S3 2: ALLEYS | NILI PORTUGALI Architect . Filmmaker . Author
A seventh generation descendent of family who lived in Sefad, Israel, the city where mystical scholars of the Kabbalah found refuge in the 16th Century; Nili Portugal is an architect, author and filmmaker. We discuss her film “And the Alley She Whitewashed in Light Blue”, a stunning, poetic, visual masterpiece of the seasonal rituals in her Grandmother Rivka’s hotel, at the end of an alley in that old city. The film is one of her many works which seek to find a universal answer to the question “What is the basis of all those places in which one feels at home, and wants to return to, again and again?”
S3 E1: SHARING SACRED LAND | SULAIMAN KHATIB
Sulaiman Khatib grew up in a small Palestinian village, on the outskirts of Jerusalem. At the age of 14, he and his friend received long jail sentences for stabbing and injuring two Israeli soldiers. In the jail library he studied the history of the Jewish people, and began to understand that there were equally compelling narratives to both sides. A reconstructed perspective of non-violence, further impacted by hunger strikes in jail, seeded his future dedication to peace and reconciliation work.
In 2005 he cofounded the Combatants for Peace, an organization created by Palestinian and Israeli former fighters and victims of violence. Combatants for Peace is modeled on humanistic values of empathy, forgiveness and mutual respect for a future of peace on the sacred homeland that both Palestinians and Israelis love, fighting not each other - but the common enemy of hatred and fear.
Nominated twice for the Nobel Peace Prize, his transformative journey and visionary optimism is rooted in a deep love of the land, ancient wisdom, and spirituality.
S2 E6: THE FIELD OF DECONSTRUCTION, RESISTANCE, DISCOURSE: A German Legacy Response | DAGMAR RICHTER | Architect and Educator
Born in Germany, post World War II, as part of the generation with the ‘grace of late births’, DAGMAR RICHTER describes the impact of that context and time on her work, identity and places she has since lived.
She talks about engagement and discourse in her work as an architect and educator, as the necessary antithesis of the wall of silence she experienced when young. Her work deconstructs, exposes and reveals what is often uncomfortable, or what she calls ‘not smooth’.
S2 Ep.5: ACROSS THE RIVER: BRIDGING CONVERSATIONS KIM JORGENSEN GANE | Candidate for Michigan State Senate
KIM JORGENSEN GANE is a midwestern mom, a speaker, author and activist community leader; a democrat, running for State Senate in Michigan’s District 20. For this candidacy, she leads with an approach of ‘care’, informed by her deep connection and understanding of the place she has lived most of her life and its complex politics. She brings her ‘every mom’ passion to issues of class, gender and race in her still deeply segregated state, helping the public connect to their values, stories and lived experiences with how they vote.
S2 Ep.4: TO MARK. TO GROUND. THE SHADOWS OF PLACE: BOEDI WIDJAJA | Artist
BOEDI WIDJAJA is a prolific international artist whose work is deeply tied to his personal experience of being a migrant child in Southeast Asia. Impacted by the region’s complicated entangled histories, his poetic art explores themes of diaspora, memory, cultural hybridity, identity and space.
S2 Ep.3: MEN’S SHEDS | Phil Johnson, Managing Director for the US Men’s Sheds
Men’s Sheds, an international phenomenon, with thousands of clubs worldwide, are mainly ‘clubs for older guys’. They provide a place for older men to meet, build friendships and projects, pursue their interests, learn new things, and discuss health issues. In these places, there is a comfort level to talk while working “Shoulder to Shoulder”. We listen to Phil Johnson the Managing Director and catalyst behind the Men’s Sheds movement in the United States, talk about the transformative effect Men’s Sheds have had on retired and elder men’s lives.
S2 Ep.2: IF YOU VISIT MY HOME YOU WILL KNOW ME | The Home Visit | Sarah Leibowits | Educator
Imagine a radical school curriculum where 4 and 5 year old children, are required to visit the homes of every student in the class. I speak with Sarah Leibowits, a lower school educator at the Manhattan Country School in New York, who has taken her class on these very home visits for 20 years. Established as a 'private school with a public mission’, lessons at the school from kindergarten through 8th grade are built on the celebration of unique difference.
SEASON 2_Episode 01: BELONGING TO CONFLICTED TERRITORY|Haya Haddad: A Palestinian Israeli Citizen |Human Rights Activist
In this episode, Haya Haddad, a young, driven woman, a Christian, Palestinian, Israeli citizen, delves into her personal family and communal, historical narrative of displacement, and her multiple minority identities, all which inspire her social, humanitarian and political work. She talks about the hope for integration by understanding the collective human story.
This interview was done prior to the beginning of the war in Ukraine. While this discussion focuses on the displacement experience of the Palestinians, some of the themes, although different in detail, context and complexity, correlate with the current forced evacuation of Ukrainian citizens. I thought about this a lot while I prepared the episode to air. I expect you will too.
Episode 15: INSIDE THE WHEREING PODCAST | Nina Freedman|Host
This is the FInal Episode of Season 1! To all listeners, THANK YOU! From starting this naive experiment, during the pandemic, from my home, it amazes me that I have listeners all over the United States and the world. Wow! I am taking a break over the summer, and will return in September. This episode gives you some short Season 1 highlight clips, and ‘behind the scenes’ info about the Whereing Podcast. It is part of a recent talk about the podcast I was invited to give to the Pratt Institute School of Design, Department of Interior Design INT Talks.
