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Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul -- Emily Dickinson
These words became sacred texts to me.
I realized that in American Letters we celebrate both language
and landscape, creating an empathy for all life. Melville's Great
Whale. Whitman's "Leaves of Grass." Thoreau's Walden
Pond. Emerson's "Oversoul, the natural world infused with
divinity." I came to understand through an education in the
humanities that knowledge is another form of democracy, the freedom
of expression that leads to empathy.
I wanted to write from the passion of my own orientation as a
woman living in the American West at this point in time. I wanted
to explore how we find refuge in change. I wanted to understand
what stories we tell that evoke a sense of place. I realized we,
too, can be be part of a great tradition of a literature of hope.
And it begins with our questions.
Recently, I had the great pleasure of meeting with a group of
graduating seniors. When I asked you what you felt we were most
in need of as a society and as a nation, your answer was a unified
one: building community. You used words like compassion and service,
and phrases like wanting to give something back, or
having a desire and responsibility to contribute,
to make a difference, to come together,
to remain open and listen to opposing points of view.
You spoke about both fear and excitement for the open space that
now awaits you after graduation. What I heard were mature voices,
steady, speaking from a generation that has witnessed two wars,
Afghanistan and Iraq, while students at the University of Utah.
You watched your peers risk their lives.
You were not interested in ideas or language that polarized people:
Christianity vs. Islam; Republicans vs. Democrats; Mormons vs.
non Mormons; wilderness vs. development. You wanted to talk about
alternatives, solutions, how to speak a language that opens hearts
rather than closes them. You were acutely aware of the complexities
and hesitant to take sides before considering all the evidence
before you.
What I witnessed was a class of highly intelligent, thoughtful
individuals who have learned how to think critically and creatively.
I saw how an educated mind is an empathetic mind. I saw how open
minds create open hearts.
Today, we honor you.
I have asked many of you graduating today, what question is burning
in your heart that will not allow you to sleep. Many of you, like
Rosemary Winters, are wondering how you can best serve society
and make a difference, others have responded by articulating your
desire to find meaningful work, still others have voiced your
fears, that you dont know what to do next.
To you and Callie, in particular I offer you these
words from my mentor in conservation, Mardy Murie. She is 100
years old, living in Moose, Wyoming, and grew up on the Alaskan
frontier and became one of the great advocates of the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge. On my graduation from college, she sent me the
following words in a handwritten letter, Dont worry about
what you will do next. If you take one step with all the knowledge
you have, there is usually just enough light shining to show you
the next step.
I believed her.
And when things dont go as planned, patience and perseverance
are required. Trust. Stay open. Suddenly, a surprise appears.
Something you never could have imagined.
I received a question from Merrilyne Lundahl, a graduating senior,
that has become the question lodged within my own heart. How do
I engage in responsive citizenship?
This is the question I would like to challenge you with today.
We are a nation emerging from the shadowed days of war. Within
our own government we are witnessing an internal debate between
the Department of Defense who favors force and the Department
of State who favors diplomacy. Democracy always favors conversation.
How do we engage in conversation at a time when the definition
of what it means to be a patriot is being narrowly defined? You
are either with us or against us. Discussion is waged in absolutes
not ambiguities. Corporations have more access to power than people.
We, the people. Fear has replaced discussion. Business practices
have taken precedence over public process. It doesnt matter
what the United Nations advises or what world opinion may be.
America in the early years of the 21st century has become a force
unto itself. The laws it chooses to abide by are its own.
What role does this leave us as individuals within a republic?
Abraham Lincoln warns: What constitutes the bulwark of our own
liberty and independence? It is not our crowning battlements,
our bristling sea coasts, our army and our navy. These are not
our reliance against tyranny. All of these may be turned against
us without making us weaker for the struggle. Our reliance is
in the spirit which prized liberty as the heritage of all men,
in all lands everywhere. Destroy this spirit and you have planted
the seeds of despotism at your own doors. Familiarize yourselves
with the chains of bondage and you prepare your own limbs to wear
them. Accustom to trample on the rights of others, you have lost
the genius of your own independence and become the fit subjects
of the first cunning tyrant who rises among you.
I believe these are contemporary words -- call them prophetic.
Do we have the imagination to rediscover an authentic patriotism
that inspires empathy and reflection over pride and nationalism?
How do we engage in responsive citizenship in times of terror?
I would submit we can protect and preserve the open space of
democracy by carrying a healthy sense of indignation within us
that will shatter the complacency that has seeped into our society
in the same of all we have lost -- know there is still so much
to be saved.
What does the open space of democracy look like?
In the open space of democracy there is room for dissent.
In the open space of democracy there is room for difference.
In the open space of democracy, the health of the environment
is seen as the wealth of our communities. We remember that our
character has been shaped by the diversity of America's landscapes
and it is precisely that character that will protect it. Cooperation
is valued more than competition. Prosperity becomes the caretaker
of poverty. The humanities are not peripheral, but the very art
of what it means to be human. Beauty is not optional, but essential
to our survival as a species. And technology is not rendered at
the expense of life, but developed out of a reverence for life.
Reverence for life.
