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Monday, January 19, 2009

Awake, Dreaming, Happy

Here at the home of friends, we just watched CNN's broadcast of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s entire 1963 "I have a dream" speech, and it could not feel more relevant today. Celebrating King's birthday the day before Barack Obama's inauguration is the happiest of coincidences: it could not have been scheduled better by design. And in that strange way that events occurring while one is away from home become themselves part of the trip, the larger events forever entwined in one's personal memories, I felt a shiver run through me (though this was not the only shiver I had during the speech) when King mentioned the "motels of the highways and the hotels of the cities," which were segregated at that time, because on our travels through the Midwest and the South this past week, we have been in many restaurants and motels. Some of the staff of each were black, some white, as the travelers and diners were both black and white. This is now "business as usual" in our country. It's such an ordinary thing now, wonderful when set in historical context. And tomorrow Obama will take the oath of office on the Lincoln Bible. "Free at last," here in America, our job is not over and will never be finished, but it is good to pause and be grateful for how far the United States has come. Today and tomorrow we celebrate. Then, back to work.

5 comments:

Betty Carlson said...

Thanks for the positive comment on my blog. One day more!

Pamela Terry and Edward said...

Isn't it wonderful??!! I can't wait for tomorrow at noon!

Anonymous said...

I'm looking forward to tomorrow, but wish I were in Detroit with Rob the Firefighter and the Lady Alicia, where the Inauguration approaches the sacramental. Ah well, the State Theatre will have to do. I am going to bring lots of Kleenex. I've been waiting for this a long, long time.

P. J. Grath said...

Tuesday afternoon, after the parade: we have been uncharacteristically glued to TV all day. I have imagined being at the State Theatre in Traverse City...or at the Lodge in Leland...or Miller Auditorium in Kalamazoo...or at the old high school, now a museum, in Plains, Georgia. In a way, this sleepy little northern Gulf Coast town is very far from Washington, DC, but in another way it has felt as if we have been in Washington all day. And that's been a GREAT place to be!

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