http://www.smirkingchimp.com/thread/18489"Let us shed tears of gratitude for this moment of grace. It will be brief."
by Mike Ferner | November 6, 2008
My friend, Lucy Bohne, an English professor at a state college near Erie, Pennsylvania, wrote to her daughter today about Barack Obama's victory. Lucy did a fine job describing how many people feel the day after the Senator's historic victory.
"Thank you for calling last night. It sounded like NYC had gone mad with joy!...I have spent the night in a roller coaster of amazement, shadowed by despair, counting the days between your birth and MLK's murder. Twelve, to be more or less exact. That was the joy--to think that 40 years later your generation would hand the White House over to the leadership of a black American. That is an amazing thing!
...The shadows--well, you know them. This amazing thing that happened in America--that only we, as Americans, can understand and share--won't make a difference to the world, to the children in Baghdad, Beirut, Gaza, and Teheran, and all the other places in the crosshairs of our guns--unless we make that difference. Might as well be brave and strong and admit that there is work to be done, struggles to embrace, disappointments to endure.
But, for the moment, let us shed tears of gratitude for this moment of grace. It will be brief.
-- Mom"
snip//
Who knows today what forces the hopes and dreams of this campaign may have unleashed? Who can say what historical events may be about to unfold, or how far they may go if we make conditions right for their growth?
More importantly, when our "moment of grace" is indeed found to be brief and we must regroup over and over again, will these new, hopeful campaigners be savvy enough to overcome the American appetite for instant gratification that today is found only in shopping malls?
That, I believe, is the challenge faced by all those who want schools and healthcare not empire and warfare; who want to "...make a difference to the world, to the children in Baghdad, Beirut, Gaza, and Teheran, and all the other places in the crosshairs of our guns."
It is a tall challenge indeed. But if we are not up to it, who is?