Ellen Israel Goldberg

Writer. Speaker. Photographer.

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News & Events

Welcome To My New Website

February 15, 2017

Getting my book into print took 32 years. I didn’t write continuously. I would have periods in which I would be inspired and others where I’d put the manuscript aside, sometimes for years. Life got in the way, so the creative juices didn’t always flow. I often worked long hours in business, with extra time for family and volunteering. Sometimes, there were a few minutes for relaxing.

Meanwhile, I read many books, both fiction and non-fiction, especially biographies and “how-tos” for writing. I also took courses, including writing short stories or features, as well as photography, then joined a few writing clubs.

Ideas began to marinate. Every few years, I’d start again. Good advice from people who had read my manuscript was incorporated into each new rendition. In commercials, the famous actor Orson Wells would say, “…no wine before its time.” In my case, it was “no book before its time.”

I wrote articles for a number of publications, including Indo-American News, Jewish Herald-Voice, and even Houston Horse & Hound. Each time, I improved my craft. It was flattering to hear the instructor of the Advanced Feature Writing Continuing Education Class at Rice University say, “I learn something each time I read your articles.”

That’s one of my goals in writing these blogs: sharing information from the many interesting activities I’m privileged to attend. I’ve been afforded opportunities that bring me into contact with people from all walks of life, many countries, and a variety of beliefs. In a world that is becoming increasingly wary of “The Other,” we must find a way to communicate with those who don’t necessarily share our views.

Some of my blogs will be reprints from articles I wrote in the past that will give an historic perspective of what was happening at the time. My visit to Gandhi’s first ashram in 1986 was one of those. South Africa was changing, and Apartheid was on its last legs.

My other goal is to encourage people to pursue their dreams. Never give up. There’s always hope. I’m a living example of that.

I’d like to hear from you, so please feel write. I’ll try to respond to each of you.

Labels: Announcements, Commentary, News & Events

South African Cousins

February 8, 2017

In 1986, I went to visit my young cousin Harold Rudolph who had been elected Mayor of Johannesburg. It was a family reunion, with seven of us from America meeting our South African relatives whom I discovered while working on my maternal grandmother’s “tree.” We heard stories that those of us on this side of the pond had not known about our great-great grandparents.

After my initial trip out of the country as a 41 year-old, I became a writer for Indo-American News. My last article before I left for Joburg, “Islamic Education In the US,” had pleased the leaders of the Musjid (a Muslim place of worship) so much that they gave me a copy of the Qu’ran. Since I planned to meet Indians in South Africa, I asked if they wanted me take a gift to their co-religionists on their behalf. They gave me another Qu’ran and it went into the first Mosque in Soweto that opened the first weekend I was there.

Apartheid was just beginning to show cracks. Besides celebrating the bar mitzvah of my cousin’s son, I travelled around the country, interviewing people from various townships. In Cape Town, Members of Parliament from all three chambers—White, Indian, and Coloured—took me to see how the government worked.

My original itinerary did not include Durban, but the leader of the town council in Lenasia, the Indian township outside of Johannesburg, said that if I was writing for Indian newspapers, I had to rearrange my schedule, because 80% of Indians in South Africa lived there. She made sure I was met by officials wherever I went.

The visit to Durban proved to be one of the highlights of my trip. At first I was shown local townships, then the professor who was my guide asked as an afterthought, “Would you like to see Gandhi’s first ashram?” It had a profound effect on me. The following article tells why.

Labels: Commentary, Memoir, News & Events, South Africa

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TravelBlog

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