W E D N E S D A Y
January 3, 2024 Vol. 44, No. 27
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JOURNAL @oakpark
of Oak Park and River Forest
Village president Vicki Scaman shares projects she’s most excited about for the coming year By LUZANE DRAUGHON Staff Reporter
Hila Ratzabi practices ways to repair and improve the world. Her poems show it PROVIDED
By JACK HELBIG “Go outside.” Oak Parker Hila Ratzabi writes in her poem, How to Pray While the World Burns, “Find a patch of grass, sand, dirt/Sit, kneel, place a hand or just/A finger to the soft earth/Feel it pulse back.” The piece is from Ratzabi’s first collection of poems “There are Still Woods,” a collection of 48 clear-eyed,
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What’s next for Oak Park in 2024?
Oak Park poet offers words for troubling times Contributing Reporter
What’s WJ’s most read story?
open-hearted, well-tuned ruminations, spond to the catastrophic forest fires in California. Other of her poems meditations, and other assorted bits of autobiographical encounters with na- comment on climate change and the ture and God, and on-going search for a “End of the Anthropocene” (literally wholeness in an aching, broken world. the title of one of her pieces). Ratzabi conducts regular poetry This is hardly surprising. Ratzabi has been an active environ- workshops in Thatcher Woods and at mentalist from childhood; her poems the Chicago Botanic Garden. multiple “I take people on an eco-poetry are steeped in an appreciation of na- companies qualitywalk,” coverages she said. “I give them a packet ture and awareness of the environmultiple companies ment. “How to Pray While the World educated agents coverages See RATZABI on page 6 Burns” was written, in part, to quality re-
Oak Parkers can expect continued work toward making the village a more affordable, equitable and enjoyable place to live in 2024. That’s according to Vicki Scaman, Oak Park’s village president. In 2023, Oak Park received an “A” for climate change adaptation, helped shelter asylum-seekers, approved a new capital improvement plan, introduced a study evaluating racial equity and more. For 2024, Scaman said she’s excited about continuing to work toward the village’s climate change goals, alternative response for mental health calls, implementing more affordable housing and so much more. “What we’re seeing today is people that are willing to, with my leadership, take that work and see it come forward in village board agendas in very tangible ways,” Scaman said. See OAK PARK on page 8
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