Jeffrey Loewen

Jeffrey Loewen

Jeffrey Loewen arrived in the Okanagan by way of Winnipeg and White Rock. He continues to insist that Winnipeg is probably the greatest city in Canada -- even if it won't have him. University studies in Winnipeg and Mannheim, Germany had him focusing on Literature and Philosophy. A former haberdasher and buyer in the high-end menswear trade, Jeffrey currently sells musical instruments and liaises with schools throughout the Interior to support their music programmes. He is a keen musician, playing a variety of keyboards and guitars. Happily residing in West Kelowna with his perfect foil, Wendy, and their Manx kitty, Merlin, Jeffrey can seem subdued at times. After all, his heroes are dead, and his enemies are in power. He notes that he would brighten if Stockwell Day would return to public service, if only for comic relief.

LOEWEN: For what it’s worth: Thoughts on Truth & Reconciliation

Callous indifference to, willful ignorance of Canadian history’s catalogue of insult towards, and impatience with Indigenous peoples’ aspirations have pretty much defined Canada’s regard for First Nations people. And in the words of Stephen Stills’ classic, “For What It’s Worth”: ‘Think it's time we stop Hey, what's that sound Everybody look what's going down...' June...

LOEWEN: Where B.C. doesn’t have to mean Bring Cash

Ahhhh... The first long weekend has come and gone. And with its passing, so too have the first round of the thousands of tourists who descend upon the Okanagan Valley each and every blessed summer, starting with the Victoria Day weekend. But they’ll be back, don’t you forget it: Those cigarette boats spewing oil and...

LOEWEN: A bittersweet Spring and the birth of a book

Bittersweet, this year. The changing of the season I mean. The dogged persistence of nature’s Spring re-awakening. Here in the Okanagan, one welcomes happily the greening of the hills, the height of the sun, the air moist and fragrant with, first cherry and then lilac, blossoms. Magpies and quail nest in our yards. The vineyards,...

LOEWEN: The Alberta election and the politics of hope

“Pigs fly!” “Hell has frozen.” “I step off a plane after 3.5 hours and we've got an F'in NDP government and the Flames tying goal is called off!! The world has gone to hell!!!” A sampling of the commentary on my Facebook wall last night as the Alberta provincial election results rolled in and media...

LOEWEN: Canada’s not a nation of “scared rabbits”

Anti-democratic, authoritarian and autocratic. Back-stabbing, brow-beating and bullying. Churlish, corrupt and cryptic. Devious, dictatorial and divisive. Egregious and erroneous. Fear-mongering, flawed and fraudulent. Grandiose, grudge-bearing and guileful. Haughty, hectoring and hypocritical. Ill-advised, imperious and invasive. Janus-faced and kleptocratic. Labour-bashing, labyrinthine and lachrymose. Mendacious, militaristic and misguided. Nasty, nefarious, and negligent. Obfuscatory, obscurantist and opaque. Paranoid,...

LOEWEN: What I learned at the B.C. Interior Jazz Festival

Readers of my weekly column will know by now that I am an inveterate slave to music. No doubt it was my significantly older brothers, constantly spinning LPs on the rec room stereo in the early Sixties, that first made me a fan of the classic rock greats: The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Doors,...

LOEWEN: Get your groove on at the B.C. Interior Jazz Festival

Armstrong, Biederbeck, Bechet and Bolden. Ellington, Basie, Hawkins and Coltrane. Parker, Monk, Mingus and Davis. Holiday, Fitzgerald, Baker and Connick Jr. Argatoff, Buck, Ertel and Griffin… I’m groovin’ with the greats today, baby. That’s right, the jazz greats. America’s finest contribution to world culture is that musical art form that manages to swing and moan, jive and...

LOEWEN: The conflicted joy of the Easter holiday

For many of us, the arrival of Easter heralds the arrival of Spring, and a general re-awakening of nature. Even our very senses seem more rudely alive, aching to take in the explosions of growth all around, our noses attuned to the blossoms scent carried on the wind, our eyes jealously keeping track of the...

LOEWEN: A lesson learned from big-box failures and small-town pride

Two business-news stories caught my attention in the last week here in the Okanagan Valley. One of them featured local restaurateur, Neil Martens, responding to some aggrieved local patrons of his business, 19 Okanagan Grill & Bar, over the bitterly-perceived steep cost of glasses of wine at his establishment. The other, was the shutting down...

LOEWEN: How bare breasts keep our eye on the prize

The baring of breasts in public can be unsettling for some and welcomed by others. Indeed, last week there was a local kerfuffle surrounding the issue of breast-feeding in public. And just Monday, in our own institution of indecorous-propriety, the House of Commons, the baring of breasts stole the show from our elected masters of...

LOEWEN: A note of thanks to those who make writing worthwhile

Writers write. It’s what we do. Sometimes what emerges on the page is deemed all right. Sometimes what emerges is utter shite. But while the mania of the writing is upon us, we live for the chase of an idea, down the rabbit-hole, before it disappears forever into Oblivion. And when the writing mania is...

LOEWEN: Is Canada losing its Mind? PM Harper’s anti-intellectualism

Canada is beset by a scourge in our present day; and it stems from the attitudes and pronouncements of our federal government under the leadership of Prime Minister Stephen Harper. The scourge is that of “anti-intellectualism.” And citizens expecting informed thinking to guide policy-making decisions had best begin examining the current style of governance in...

LOEWEN: The “poetry” in Canadian politics

For those that follow Canadian federal politics closely, we live in exceptional times. We live in a time when it is becoming increasingly clear that the governments that accommodate the day-to-day business of the world’s most powerful economies are doing just that: Accommodating the interests of business. A cursory glance at the news coming out...

LOEWEN: Is Canada living through perilous times? A historical perspective

Given the revelations from the Snowden archives that we now have proof-positive of Canadian government and corporate surveillance of virtually everything that Canadians (and others abroad) say and do, one might forgive Canadians for believing that we live in uniquely perilous times. The times are so perilous that we even share this data with the...

LOEWEN: PM Harper and the language of opacity

Writers are blessed (or damned) to be concerned constantly about language. We’re concerned about things like how our work is received by the reader, whether we are accurate in isolating on the paper or the screen something singular and unique that will be a turn-on for the reader. Maybe give them a little insight or...