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Supplementary > July 6, 2005

Farewell Songs

By Teresa Prados Torreira

James Weinstein: The Man

Jimmy By Beth Maschinot
Creature Comforts
By Lee Aitken
Look, It's a Better World
By Joan Walsh
A Generous Teacher
By Sheryl Larson
The Man Who Came to Dinner By Jim McNeill
Hope and Politics By Pat Arnow
A Socialist in the Age of Triangulation By Rick Perlstein
Farewell Songs
By Teresa Prados Torreira
Jimmeth By Salim Muwakkil
A Worthy Soul By Saul Landau

A couple of years ago, Jimmy enrolled in a Spanish language program in Oaxaca, Mexico. He proudly told me that he packed so lightly, he didn’t need to check his bag at the airport. He could have stayed at a fancy hotel; instead, he chose to board with a family, roommate and all. He had a great time and, true to himself, he only complained about his landlady’s cooking skills. “Not a cook,” he said in his blunt way. Jimmy’s frugality, his unpretentious personal style, was consistent with his ideology. I found his Old Left politics comfortingly familiar, a connection to the European left I came from. Yes, he could be dogmatic, but his no-nonsense clarity, his uncompromising commitment to placing class at the center of the social change agenda was refreshing in the too-often unfocused climate of the American left.

A few weeks before he died, while I sat with him so Beth could take a break, he and I spent the afternoon singing songs of the Spanish Civil War to each other. A fitting farewell.

Teresa Prados Torreira teaches American history at Columbia College, Chicago.

More information about Teresa Prados Torreira
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