Courtesy: Planet Word/Long Story Short Media)) We like to call ourselves the world's first voice-activated museum. So, we have lots of voice recognition technology, but we also have motion activation. ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) We have places throughout the museum where just by scooting in on a chair, the exhibit begins or by laying a book in a special holder, you will trigger projection technology. ((NATS)) There's a character called the Once-ler and the Once-ler is essentially us and what we're doing to the planet. ((NATS)) ((Courtesy: Planet Word/Long Story Short Media)) The iconic scenes from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland have captivated audiences for generations. “Off with their heads!” “Oh dear! Oh dear!” ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) We have these paintbrushes and you can basically dip one of these high tech paintbrushes in a word palette and paint the scenery ((Courtesy: Planet Word/Long Story Short Media)) around you on the walls with that word. ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) When I dip my brush in that word, what's going to happen? You know, let me see. And I bet when you do that, you are never going to forget that word. It's going to be sunk into your conscience. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Planet Word/Long Story Short Media)) A subject we call cooking. Everything is a wheel, turning and turning, never stopping. The frogs is part of it and bugs and fish and wood thrush, too. ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) Jokes. What makes them funny? You know, it's those ((Courtesy: Planet Word/Long Story Short Media)) homophones and double entendres. ((NATS)) ((Courtesy: Planet Word/Long Story Short Media)) Oh, come on. Come on. That was not close to funny. A little laugh? ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) We've had fantastic programs that are reaching a much larger audience. People from all around the U.S. and even in other countries who can listen and enjoy our virtual programs. ((NATS: Ann Friedman and others)) ((Courtesy: Planet Word/Long Story Short Media)) Ni hao. Ni hao. My name is Yaro. I'm from China and my first language is Mandarin. You can see on the globe. China is lighting up. …...people speak it. Habari. I'm Doreen. I’m from Tanzania and I speak Swahili. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Planet Word/Long Story Short Media)) I speak Icelandic. I speak Amharic, Hindi, Korean, Hawaiian, Farsi. And I speak Hebrew. Shalom. Shalom. ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) The Word Wall is telling the story of where do words come from in the English language. How did they get into English? And there are many ways that words enter our language. ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) In fact, the exhibit designer and I came up with 24 ways that words enter English, but we settled on about eight important ways that are represented by the Word Wall and the story it tells. ((NATS)) English has thousands of words we don't use that much. ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) So, that's words that came in from war, and from the Vikings, and then in 1066 and the Norman Conquest. Words that we borrow from other languages. ((NATS)) Part of the story of English is the story of violence, warfare, conquest and lots of it. It all started when Germanic tribes sailed to what’s now England and conquered the people who lived there. ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) You know, I was, I was a reading and writing teacher and I think I was pretty successful at that. But like I said, test scores in language arts have been stagnating for years. How could we try to reverse these negative trends? And the idea that came to me was through informal learning. That's what happens at museums. You make learning fun. You have big spaces. You can attract celebrities, ((Courtesy: Planet Word/Long Story Short Media)) all sorts of things that a person can't do on their own or a teacher can't do on his or her own in a school classroom. ((Ann Friedman, Founder and CEO, Planet Word)) So, I felt like having a museum allowed me the space and the influence and then, sort of, national attention that, maybe, would make reading and language and words cool again. ((NATS)) TEASE ((VO/NAT)) Coming up ((Banner)) Lending a Hand ((SOT)) ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) At the end of the day, I can say I did something positive. I made something work. I made somebody happy. And at the end of my days, I am actually pretty happy. BREAK ONE BUMP IN ((ANIM)) BLOCK B ((PKG)) PANDEMIC BIKE REPAIR SHOP ((TRT: 08:04)) ((Topic Banner: A Biker’s Friend)) ((Reporter/Camera/Editor: June Soh)) ((Map: Potomac, Maryland)) ((Main character: 1 male)) ((Sub characters: 3 female)) ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) I love working on bikes. I love taking old bikes and fixing them up so people can use them again. And cleaning them up and I turn them into a thing of beauty in my mind. I don’t charge, just my gift to my neighbors. ((NATS: Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) The wheels work and that’s good. ((NATS: Kara Sun & Ric Jackson)) ((Kara Sun)) Hey, Ric. ((Ric Jackson)) Hey, Kara. ((Kara Sun)) Oh, the bike’s ready, huh? And his bike. Wow, look at that! ((Ric Jackson)) It is clean and neat and tidy and updated. How do you like it? ((Kara Sun)) Oh, my God. So, I am going to ride his bike. ((Ric Jackson)) Oh, okay. ((NATS)) ((Kara Sun, Customer)) During COVID, we picked up biking because we want to be socially distanced. However, all of our bikes were not in a good condition at all. So, we’ve been trying to get her bike to a repair shop. Everywhere we went, we called, they say, “Oh, at least six months, five months. We’re not taking any more bikes. We’re completely booked.” ((NATS)) ((Kara Sun, Customer)) As a whole family, we dearly, sincerely appreciate what Ric does. