As
we stand at the apex of a new day in American History, perhaps
in a description of extremes, Charles Dickens captured it best
when he wrote “it is the best of times yet it is the worst of
times.” As the world looks on with intent excitement and anticipation,
we will witness a president-elect that rose from the lower ranks
of society to the highest position in our land, almost overnight,
inheriting a union in a state of disrepair. President-elect Obama
has a Herculean task before him in placing our country back on
course. It is “the best of times, yet the worst of times.”
While
he stands taking the presidential oath of office, countless issues
across the nation will be given a renewed sense of hope and promise.
The astounding citizens that are affected by homelessness have
a sense that we will now be fed. Those who have traversed the
globe in the name of democracy and freedom can now declare that
there will be peace. I
am convinced that the helpless will now have a sense of help,
the hopeless will have a since of hope and the lost will now have
a new sense of direction under an administration and election
season of promise.
It
is my hope and prayer however, that a new-found sense of hope
does not translate into a sense of naivety. The reality is that
after inauguration Tuesday there will be January 21st and thereafter.
Following the pomp and circumstance and after all the lights have
dimmed there remains the reality of the day after. The amazing
thing about it all is that if the Obama administration is going
to be successful he is going to need the help of both his supporters
and non-supporters alike, to continue to perpetuate the momentum
of change.
The
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan continue to rage under clearly false
pretense; tension in the Middle East and internationally continues
to be volatile; the socio-economic gap continues to widen throughout
the country; race relations remain an evident part of the fabric
of America. As I will rejoice watching a man that looks like me
take the oath of office, I will likewise weep, thinking of a man
that also looked like me who was shoot in cold blood in the Bay
Area of California by trigger happy police. In short, our domestic
and international issues are a laundry list of that which is broken
and in need of fixing. In all the excitement, it is the “best
of times, yet the worst of times.”
It
is wonderous that President-Elect Obama will stand, using the
bible Lincoln used for the same purpose. In closing, I am reminded
of the poem written by James Weldon Johnson for the celebration
of the 100th birthday of Lincoln that would later become the Negro
National Anthem:
“Lift every voice and sing, till earth and heaven
ring,
Ring with the harmonies of liberty;
let our rejoicing rise, high as the listening skies,
let it resound loud as the rolling sea,
facing the rising sun of our new day begun,
let us march on till victory is won.”
[Click
here for a link to Lift Every Voice, part of Dave Pearson’s
2002 NPR series, Present at the Creation. The site has links to
four distinct performances.]
BlackCommentator.com Guest
Commentator, The Reverend D. D. Prather, is a noted Civil/Social
Justice Activist, and a native of Atlanta, GA.
Click here to contact the Reverend Prather.