Santa Fe 2010 - Pioneer women, painter, potmakers, poets – and of course a chef!

Miriam Sagan, in Santa Fe, reading from her collected poems, 2010.

by Nancy Sternoff

The day was overflowing with the stories of women who have been inspired by, actually led by, the light and the terrain and the curves of the Santa Fe landscape.

Lois Rudnick, passionate about the early women shapers of the cultural landscape in New Mexico, described this as distinctly feminist space, a place where humans do not attempt to dominate nature, but rather, the land itself establishes the law. What a way to frame the day.

Lorraine Schechter, from the day she said “no” to a Bat Mitzvah, has been on the road to YES – and she found it here among these hills.

I want to hang out at SAR for a couple of months! You can feel the creative energy, both in the vaults of pots and pots and more pots and on the pathways leading from house to house.

The New Mexico History Museum affirms our belief that the one in power writes the history – the struggles between the pre-contact inhabitants and the post-contact missionaries and land grabbers and dominators comes to life in the museum’s permanent exhibit.

I want to be Miriam Sagan’s Queen Esther next Purim!

And the icing on today’s cake was a reunion with old friends from Seattle who are on this adventure with us.

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Jewish Women's Archive. "Santa Fe 2010 - Pioneer women, painter, potmakers, poets – and of course a chef!." (Viewed on November 22, 2024) <https://jwa.org/santafe/blog/pioneers-painters-potmakers-poets>.