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) Back in April, April, early April in the beginning of the pandemic, there was somebody who sent out a message on our local ListServe and said, “Is anybody out there that can repair bike, my daughter's, the breaks on my daughter’s bicycle?” I said, “I’m willing to do it.” And since then, I have had over 670 bicycles that I have repaired. ((NATS: Phone ring music)) ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) Excuse me just a second. ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) Pretty good. When would you come? That would be perfect. ((NATS: Customer)) Thank you so much. ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) Sure. Sounds good, right. I will see you then. Sure, bye bye. ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) So, that’s somebody who will be bringing her bike over shortly. Alright? ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) A lot of what I do is actually just lubricating these things. ((NATS)) ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) That’s good Nikki. That’s good. ((NATS: Nikki Mock)) You know, maybe you can tell just looking at it right away. You don’t even need it to say. ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) Good enough to go. They don’t have to be beautiful. ((NATS: Nikki Mock)) Right. ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) They just need to function. ((Nikki Mock, Volunteer Collecting Donated Bikes)) With the pandemic, I started to think like what else are the kids doing? Like they, you know, parks were closed. They weren’t going to school. In Ward 8, which is, you know, the poorest, probably the poorest part of Washington, D.C., where the most underprivileged families and kids live, there really was hardly anything to do. So, every time I bring a bike to a child, I feel like it’s giving them, you know, a sense of freedom, a sense of fun and probably most importantly, a sense that people care about them. I couldn’t do this without Ric. Ric doesn’t charge me anything. He does it out of the goodness of his heart. You know, Ric is my hero in a lot of ways. ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) Alright. I will be in touch, Nikki. ((NATS: Nikki Mock)) Have a good day. Thank you. ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) I will let you know when things are ready. ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) I guess it’s always been in my nature even when I was working. The place that I worked at, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, has a mission to support commercial activities in this country. And so, I was a mission-oriented person even during my career, doing stuff to help other people. But after I retired, volunteering just seemed like a natural thing to do. I was comfortable. I was happy with what I have done, and I was looking for something else meaningful to do. ((Courtesy: Bike Loaner Program)) ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) And I started volunteering at the national park nearby, the C&O Canal. And I created and ran their bike loaner program down there. It’s the place where people could come in and borrow bicycles for two hours for free. We had 150 bicycles in our fleet, and that’s when I learned how to repair bicycles. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) I fix the bikes in my garage. I park my cars out on the driveway around the street. After the pandemic is over and I stop doing this, I will put my cars back in the garage. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) My own spare time? I ride my bicycle a lot. I go on long bike rides with friends. It’s important to me to ride, to be healthy, to stay healthy. But it also gets me out in nature, and I can just enjoy being away from everything and just riding my bicycle. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) I am going to go for a little test drive. Okay? I will be right back. ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) I don't charge for anything that I do. But people do frequently bring me gifts, goodies, baked goods, brownies or, in this case, chocolate. These appeared from a lady whose bike I repaired this morning. So, this is the note that the lady left along with the chocolate. It says, “Thanks for being big-hearted. Now, my dogs and I can go on more bike rides together.” It makes me feel good that I made somebody else feel great. That makes my day. ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) But one of the things that works for me that I enjoy very much is that doing this, doing this in my garage out here, allows me to interact with my neighbors. The neighbors right next door to me, the neighbors across the street, the neighbors many streets away. I get to meet them, talk to them, interact with them and get to know them. And that’s an awful lot of fun. It’s like it was when I was growing up. ((Rima Adler, Customer)) Ric is a great example of how to be a neighbor and contribute to the community and, I think, really inspiring on how to keep a positive, upbeat feeling during a pandemic and make us connected in this sort of disconnected time. ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) My idea of a community is just the people that I interact with, where I live, the people in my neighborhood, in my town, in my city, in my country and in the world. A lot of the bikes that were donated to me down at the bike loaner program that I couldn’t use, I re-donated to a group called Bikes for the World and they would send the bikes out to other countries. So, just the notion of helping people anywhere, everywhere is, I guess, what I call a community. ((NATS)) ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) I'm not going to make it really beautiful but I'm going to make it work. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) Tada. ((NATS)) ((NATS: Ric Jackson)) Good. ((NATS)) ((Ric Jackson, Pandemic Bike Repair Shop)) At the end of the day, I can say I did something positive. I made something work. I made somebody happy. And at the end of my days, I am actually pretty happy. And when I put my head down at night, I go right to sleep. And I wake up the next morning, I look forward to doing it again. ((NATS/MUSIC)) TEASE ((VO/NAT)) Coming up ((Banner)) A Rich Heritage ((SOT)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai Oakland)) I remember some of my other Religious Studies classes that spoke about Judaism. And when you are on the outside describing a religious tradition, it's very different than being on the inside and experiencing it. That was the shift. I wanted to be with the practitioners. BREAK TWO BUMP IN ((ANIM)) BLOCK C ((PKG)) THE FIRST CHINESE AMERICAN RABBI ((TRT: 04:09)) ((Topic Banner: Melding Traditions)) ((Reporter: Jiu Dao)) ((Adapted by: Zdenko Novacki)) ((Map: Oakland, California)) ((Main characters: 1 female)) ((MUSIC/NATS)) ((Courtesy: Temple Sinai-Oakland)) ((Courtesy: Videoblocks)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) When people think rabbi, they are often thinking of an old man with a big old beard ((Courtesy: Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin)) and that's never what I'm going to be. I'm Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, ((Courtesy: Temple Sinai-Oakland)) and I'm the senior rabbi at Temple Sinai in Oakland, California, ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) and I'm the first Chinese American rabbi. ((MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Temple Sinai-Oakland)) Rabbis are, the word means teacher. What does it mean to be an insider? What does it mean to be Jewish? What is that experience of it? ((MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) If we go back as far as we can, nobody can think of anybody who was ever a rabbi. ((MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Temple Sinai-Oakland)) It’s not a family tradition. ((Courtesy: Videoblocks)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) I grew up in San Francisco. My parents are both physicians. ((Courtesy: Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin)) My mom is an OB-GYN [obstetrician-gynecologist]. My dad is a psychiatrist. My mom converted to Judaism before my parents were married. I have four siblings. So, we have a very big family. ((MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Videoblocks)) ((Popup Banner: Her mother is a second-generation Chinese American. Her father is the son of Austrian Jewish immigrants.)) ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) My father's family also escaped Nazi Europe. They were in Vienna. ((Courtesy: Videoblocks)) So that family story was very significant to us and was a huge part of our understanding of who we are. I became very active in the Jewish community on my own, especially as a teenager. ((Courtesy: Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin)) We all celebrated becoming bar and bat mitzvah [Jewish religious ritual and family celebration] when we were 13. ((Courtesy: Temple Sinai-Oakland)) There were lion dancers at every single one of our bar and bat mitzvah [Jewish religious ritual and family celebration] celebration. ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) At these significant moments in our lives, it was important to us to be able to make sure that like all the symbols ((Courtesy: Temple Sinai-Oakland)) that represented us were there. ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) We didn't have a lot of other families that have the same kind of make up as ours. ((Courtesy: Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin)) But because we were a large group, I think that also just helped us to feel like we had our own like mini tribe and our way of doing things. ((MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Videoblocks)) My favorite Jewish food I would say is matzo ball soup. ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) And my favorite Chinese food is chicken feet, which was one of my favorite thing ((Courtesy: Videoblocks)) when we would go out to dim sum. ((MUSIC)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) ((Courtesy: Videoblocks)) We celebrate three New Years. Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah is usually in the fall, the early fall. And then of course we have January 1st and then we have we have Chinese New Year. ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) There was such a wonderful wealth of tradition and of holidays and of family. ((MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Videoblocks)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) I was a Religious Studies major and then I added Cultural Anthropology. I remember some of my other Religious Studies classes that spoke about Judaism. ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) And when you are on the outside describing a religious tradition, it's very different than being on the inside and experiencing it. ((Courtesy: Videoblocks)) That was the shift. I wanted to be with the practitioners. ((MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Temple Sinai-Oakland)) ((Popup Banner: In 2002, Jacqueline Mates-Muchin was ordained by Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in New York.)) ((Courtesy: Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin)) What is it like? ((Courtesy: Temple Sinai-Oakland)) In terms of just encouraging people to be authentic to who they are and connected to Judaism and connected to all aspects of, you know, their heritage and things like that. ((Courtesy: Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin)) I think it's a big responsibility. It’s humbling. It's an honor in a lot of ways. A lot of people also come to me to talk about ‘how do we make sure that our kids understand where they come from?’ ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) That's where I just feel so fortunate about the way that my parents ((Courtesy: Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin)) had modeled that for me. Things don't have to be at odds. They don't have to be clashing. ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) It's actually a really special way to go through life to understand that you fit in many places. ((MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin)) My being Chinese and Jewish ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) is very much a product of my being an American, that my parents, right in the 60s at UC Berkeley, ((Courtesy: Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin)) that enables me to be here. ((MUSIC)) ((Courtesy: Temple Sinai-Oakland)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) If you ask me, what feels like it outweighs one or the other being Chinese or Jewish, I couldn't answer. ((Courtesy: Skype)) ((Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin, Senior Rabbi, Temple Sinai-Oakland)) Truth is, if there's any one identity that probably stands out the most, it's probably being American. ((MUSIC)) ((PKG)) CONNECT WITH – DIANA WERTS, PAINTER ((TRT: 03:22)) ((Topic Banner: Connect with – Diana Werts)) ((Reporter/Camera: Deepak Dobhal)) ((Locator: Matfield Green, Kansas)) ((Main character: 1 female)) ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Diana Werts, Painter)) Okay. So, my name is Diana Werts, and I am a painter, and I studied art nearby, and I am 66 years old. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Diana Werts, Painter)) This building right here was a bar called the Hitchin Post. So, as a 17-year-old college student, stopping in the Hitchin Post when you're almost, almost of age to drink but not quite, was pretty exciting for me. I could order a red beer and feel like a real big person. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Diana Werts, Painter)) I had some, a lot of tragic things happen when I was young. I drove through here all the time, back and forth, to get home, and this drive was a healing thing for me. It was like this magical, beautiful place, especially this spot right here. And so, two years ago we realized this bar was for sale and had been empty for five years. And it seemed like, kind of a self-healing thing to do, to come here and grab this building and give it some love. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Diana Werts, Painter)) It's just one of those things you do when you're young, and I think I was, maybe, 20. I had an idea that, maybe, I should hop a freight train. So, I did that. It was illegal and it was risky. One of the trains I hesitated because it was starting to take off. And so, I ran and I climbed up, I grabbed it and got up. And I was like proud of myself because I was standing, you know, on the train moving. And then the conductor or whoever he was, was standing at the other end of the train going, um, umm. And so, we had to kind of get over to him, the opposite side of the car, and he acted really tough like he was, he said something like, “You know what I do to people who hop freight trains?” Like, no. What do you do? He wanted to, you know, really bully us and scare us. And then he ended up being really fun to talk to and told us all about the train. ((NATS/MUSIC)) ((Diana Werts, Painter)) Well, the reason I say I was orphaned is that my mother died when I was 15 and my dad just completely checked out. He, and then he married a math teacher at my high school. And I wasn't nurtured anymore. And I was, it was, they were counting the days till I was gone. That's probably why I liked to stretch the rules a little bit because I felt like I didn't have anybody watching over me, you know, holding me to anything, sort of like find your way. Okay, I'll find it my way. And I did. ((NATS/MUSIC)) NEXT WEEK ((VO/NAT)) ((Banner)) In coming weeks….. Zoe’s Cards ((SOT)) ((Zoe Moser, Founder, The Zoe Project)) Hey guys, it’s Zoe and I’m the CEO of the Zoe Project. I have started my cards during this pandemic. I started my project with making cards for anyone in nursing homes, nurses, doctors or anyone in jail, anyone who feels forgotten. My mom would drive to the nursing home. We would have to call the nursing home because we can't come inside. You pass the cards to a nurse that comes to the door. ((NATS: Zoe Moser and Nurse)) Oh my God! ((Zoe Moser, Founder, The Zoe Project)) I think I've created, maybe, about 300 in total. ((NATS)) CLOSING ((ANIM)) voanews.com/connect BREAK THREE BUMP IN ((ANIM)) SHOW ENDS