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Michael
Henderson |
Seventy
years ago this month a great American minister, Frank Buchman, with whom I
worked for more than ten years, made a memorable appeal. At a time when the
nations were focussed on military rearmament before World War II he called
for moral and spiritual rearmament as well. He believed that peace depended
on new motives in people, that hatreds needed to be answered as he had
found them answered in his own life.
His work which galvanized thousands could not delay the
onset of war but after the war he is credited with initiatives to heal the
resulting bitterness. Much of it resonated from the conference center in
Caux, Switzerland which was twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize and
led to him being decorated by the French and German and Japanese
governments for his efforts towards post-war unity. Those efforts at
reconciliation continue today at Caux and are called Initiatives of Change.
Buchman, who loved America and helped many foreigners like
me to appreciate his country would have rejoiced as I do at the monumental
achievements in the current election campaign. He felt strongly on the
subject of race, even from his early days of the last century at Penn State
University. In the 1950s and 60s his emphasis on character not color as the
important consideration inspired the musical “The Crowning Experience”
which helped integrate audiences in Atlanta. The musical featured the life
of the great African-American Mary McLeod Bethune who had said that to be a
part of what she called “this great uniting force of our age” was ‘the
crowning experience of my life.” At recent celebrations of the life of
Daisy Bates in Little Rock tribute was paid to Buchman’s influence in the
bringing of her together in an historic handshake with Governor Faubus.
The foundations of his work in the 30s and 40s
in Richmond, Virginia, are to this day carried on by Hope in the Cities
which is pioneering a model of honest conversations on race, reconciliation
and responsibility that have caught national and international attention.
Rob Corcoran, its director, writes, “The heat of a political campaign is
unlikely to provide hospitable space for truly forthright dialogue on race
relations. But whether or not Obama succeeds in his bid for the White
House, Americans of all backgrounds should seize this window of opportunity
to reach out rather than ‘retreat into our separate corners.’”
I am not involved in politics and would not want anything I
write to be construed as endorsing one candidate or another. But having
lived and worked in the US in the early 50s, and being involved in trying
to bring races together in Oregon in the 1980s and 90s, and now having been
these last weeks on a visit here I feel it is important that no Americans
should underestimate what the campaign so far has meant not only for
disillusioned citizens but also for this country’s image abroad. As Bob
Herbert wrote in the “New York Times’, the fact the Barack Obama is the
presumptive nominee of the Democratic Party and that the two finalists for
that prize were a black man and a white woman are events of the highest
importance: “We should not allow ourselves to overlook the wonder of this
moment.”
Hillary Rodham Clinton’s achievements for women
and Barack Obama’s for black Americans will be remembered long after any
bitterness that some may have about other political figures whom I hardly
need to name. I had an email from Richmond from Paige Chargois, an
African-American minister, author of Certain Women Called by Christ,
in which she wrote, ‘I’m still rejoicing about Barack Obama. America has
changed. I’m so glad it has happened in my lifetime. That’s not to even
think that we have solved all our racial problems by any means but it
definitely suggest we’ve come the longest part of that journey.”
She added, after Senator Clinton’s
gracious concession speech, “While we were all strategizing and diligently
working to end racism ‘on the front side,’ God was at work ‘on the back
side’ to virtually bring it to an end in America. Even before Hillary
spoke, my thoughts were
about how God prepared Moses for 40 years to return to Egypt and lead His
people out of enslavement. Little did we know that God was actually
preparing two persons: Barack & Hillary for such a momentous time in our
history. So quietly they both ‘slipped’ onto the stage without our being
aware initially how deeply and how greatly they would change us relative to
gender and race over these past 18 months.”
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Michael Henderson is the author of
Forgiveness:
Breaking the Chain of Hate |
Articles Archive of
Michael Henderson
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