Episode 14: A LIVEABLE PLACE FOR ALL | Karen Kubey |Urbanist and Houser
I speak with Karen Kubey, who is an urbanist and ‘houser’ with an enduring passion and commitment to affordable housing as the generative factor in social equity and justice. We speak about the ways to engage residents in the decisions for the design of their homes, and the need to push for generous, transformative policies, because housing is a human right.
Episode 13: MOTHER TONGUE | ፈለማ የማነበርሃን| Felema Yemaneberhan |Architectural Designer
Felema Yemaneberhan grew up in Los Angeles, but throughout her childhood she was brought back to another home, in Eritrea, north of Ethiopia, a country traumatized by Italian colonization and Civil War. Before the age of 5, she only spoke Tigrinya, the language of her ancestral home, a place where her parents still anticipate returning. When we say mother tongue, what does it mean? ‘Mother Tongue’ merges the past and present, a sometimes invisible gift of identity, particularly when displaced in another land.
Episode 12: ELASTIC | ABSORBABLE | SPACE: Loukia Tsafoulia, Architect
The conversation with Loukia Tsafoulia covers her various multi-disciplinary projects. We first speak about the book she has edited and curated, titled 'Transient Spaces', and her devotion to exploring belonging for migrant and refugee populations. Her other works examine the connections between design, technology and science, specifically the human body, and its sensory interactions with objects and place. A project we speak about is an installation now being exhibited at the the Venice Biennale, called 'Synesthesia'.
Episode 11: HOME ‘ON STAGE’ Lori Kirstein: Actress | Singer | Author | Entrepreneur
Lori Kirstein is a multi-talented force - an actress, singer, author, and entrepreneur. She brings these skills to her training programs, which focus on leadership from a place of presence and truth. We discuss the period in her life, when, in the midst of becoming a rising entrepreneur, she became homeless, and how it has informed her work and life, what it means to find and build a home.
Episode 10: MOVEMENT CREATES SPACE Sofia Kondylia: Choreographer | Performer | Architect
Sofia Kondylia is an award-winning choreographer, performer and architect. Motivated by the simple truth, that ‘movement creates space’, her work, through dance, performance, physical theatre and film, explores intersections between choreography and architecture and its impact on emotional self transformation.
Episode 09: SPATIAL FICTIONS | FROZEN DAYDREAMS Clement Luk Laurencio
Clement Luk Laurencio is a storyteller and master of pencil drawings. His surreal, poetic drawings capture the dreams, inventions, memories and flashbacks of places he has lived, visited and cherished. He calls them ‘spatial fictions’. He says they are an invitation for pause, and wandering, in its timeless labyrinth. He probes the question ‘How is the dwelling a place of reverie and protection for the dreamer?’
Episode 08: ONE YEAR IN: COLLEGE IN QUARANTINE Emma Bowers | Alex Durham | Irene Pan
It is one year into the pandemic. Colleges closed their doors in March of 2020. Students weighed their decisions about how and where they could continue to learn. Where are our students now? What are the impacts, and unexpected lessons they have learned?
We speak with 3 students who all have different stories. Emma Bowers has had a nomadic experience. Alex Durham went home to live with family. Irene Pan is a Chinese international student, who decided to remain in the USA and study online.
Episode 07: ‘OUR HOMES’ IN ANOTHER PLACE Photographing Disappearing Jewish Communities CHRYSTIE SHERMAN
I speak with CHRYSTIE SHERMAN, a photographer who documents the loss and disappearance of Jewish communities. Coinciding with the beginning of the Jewish Passover holiday, her art captures themes of exodus, migration, nomadic wandering, and the longing for a homeland .... universal questions, very much alive today.
Episode 06: HOUSE CALL! BELONGING TO EARTH, PLACE AND SELF
She thought she was nomad. New to to this town, she experienced serendipitous events, meetings with eccentric creatives, and a deep curiosity about the land. We hear how her home was realized, in a beloved, magical summer camp, once called the ‘Fried Egg'. It is a story of belonging to earth, place and self - through anchoring, listening, learning, and rebuilding with friends.
Episode 05: PLACES OF RISK | PLACES OF SERVICE
What does it mean to live on the edge? Jerry Roback is most comfortable describing himself as a wild man, a humanitarian adventurer, a self appointed and fearless grass roots citizen of compassionate service. He seeks the oasis - the calm, the magic, the rescue in places of suffering, a sanctuary for discussions across divides…. or simply… in the need that reveals itself in spontaneous encounters. That is his home. This unbridled spirit has provided a life resume of the ordinary extraordinary in places near and far.
Episode 04: HOME AND HOMELESSNESS |BUILDING SMARTER
What might resolve the challenges of sheltering the homeless? Kishani De Silva envisions a pilot scheme to test a smarter, faster, cheaper methodology. Bridging government, design, technology, and community resistance, she speaks, with hope, to the urgent need for alignment, partnership and the intangible meaning of community and belonging.