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Bob Herbert: I Wish You Were Here

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nsd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-20-09 01:48 AM
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Bob Herbert: I Wish You Were Here
I Wish You Were Here
By BOB HERBERT

And so it has happened, this very strange convergence. The holiday celebrating the birth of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. became, in the midnight hour, the day that America inaugurates its first black president.

It’s a day on which smiles will give way to tears and then return quickly to smiles again, a day of celebration and reflection.

...

There are so many, like Dr. King, who I wish could have stayed around to see this day. Some were famous. Most were not.

...

I remember talking several years ago with James Farmer, one of the big four civil rights leaders of the mid-20th century. (The others were Dr. King, Roy Wilkins and Whitney Young.) Farmer enraged authorities in Plaquemine, La., in 1963 by organizing demonstrations demanding that blacks be allowed to vote. Tired of this affront, a mob of state troopers began hunting Farmer door to door.

...

Farmer died in 1999. Imagine if he could somehow be seated in a place of honor at the inauguration alongside Dr. King and Mr. Wilkins and Mr. Young. Imagine the stories and the mutual teasing and the laughter, and the deep emotion that would accompany their attempts to rise above their collective disbelief at the astonishing changes they did so much to bring about.

And then imagine a tall white man being ushered into their presence, and the warm smiles of recognition from the big four — and probably tears — for someone who has been shamefully neglected by his nation and his party, Lyndon Johnson.

Johnson’s contributions to the betterment of American life were nothing short of monumental. For blacks, he opened the door to the American mainstream with a herculean effort that resulted in the enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. He followed up that bit of mastery with the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

“Once the black man’s voice could be translated into ballots,” Johnson would say, “many other breakthroughs would follow.”

Without Lyndon Johnson, Barack Obama and so many others would have traveled a much more circumscribed path.

I wish Johnson could be there, his commitment to civil rights so publicly vindicated, his eyes no doubt misting as the oath of office is administered.

It’s so easy, now that the moronic face of racism is so seldom openly displayed, to forget how far we’ve really come.

...

My grandparents, who struggled through the Depression and World War II, and my parents, who worked tirelessly to give Sandy and me a wonderful upbringing in the postwar decades, seemed always to have believed that all good things were possible.

Even if the doors of opportunity were closed, they didn’t believe they were locked. Hard work, in their eyes, was always the key.

Still, the idea of a black president of the United States never came up. Perhaps even for them that was too much to imagine. I wish they could have stayed around long enough to see it.
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BlooInBloo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-20-09 01:51 AM
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1. The 3 MS ballot workers. The 3 little AL church-going girls...
And thousands upon millions of others.

Oh yah, and all currently-living Americans who just couldn't make it to DC.
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firedupdem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-20-09 01:52 AM
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2. There are so many that I wish were here to share this moment
with us. However, I believe they can see it. They are here with us. They are as proud as we are right now.
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pnwmom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-20-09 01:58 AM
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3. Rosa Parks almost lived long enough; she died just three years ago. n/t
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