Monday, October 29, 2018
SO WHAT HAPPENED IN MISSOURI ON SUNDAY?
People came together to be with each other after a horrific murder happened in another city many miles away. The gathering was held in a barren auditorium. The expectation was that there would be a few hundred people there. The day was warm and sunny.
The program was put together quickly. The people grew from a small number to hundreds and they
came in a steady stream until they filled the 1200 seat auditorium to capacity. Many stood in the back.
Some people came from neighborhoods close by. Others came from distant areas. They were young and elderly people with canes, with walkers, some in motorized scooters. Sturdy parents and grandparents pushed carriages and carried children.
The program began later than expected because the stream of people kept coming.
Leaders representing all facets of American life were on the platform. There were educators, clergy of all denominations, and political candidates and incumbents, and state and local police and guards.
The names of the people murdered in Pittsburgh were placed in front of the platform and the audience was asked to remember them and their families and their communities.
Is it comforting to ask why? I don't think so. We can no longer overlook the physical and mental anguish that words and ignorance produce. We can no longer allow death and destruction to keep us
from thinking. Neither walls nor guns nor elaborate schemes must be allowed to entice us away from speaking out.
What happened in Pittsburgh will happen here in St. Louis unless we can recognize that the stranger in our midst is not the threat. The threat is our reluctance to accept words that claim otherwise, whether uttered by elected officials or ourselves.
REMEMBER TO VOTE NOVEMBER 6.
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
HOW SHALL WE REMEMBER?
There is a drawer in my cabinet that I seldom open. It contains very old files. One of those files holds letters in a language I cannot read. The letters were from my Grandmother to her family whom she and my grandfather left when they came to this country
I was fortunate to know and visit with all of my grandparents, there were four all of whom came to this country legally. I thought of them and of a conversation I had today at lunch with a friend who had returned from a trip with her daughter. My friend told me of her visit and the places she had not seen since childhood. She spoke of the memories she recalled and how startled her daughter was to hear about those memories.
My sons knew first hand of their great grandparents. They knew too of the memories and the circumstances that had brought their great grandparents here. Among those memories were stories of turbulence and persecution and vicious edicts. Memories that included kindness, help and the opportunity they found in their new country.
I thought of all this when I opened my newspaper and saw the pictures of the immigrants at this country's borders. The same words and actions that were used against my grandparents are used now but for different people.
How we treat and understand the stranger in our midst will color our lives. The memories my friend shared with her daughter also included memories of neighbors and neighborhoods. Memories that were joyful yet may have been harder to recount but are stored now in the memories of my friend's daughter.
It is time to recognize that we live in a period of major world-wide migration. How shall we recognize this historical moment? With bellicose words and saber rattling? Or will we have the wisdom to learn about the memories of the people making up this migration?
REMEMBER TO VOTE NOVEMBER 6, 2018
I was fortunate to know and visit with all of my grandparents, there were four all of whom came to this country legally. I thought of them and of a conversation I had today at lunch with a friend who had returned from a trip with her daughter. My friend told me of her visit and the places she had not seen since childhood. She spoke of the memories she recalled and how startled her daughter was to hear about those memories.
My sons knew first hand of their great grandparents. They knew too of the memories and the circumstances that had brought their great grandparents here. Among those memories were stories of turbulence and persecution and vicious edicts. Memories that included kindness, help and the opportunity they found in their new country.
I thought of all this when I opened my newspaper and saw the pictures of the immigrants at this country's borders. The same words and actions that were used against my grandparents are used now but for different people.
How we treat and understand the stranger in our midst will color our lives. The memories my friend shared with her daughter also included memories of neighbors and neighborhoods. Memories that were joyful yet may have been harder to recount but are stored now in the memories of my friend's daughter.
It is time to recognize that we live in a period of major world-wide migration. How shall we recognize this historical moment? With bellicose words and saber rattling? Or will we have the wisdom to learn about the memories of the people making up this migration?
REMEMBER TO VOTE NOVEMBER 6, 2018
Thursday, October 4, 2018
REMEDY TO OVERCOME "FRIGHTENING TIMES"?
So what should we do if we live in "Frightening Times."
Begin by turning off the noise! Go to the movies to see "Science Fair" the award-winning documentary written and directed by Cristina Constantina and Daren Foster.
The film features a group of students, their friends and families and depicts what happens to them when they all undertake impossible challenges, individually and collectively.
It is the story of who we are as Americans working with other "citizens" from around the world. The film demonstrates that we still live in a country dedicated to justice and opportunity. And it shows the willingness of the young and old to listen and respect each other as we work to achieve a common goal through education.
Yes, we are living through changing times. Sometimes we move a step forward and sometimes a step backward but we know from our history we need not be afraid. We will prevail! We will do so not because we live through "Frightening Times" but because of our constant quest to better ourselves.
We will do so with the courage of young people. We will look to their inquisitiveness and persistence to welcome change. We will do so because they and we know and agree that we live in a country that is ruled by laws. We and they will take all this and march toward the future, leaving a past filled with turmoil and "Frightening Times."
Go see "SCIENCE FAIR" and VOTE ON NOVEMBER 6.
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