06/11/2011
Cathy's guest is art historian Ann Ellis, who talks about a special project she's going to be doing for the programme in the very near future.
Sunday Mornings With Cathy Macdonald is two hours of music and stimulating conversation taking a faith and ethics based view at the world we live in today. Topical and where necessary provocative it takes the weeks events and breaks them down into what it means to the individual and our society's values and beliefs. Complementing this are conversations with people who have something to say on how we live our lives; whether through their personal experiences, what they write or preach, or because they've dedicated themselves to making the world a better place.
Cathy's first hour guest is art historian Ann Ellis who will be talking amongst other things, about a special project she's going to be doing for the programme in the very near future.
With Pilgrimage being the largest co-ordinated movement of people on earth, Martin Palmer, secretary general of the Alliance of Religions and Conservation (ARC) and Rev Dane Sherrard from Luss on the banks of Loch Lomond, talk about The Green Pilgrimage Network - something that aims to help major world faiths make their holy cities and sacred sites as environmentally sustainable as possible, according to their own theologies and understanding.
Tommy Whitelaw, a full time carer for his mother who suffers from dementia, was on the programme earlier in the year to talk about his Tommy's Tour initiative: gathering personal stories in the form of letters from fellow carers. Tommy joins us again to tell us about the inspirational people he met, and his imminent visit to the Parliament.
And the cast and crew of the T.A.G. amateur theatre group, talk to Anna Magnusson about the play MYLA, the story of a young girl who falls into heroin abuse and homelessness. The play is on at Dunferminline's Carnegie Hall next week.
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- Sun 6 Nov 2011 07:05Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Scotland