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Collective Creativity: President Obama
and Martin Luther King
Today is Martin Luther King Day. What hardest of hearts could resist
the voice of justice calling down the corridors of conscience in the
satin tremolo of our American Dr. Martin Luther King? My indelible moment
was underneath the Lincoln memorial with my now-deceased parents, my
sister-in-law and eldest brother. It was a thin crowd that day. In stillness
we stood together, watching the video footage--listening--with ten tear-filled
eyes. King’s call for forgiveness on the larger scale seemed to fortify
the waters of familial pardon for which we had been striving, imperfectly,
for quite some time. Our family has been one of fierce love, with divergent
views fiercely held.
Today’s holiday is a remarkable coincidence, coming just one day before
the inauguration of our first African-American president. No mistaking
here the mysterious order of being, moving in the wings and revealing
itself—at times conspicuously--from behind the chaotic curtains of life.
A coincidence, yes, but no historical accident. The confluence of these
two events is at once a harbinger of civil rights fulfilled, and a clarion
call for action on dreams unfulfilled.
Soon-to-be President Obama has rallied our optimism. A highly talented
and bi-partisan team is coalescing to help us recover from a staggering
heap of grave and complex problems: from a broken economy and confidence
to a broken healthcare system, a broken energy policy, a broken educational
system, broken infrastructure and a breaking middle class. You name
it. The collective sense of relief in the air can be slashed with a
proverbial knife. It’s unlike anything my generation has witnessed,
including the 60s, 70s and Viet Nam. New stewardship is a blessing.
We ache for renewal. We long for escape from maddening witness to mind
blowing ideological blindness, secret channels, censorship and paramilitary
shadows. Orwellian mischief--with its word play--has entered into law:
“torture” redefined to legalize torture, rendition of innocents renamed
“productive,” bad intelligence from the enemies tortured renamed as
“actionable.” Not to mention the loss of life on all sides, the growing
morass of radical Islamists and End of Days proponents in the Middle
East. Ask us why we are heartsick, and we will tell you more. Though
badly wounded, we are deeply grateful for a renewing worthiness in the
eyes of our founders. We sense that we are heading inward toward our
constitutional soul, to regain a foothold on the genuine path aligned
with our fathers’ yet-unrealized dream.
Barack Obama’s presidency embodies Martin Luther King’s vision for racial
healing in America. Obama also leads us further, to focus on our common
heritage, our unalienable freedoms, our values that transcend even the
civil rights movement. His language reveals a preference for non-violent
means. He understands that these, in fact, are the most powerful weapons
at his disposal in dealing with the rest of the world, even in striving
to defeat terrorism. Tomorrow is not only America’s day. People the
world over, who long for diplomacy, justice and the guidance of a peace-loving
America, will be listening to his speech, shedding tears. The discomfort
we feel is actually a “call” that signals new opportunity. In order
to decipher the signal, our perceptions need pulling back from outer
circumstances. It’s not about denial. But by observing present challenges
in the broader scope of our personal histories, the obstacles are brought
down to size. From the aerial view we recall past endings survived,
learning and confidence gained, circumstances that, a the time, felt
even more dramatic than these. Past evidence reveals that we ourselves
are larger than circumstances, which are fleeting.
Obama manages to fulfill a wider context of King’s timeless words, which
both include and transcend race:
“I have a dream. That one day this great nation will rise up and live
out the true meaning of its creed. We hold these truths to be self-evident,
that all men are created equal…again and again we must rise to the majestic
height, meeting physical force with soul force…they have come to realize
that their freedom is inextricably bound to our freedom. We cannot walk
alone…This is no time to engage in the luxury of cooling off or to take
the tranquilizing drug of gradualism. Now is the time to make real the
promises of democracy...It would be fatal for the nation to overlook
the urgency of the moment...Now is the time to make justice a reality
for all of God's children…From every mountainside, let freedom ring!”
Some of us remember "The Nightingale," by the Danish author Hans Christian
Anderson. In this fairy tale, the Emperor of China has favored a mechanical
nightingale covered with jewels over the real bird, known to communicate
its beauty to humans through song. The mechanical bird breaks down and
the emperor is taken deathly ill. When the real nightingale returns,
its song so moves Death that he turns away, and the emperor lives on.
No matter how much value we’ve instilled in our work, it may be time
to further enhance the value of our services. Aiming to create more
income or celebrity is missing the mark. In contrast, aiming to create
more value in service to others is building trust and attracting income.
Most likely, you are now seeking more value for the dollars you are
willing to spend. So is everyone else. We need to glance away from nervous
preoccupation with the ephemeral, and re-focus. It may take quite some
time to navigate through this year’s endings. Creating more genuine
value for the people we serve may be challenging. But patience and a
long-view focus will lead to improved conditions.
The last eight years was, perhaps, a prescription in disguise. Our democracy
was taken so deathly ill that the Nightingale was compelled to return.
May we choose to keep listening to its authentic song, and come to realize
that our own renewal is inextricably linked with renewal of unalienable
freedom beyond our borders. May the song so moving Martin Luther King,
and now Barack Obama, be passed through us, and live on.
Featured Link:
Martin
Luther King Videos
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*Essay by Barbara Bowen of
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