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Commentary: CommUNITY group reflects on nation's path

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  • Commentary: CommUNITY group reflects on nation's path

    Commentary: CommUNITY group reflects on nation's path
    By Jill Smilow
    Thu Jan 15, 2009



    Lexington - On Sunday, Jan. 18, we will once again gather as a
    community for the 16th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. CommUNITY
    Commemoration Event. We'll begin on the Battle Green and march to Cary
    Hall for an interactive program designed to reflect upon and celebrate
    Dr. King's work, the legacyhe left behind and the election of Barack
    Obama.

    With the backdrop of a presidential campaign which included a black
    man, two women and one of the oldest men running for the highest
    offices in our country, we have a lot to talk about. One of my own
    observations this fall was the extraordinary range of perspectives
    among different members of our community. An African-American friend,
    who is about 20 years my senior, told me that just after Sen. Obama
    had secured the nomination, his grown son (a Lexington High School
    grad) asked him if he ever thought a black man would be elected
    President in his lifetime. My friend answered, `No,' and confessed he
    never believed a black man would be elected President in his son's
    lifetime.

    Many of my contemporaries were filled with a hope and fervent belief
    that it could happen - that as a nation, we just might be ready to
    look beyond race to the substance, intellect and talents of this man
    running for president. Knowing how hard and how monumental a shift it
    would be to elect a black man to the highest office, we fought what we
    knew about our long history of racism in this country and allowed
    ourselves to believe it was a very real possibility.

    For my children, who study in their classrooms, play sports on the
    playing fields of Lexington and sing in choirs on the stage at LHS
    alongside their African-American, Jewish, gay, Chinese, Muslim,
    Korean, Indian, Christian, lesbian, Latino, Armenian, Hindu, Caucasian
    and other beautifully diverse peers, I do not believe seeing a black
    man sworn in as president will be the amazing part of Tuesday.

    Rather, they know that Obama himself, their bright, exciting,
    articulate leader who thrilled our nation and the world, will inspire
    them in the years to come.

    It is in these seismic generational perspective shifts that we
    acknowledge Dr. King's legacy. Forty-five years ago, Dr. King
    poignantly dreamed that one day, his children `would live in a nation
    where they would not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the
    content of their character.' His children and grandchildren are about
    to witness the fulfillment of that dream when Barack Obama is sworn in
    as our 44th president on Tuesday.

    On Wednesday, will we still have to fight against hatred in all its
    forms including racism, homophobia and anti-semitism? Sadly, yes. Will
    we still need to speak out against intolerance, discrimination,
    poverty and prejudice? Yes we must. Will we still need to teach and
    preach respect for those different from ourselves? Yes we will. But on
    Tuesday, something will change in a profound way for all Americans and
    the world watching our historic moment.

    Join us this Sunday and participate in community-wide conversation
    groups about this remarkable time for our country. Come share your
    perspective, your thoughts, your ideas, your hopes and your wishes
    with your neighbors and friends as we embark, together, on a new path
    for our nation. Jill Smilow is chairman of the Martin Luther King
    Jr. CommUNITY Commemoration Committee.

    Lexington Minuteman, USA

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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