TO HELL AND BACK: The Long, Strange Trip of Dave Evans' Life
PLUS: Gardens and Grief, Painters and Paths, and Ann Magnuson's 'Bad' Street | August 2021
Welcome to the August 2021 issue of WestVirginiaVille.com, a multimedia feature magazine with alternative ways of looking at life in the Mountain State of West Virginia. We’re back from a month-long break, not necessarily tanned since we wore long pants in the woods to avoid the bugs. But we’re certainly ready — see our lineup of great reading, looking, and watching. Read on and be well. | Douglas John Imbrogno, editor.
COVER STORY: The Long, Strange Trip of Dave Evans’ Notable Life
A bodhisattva is a Sanskrit term to describe someone motivated by great compassion, who seeks selflessly to help others. The bodhisattva Kṣitigarbha (known in Japan as Jizo) is known for his vow not to achieve Buddhahood until all the hells are emptied. He is often depicted carrying a staff to force open the gates of hell and a wish-fulfilling jewel to light up the darkness.
I thought of Kṣitigarbha/Jizo when pondering how to introduce my profile of the remarkable life of West Virginia native Dave Evans. As an 18-year-old Marine in Vietnam in 1970, Dave lost both his legs below the knees from a land mine and ambush. It would have been easy for him, distraught and disgruntled, to shut himself off from a world that had taken so much from him.
Yet, he got up on prosthetic legs, then learned how to make artificial arms, legs, and hands for others. He proceeded to spend the next half-century moving among the world’s conflict zones and hot spots — its hell zones — often at considerable risk. He brought a compassionate heart, plus skilled hands and eyes, which he applied to the suffering of thousands of adults and children who, like him, had lost limbs from the endless toll of war and human conflict.
In Japan, Jizo Boddhisatva is also a beloved guardian of children. You will see in this profile also how much Dave was a guardian of the world’s children, with a fierce resolve to return to them a semblance of the hands, arms, and legs they had lost. Dave died in Antigua, Guatemala in July 2020. The example of his bodhisattva life lives on.
READ ON: The Long, Strange Trip of Dave Evans’ Notable Life
2 | MEMOIR: When Gardens Turn to Grief
Gardens are endlessly suggestive. They usually signify growth, inspiration, and the boundless, restorative invention of Nature. Yet gardens can carry their own freight of more painful meaning. Especially when they fall into tangles as life’s misfortunes overwhelm and distract us from turning their soil. WestVirginiaVille Minister of Paragraphs, Connie Kinsey, returns to our pages with a short memoir on the dance between her garden and her grief.
READ ON: “The Garden and the Grief” by Connie Kinsey
3 | ART/WORK: The Paths Taken
We’re pleased to feature a new round of artwork from an evocative series by Mountain State artist Sharon Lynn. They feature children spotlighted in enigmatic settings, hinted at but never completely revealed. Her range and frequency is all the more remarkable as Sharon is a full-time clinical mental health counseling graduate student at Marshall University, a disability advocate, and writer.
READ ON: Sharon Lynn and the Path Taken
4 | BACK/THEN: The Bad Street of Ann Magnuson’s Growing Up
We keep our eyes peeled for cool, offbeat social media postings with a West Virginia connection that may be worth further sharing. A new edition of 'BACK/THEN' harkens to past times in West Virginia. See how cultural avatar and West Virginia native Ann Magnuson responded to an historic shot of Summers Street in Charleston, WV, where she partly grew up.
READ ON: On the Bad Streets of Ann Magnuson’s Charleston Upbringing
5 | Artist at Work in the Clouds
In 2022, artist Robert Singleton will be honored as a Tamarack Foundation for the Arts Master Artist. Robert, who lives and paints at his home on an Allegheny Mountain ridge near Baker, WV, is on a creative jag at age 84. He will host an Open House exhibit and sale of more than a dozen new works on Aug. 14-15 and 22, along with new artwork by Dan Morro. I recently visited Robert, whose remarkable life is the subject of a forthcoming AMP Media documentary. Here are portraits of the artist in his sunlit studio.
READ ON: A high-up visit to Robert Singleton’s West Virginia studio
6 | The Pillars of Climate Work in West Virginia
The West Virginia Climate Alliance is a new coalition of nearly 20 West Virginia-based environmental organizations, faith-based, civil rights and civic groups with a focus on climate change. I recently began doing some communications consulting with them, including short videos. The one at the links describes the three pillars that drive Climate Alliance efforts. It also features stunning aerial drone photography by AMP Media/WestVirginiaVille.com Producer/Videographer Bobby Lee Messer.
READ ON: The Pillars of the WV Climate Alliance
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