Are we a winner? Yes, I think
we are.
“And never let anybody say ‘Boy, you can't make it,’”
as Curtis Mayfield once told us…
It was the fourth day of the eleventh month of a
new era,
And we were there,
But there were many who had come before
us,
Oh, they’ve been waiting as well.
This day was for Harriet and Frederick,
for Martin, Malcolm and Rosa,
For Fannie Lou, who was sick and tired
of being sick and tired,
And let’s not forget Viola, or the
three brothers who were lynched in Mississippi - one Black and two Jews.
But most of all, there were those African souls who
built the White House from the ground up, and without pay,
See their blood, sweat and tears etched
in that stone?
That house was built by them, but never
was meant FOR them,
And while they were deemed suitable
to prepare a meal for its rightful occupants,
An occupant of this prime real estate
they never would become,
Never could become.
Are we a winner? Are we? Yes, my brother, that we
be.
It was the day when America, in spite
of itself,
Demonstrated a willingness to redeem
itself.
So, let’s say goodbye to the old way
of thinking,
To the failed race card divisions,
and the cynical hustling and deceptions,
To the misplaced priorities and cold-blooded
policies,
To the barrel-scraping and bottom-feeding,
and the megalomaniacal Machiavellian madness,
To the destructive wars abroad and
crumbling society at home,
And the bigoted mediocrity that once
passed for capable leadership.
The fourth day of the eleventh month was a bittersweet
one for me.
While other fathers of the tribe were
exuberant and hopeful,
Thrilled that they could take their
children to the polls
To be a witness to history,
My tears of joy mingled with tears
of sorrow,
Since my baby boy did not live to see
this moment
When someone like him could be the
President, when he could be the President, and it wasn’t just a cliché.
Are we a winner? Yes, sister, it appears we are.
So I say this to you as I propose this toast:
Raise your glass to a future drunk
with our expectations
Of a world that values human rights
over property rights,
And the builders, teachers and healers
are in greater demand than the speculators, fat cats and power grabbers.
Have we found the magic wand that will make all the
ugly disappear?
I don’t think so.
Have we discovered the secret elixir
that will cure all our ills? Hardly.
But this is a good start, and we have
to start somewhere.
What comes next is up to us,
As this flawed, imperfect experiment
called democracy is not a spectator sport.
And after you imbibe, it’s time to
get to work,
So we can clean up the mess that hate,
neglect and ineptitude created.
So, are we really a winner? We are if we want to
be.
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here
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on the BC Readers' Corner Blog
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, David A. Love, JD, is a lawyer and journalist
based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to the Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune
News Service, In These Times and
Philadelphia Independent
Media Center. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention, and Prisons
(St. Martin's Press, 2000). Love is a former Amnesty International UK
spokesperson, organized the first national police brutality conference
as a staff member with the Center for Constitutional Rights, and served
as a law clerk to two Black federal judges. His blog is davidalove.com. Click here
to contact Mr. Love. |