Change Agents 2/4/21: Directors and Playwrights Who Focus on Human Rights Issues

Producer/Host: Steve Wessler

-The reaction to plays on human rights themes
-What is hard about presenting a play focused on human rights issues
-Why doing a play about Abraham is important

Guests:
Arthur Feinsod, Director and teacher at Indiana State University in Terre Haute
Andy Park, Artistic director of Nebraska’s only professional equity theater, Nebraska Repertory Theatre.

About the host:
Steve Wessler will soon will be starting his 28th year of working on human right issues. He founded the Civil Rights Unit in the Maine Attorney’s Office in 1992 and led the Unit for 7 years. In 1999 he left the formal practice of law and founded the Center for the Prevention of Hate. The Center worked in Maine and across the USA. He and his colleagues worked to reduce bias and harassment in schools, in communities, in health care organization through workshops and conflict resolution. The Center closed in 2011 and Steve began a consulting on human rights issues. For the next 5 years much of his work was in Europe, developing and implementing training curricular for police, working in communities to reduce the risk of hate crimes, conflict resolution between police and youth. He has worked in over 20 countries. In late 2016 he began to work more in Maine, with a focus on reducing anti-immigrant bias. He continues to work in schools to reduce bias and harassment. Wessler teaches courses on human rights issues at the College of the Atlantic, the University of Maine at Augusta and at the School of Conflict Analysis and Resolution at George Mason University in northern Virginia.

Notes from the Electronic Cottage 2/4/21: Geofencing

Producer/Host: Jim Campbell

Many folks feel a bit fenced in by Covid these days, and that is a very understandable feeling. We know all about that type of being fenced in. We may not know quite as much about being geofenced in – in fact, we may have never heard the term. But if a person has a cell phone, there’s a very good chance that person has been geofenced – probably more than once – and never knew anything about it. So just what the heck is geofencing and why should anyone care? Listen up.

Healthy Options 2/3/21: The Intersection of Healing and Music (rebroadcast)

Host/Producer: Rhonda Feiman
Co-producer: Petra Hall

Host Rhonda Feiman explores the intersection of healing and music, with singer and energetic healer Amy Robbins Wilson.

Rebroadcast from 5/6/2020

About the host:
Rhonda Feiman is a nationally-certified, licensed acupuncturist practicing in Belfast, Maine since 1993. She primarily practices Toyohari Japanese acupuncture, using gentle and powerful non-insertion needle techniques, and also utilizes Chinese acupuncture and herbology. In addition, Rhonda is a practitioner of Qi Gong and an instructor of Tai Chi Chuan in the Yang Family tradition.

Maine Currents 2/2/21: “Being Black in Maine: Lived Experience and the Prospect for Change”

Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Today we bring you a panel discussion, “Being Black in Maine: Lived Experience and the Prospect for Change”, recorded on MLK Day 2021 via zoom. The speakers were Daryl Fort, leadership development consultant (moderator)’ Tonya Bailey-Curry, Clinical Social Worker at Bates College; Nancy Dymond, SAD 22 educator; Madison “Madi” Hemingway, UMaine Student; Ricky Hall, USDA/NRCS Civil Engineering Technician; and Tessa Solomon, UMaine student. The event was cosponsored by the UMaine Alumni Association and the Bangor Area Chapter of the NAACP

This recording was lightly edited to address audio quality issues in place.

About the host:
Amy Browne started out at WERU as a volunteer news & public affairs producer in 2000, co-hosting/co-producing RadioActive with Meredith DeFrancesco. She joined the team of Voices producers a few years later, and has been WERU’s News & Public Affairs Manager since January, 2006. In addition to RadioActive, Voices and Maine Currents, she also produced and hosted the WERU News Report for several years. She has produced segments for national programs including Free Speech Radio News, This Way Out, Making Contact, Workers Independent News, Pacifica PeaceWatch, and Live Wire News, and has contributed to Democracy Now and the WBAI News Report. She is the recipient of the 2014 Excellence in Environmental Journalism Award from the Sierra Club of Maine, and the First Place 2017 Radio News Award from the Maine Association of Broadcasters.