When I visited Kenya for the first time, as part of the U.N. Decade
for Women with many women from the University of Utah, I heard
the stories of women in India who, when faced with the cutting
down of the forests adjacent to their homes by an international
timber company, made the decision together that one woman would
wrap herself around the trunk of one tree. They would have
to cut into our own bodies before they would cut into the bark
of our trees, they said. When asked why, they replied simply,
Because the trees are our flesh and our childrens
flesh. The roots of our trees hold the soil in place. Their leaves
shade our water. Their health is the health of our village.
(This is where the term, tree huggers came from. It
came to be known as the Chipko Movement and the trees were saved).
In the future, brave men and women will write a Declaration of
Interdependence that will be read and honored alongside the Declaration
of Independence; proof of our evolution, revolution of our own
growth and understanding.
The open space of democracy provides justice for all living things
and extends our notion of community to include plants, animals,
rocks, and rivers, as well as human beings. It is a landscape
that encourages diversity and discourages conformity.
Democracy can also be messy and chaotic.
In the open space of democracy, every vote counts and every vote
is counted.
Integrity is the highest investment that yields the greatest returns.
These are some of the values and ethics that live inside this
landscape of freedom.
When minds close, democracy begins to close. Fear creeps in, silence
overtakes speech. Rhetoric masquerades as thought. Dogma is dressed
up like an idea. And we are told what to do, not asked what we
think. Security is guaranteed. The lie begins to carry more power
than the truth until the words of our own founding fathers are
forgotten and the images of television replace history. An open
democracy inspires wisdom and the dignity of choice. A closed
society inspires terror and the tyranny of belief. We are no longer
citizens. We are media-engineered clones wondering who we are
and why we feel alone. Lethargy trumps participation. We fall
prey to the cynicism of our own resignation.
When democracy disappears, we are asked to accept the way things
are.
I beg you, as graduates of this distinguished university, do not
accept the way things are.
Question. Stand. Speak. Act.
Patriots act they are not handed a piece of paper called
by that same name and asked to comply.
To engage in responsive citizenship, we must become citizens who
respond. Passionately. This is how you can make a difference.
This is how you can serve your society.
What is at stake? Everything we value, cherish, and love. Democracy.
It was true in 1776. And it is true in 2003. This is the commitment
we make to a living, breathing, evolving republic. Hands over
our hearts, our beating hearts, we pledge allegiance to this divine
process of public discourse and discovery.
Thomas Jefferson said, I believe in perilous liberty over
quiet servitude.
To all of you graduates, may you commit yourselves to "perilous
liberty."
This is the path of intellectual freedom and spiritual curiosity.
Our insistence of democracy is based on our resistance of complacency.
To be engaged. To participate. To create alternatives together.
We may be wrong. We will make mistakes. But we can engage in spirited
conversation and listen to one another with respect and open minds
as we speak and explore our differences, cherishing the vitality
of the struggle. As our beloved J.D. Williams has so brilliantly
said, Democracy is built upon the right to be insecure.
We are vulnerable. And we are vulnerable together. Democracy is
a beautiful experiment.
Thoreau wrote in his essay, "Civil Disobedience," Cast
your whole vote, not a strip of paper merely, but your whole influence.
I want to tell you a story:
Prior to the war in Iraq, on March 8, thousands of women and children
gathered in Washington, D.C., for a Code Pink Rally in the name
of peace. We walked from the Martin Luther King Park through the
streets of the nations capital to Lafayette Park located
directly in front of the White House. When we arrived we were
met by a wall of Washington, D.C., police dressed in black
combat gear, bullet-proof vests and rifles. We were not allowed
to proceed on to the public park. One of the organizers of Code
Pink began to negotiate with the police. While these negotiations
were underway, Rachel Bagby, an African-American poet and musician,
stood directly across from a policeman and focused her attention
on one officer in particular, also African American. She began
singing with all the power of her God-given voice, All we
are saying is give peace a chance. Over and over she kept
singing, All we are saying is give peace a chance.
Other women began to join her. She never took her eyes off that
man, but just kept singing to him in her low, dignified voice.
In that moment, it was clear neither one of them would be who
they are, or where they are, without the voices of dissent uttered
by their parents, without the literal acts of civil disobedience
practiced by their parents parents and their parents
parents before them. The African-American policeman quietly
stepped aside, creating the opening we walked through.
This is what the open space of democracy looks like.
One on one, in the name of love, we support each other in the
vitality of the struggle called Democracy. Liberty. Freedom. We
can not only change the world, we can transform it. Indeed, we
are in this together. As you step outside this morning with your
diploma in hand, may you celebrate your accomplishments. May you
recognize the power of the present, and your place inside this
exquisite moment. Never have we needed what you have to give more.
Never has there been more room for you to take your place in the
world at large. May you make vows, prayers to your highest and
deepest self, that you will allow your soul to be used for the
greatest good with all your gifts and talents. May you follow
your heart.
Question. Stand. Speak. Act.
Make us uncomfortable.
Make us think.
Make us feel.
Keep us free.
Something within you has been set in motion this is the
gift of your education.
This is the open space of democracy.
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