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Posted

I can't help thinking that this may not have happened

if he were around on Tuesday - better yet - Wednesday?

Or maybe it was bound to happen regardless?

Possibly on tenterhooks about the upcoming results

and just couldn't deal?

Rod

Do you really think that someone so obsessed with an issue that he's willing to kill himself in such a gruesome manner is going to sit around and wait until the final results in the Virginia senate race are available before he decides whether to set himself on fire.

  • 1 year later...
Posted

Contrary to what Jennifer Diaz says toward the end of that Al Jazeera report, there was a great deal of intense discussion about this on the Chicago Reader website (and elsewhere too, IIRC) right after Malachai's identity was discovered:

http://blogs.chicagoreader.com/post-no-bil...parent-suicide/

Now it's possible that the story wasn't prominently featured throughout the media for primarily political reasons (remember how that woman who protested the war at or near Bush's ranch was trashed as a self-serving eccentric?), but as some of the posts on the above discussion suggest, there is some reason to think that Malachai's motives were somewhat mixed and that members of his immediate family would have been hurt if those actual or apparent mixed motives were hashed over in the press, as they almost certainly would have been.

  • 6 years later...
Posted (edited)

From Holland Cotter's review in the Times of the newly opened Whitney Biennial:

"An installation by Public Collectors, a Chicago group founded by Marc Fischer in 2007, is also about preserving sounds: hundreds of live experimental music performances taped over many years by Malachi Ritscher, a Chicago jazz fanatic and political activist who publicly immolated himself in 2006 as a protest against the war in Iraq. Thanks to Public Collectors, which functions as a custodian of cultural materials that no one, including museums, wants, Ritscher’s life’s work survives, including the briefcases in which he carried equipment, which are here."

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/07/arts/design/2014-whitney-biennial-has-new-faces-and-interesting-choices.html?hp

Edited by Mark Stryker
Posted

Mark, thanks mightily for that Public Collectors link. It's true, Malachi was certainly one of the non-musician MVPs here in Chicago. And reading this reminds me of the despair we felt during the long, long Bush-Iraq War years.

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