A New Year’s Wish: Rekindling the Magic Moment!

Around this time last year, I was in a state of euphoria. Soon I’d be in Washington D. C. covering the inauguration of our 44th President with other St. Louis Post-Dispatch reporters.

As a first-time visitor to the Nation’s Capitol, I was immediately humbled by the relevance of history and the struggles of my ancestors. The Declaration of Independence which declared all men “equal” except those of my hue took on new meaning. While gazing at the statue of President Abraham Lincoln, the dashed dreams of a freed but “inferior” people were rekindled. The whispers of hope gained new resonance as I stood near the Memorial where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his prolific “I have a dream” speech in 1963.



By the time Obama raised his right hand, faithfully swearing to execute the duties of the President of the United States I was overwhelmed with the conception that history had come full circle. This was the moment for which millions of brave souls lived and died. For me, Obama represented the culmination and continuum of valiant, hard-fought struggles for equality and opportunity. Forty years after the assassination of Dr. King, who epitomized “hope and change,” the inauguration served as a symbolic invitation to embrace the possibilities of humanity.



Today, however, my feelings have been tempered. In the afterglow of that historic moment, cynicism and frustration has returned and seems to be growing. According to a recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, Obama’s overall job approval rating fell below 50 percent with only 33 percent believing that the nation is headed in the right direction. Choruses of high-profile black voices are expressing discontent, complaining that Obama has not done enough for disenfranchised blacks. Some, including members of the Congressional Black Caucus, are now vowing to hold Obama accountable if he does not turn his attention to our specific plights.

I won’t diminish these concerns. Nor will I attempt to defend Obama by pointing to the plethora of challenges he’s faced within his first year, which include a recession, skyrocketing unemployment, threats of terrorism and two wars in the Middle East.

I will, however, speak to my haunting fear that we are missing “our moment.” Too many cling to the illusion of Obama as Messiah, the miracle worker who will heal our wounds and solve our dilemmas. Some have forgotten or are ignoring his call to pull together, work together and bring about the “change” we claimed we wanted.

Those of us overwhelmed with the disproportionate numbers of African Americans trapped in the nation’s prison systems, inadequate schools and soul-sapping ghettos forget that we have a resonate heart in the White House willing to roll up his sleeves and help us help those who have been long ignored and deemed disposable.

Fulfilling his campaign promise, the Obama Administration recently allocated $10 million dollars to replicate the poverty-fighting approach pioneered by New York’s Harlem Children’s Zone? The “Promise Neighborhoods” endeavor will fund the implementation of 20 comprehensive plans nationwide aimed at addressing the educational, health and other dire social deficits urban children need to survive and thrive within their own communities. Millions more in federal aid will be targeted toward establishing and maintaining the most feasible plans.

What if this endeavor served as a template for continuing Dr. King’s dream? Remember, it was King who, during his interview with Playboy Magazine in 1965, suggested a $50 billion economic aid package that not only compensated for centuries of denied opportunities but gave blacks and the poor a “do-for-self” chance to redress societal and economic neglect.

Obama, a community activist at heart, seems to be challenging urban advocates to come up with responsible agendas that he can support while avoiding accusations of racial favoritism. When outlining the goals of his Domestic Policy Council, Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships advisory council, White House Office of Urban Affairs and other revamped agencies, Obama spoke of a new “federal approach” to tackle problems in “high-poverty” areas.

The Promise Neighborhoods program calls for a consortium of government, private sector, nonprofit, church and grassroots activism that offer comprehensive community-based services. What if black leaders developed a plan based on this initiative? Is it beyond our capabilities to create a comprehensive, fiscally-sound urban agenda that offers an umbrella of services designed to revitalize urban communities and reclaim wasted human potential?

Imagine a consortium that included grassroots agencies, urban municipalities, education and criminal justice system reformers -- all committed to offering “at-risk” youth and non-violent offenders viable alternatives to the deadly drug trade. What better time than now to help this president fulfill his promise to drastically lower the crime and prison recidivism rates?

What if, when addressing unemployment and poverty, we implemented methods pioneered by Nobel Prize-winning banker and author Muhammad Yunus? Is it impossible to urbanize a groundbreaking effort that helped empower millions of Bangladeshi villagers?

According to Yunus, his success in Bangladesh is indeed duplicable in the United States. The Grameen Foundation, the Charles Stuart Mott Foundation, the Center for American Progress, Policy Link, Ashoka and other agencies and foundations are implementing microentrepreneurship, social entrepreneurship, profit-driven “social businesses” and other innovations aimed at creating thriving community-based urban enterprises, business co-opts and alternative energy jobs that will pump fresh blood into long-clogged ghetto arteries.

However, there’s a missing link between the goals of government and social agencies and the grassroots populations who must be inspired, activated and instructed to carry out a self-sustaining agenda. This void -- connecting the dots between best practices, good intentions and the urban community’s needs, can only be filled by those intimately aware and passionately committed to make significant change in short amount of time.


Nothing is promised. This is our time -- perhaps the only time to seize a fleeting opportunity to energize and empower long-ignored people and depressed communities.

Despite my fears, I am resolved to work with like-minded individuals who understand that Obama is not our savior – he is but a powerful resource we can utilize to save ourselves.

My New Year’s wish is to cling to that magical moment one year ago when a man who looked a bit like Malcolm and spoke a bit like Martin reminded me that history is a continuum, that this is “our time” to bring about the change of our ancestor’s dreams.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Yes, yes, yes, this is what it should be about, you have described the solution. Whether one is black or white, and both are in a place of less solid footing these days, working together we can accomplish miracles. The government can help in the ways you have mentioned, but all of us have to be interested in making the changes and helping each other have a better outlook for our future.
vavaughn@claimid.com said…
Sylvester,
While my comments may have been appropriate to your previous post, I intended them I for this post. Indeed, our community will prosper when we turn away from the station and toward one another, when we stop stop chanting the polar talking points and trust one another enought to forge a common agenda.
vavaughn@claimid.com said…
Here is my intende post:
As always, you thoughts provoke me to think - thank you. In this case it stirred up old thoughts stolen from others and rather than rephrase them as my own, I share them here with credit attributed.

"All progress is precarious, and the solution of one problem brings us face to face with another problem ... Human salvation lies in the hands of the creatively maladjusted ... ."
Martin Luther King Jr., 'Strength to Love,' 1963

Also brought to mind was Gil Scott Heron's "Train from Washington" written in 1980 when Jimmy Carter was still president. The intro sets the stage:

"During reconstruction time there were folks who were promised 40 acres and a mule and they were told that a man with their legal papers could be expected on a train from Washington and there were folks who waited for him and there are folks who are still waiting for him. You can’t depend on the train from Washington; it’s 100 years overdue."
And the relevant verse reads:
"You can depend on the politicians
Always have a point of view.
They are contemporary court musicians you
hear
Sleight of hand will dazzle you
You can depend on a weak position from them
Changes that you got to go through
But don’t depend on the train from
Washington
It’s 100 years overdue
(Gil Scott Heron, 1980)
I believe I will chew on your thoughts as the entree with these as side dishes for a while.
Anonymous said…
Like you, I supported Obama. He seemed to signal a change in tone and direction, which was good. But where it mattered most -- on the economy and on the wars -- he's been a terrible disappointment.