A few days ago, I was invited to attend a Rotary meeting in which the club would be honoring my father for his involvement. Dad was an avid Rotarian right up to his death. It was important to him, so of course I went. I admire Rotary's motto, "Service above Self" and the work that individual members of the club, and the club as a whole, is worthwhile and even meaningful.
Rotary's international campaign to rid the world of polio, the exchange programs for high schoolers and young professionals, and links between individual clubs accross national boundaries increase international cohesion. However, I've always been uneasy with the clubbiness of this service group. Well-fed, comfortable men and women congratualating themselves on how well they are doing. Rotary is a professional club--with members representing their segments of their profession be it law, advertising, journalism,
government, retail, ministry. And there is lots of networking and social conviviality. It could be termed a bastion of middle-class privilege.
But on Wednesday, I observed another aspect of this group, one that I admired, and which made me hopeful. And one, even, that I hope I can emulate. The meeting started with a song. We all stood, faced the front of the hall where the flag stood (there's always a flag), and sang
America the Beautiful. There were 500 voices singing to a symbol. It was not invested with extra meaning. It was not sentimental. It was simple.
Then they sat down, and listened for fourty minutes to the day's program, which consisted of some awards, brief announcements, and a talk by Dr. Gary Sick on Iran and the Middle East. Dr. Sick (author of All Fall Down, America's Tragic Encounter with Iran) spoke for about 20 minutes on the emergeing power of Iran in the Middle-east, how it got there, and what
might happen. He pointed out that the impact of American involvement in the last 10 years, invading Afghanistan to defeat the Taliban, and deposing Hussein in Iraq, had increased Iran's regional political security and power. And he talked about Ahmadinejad, Iran's president, and opined that despite the global press he's getting, he's not popular at home and may well lose
the next elections.
And 400 people listened, avidly. Took time out of their day to think about the world. Many asked questions after the talk, showing that they were concerned about the role of oil in US foreign policy, about our relationship with Russia, about the likelihood of a war with Iran. People paid attention.
Somehow, this Rotary club at least, has made a connection between the local and the global. Members of the club sit next to one another, have in many instances known each other for years, visit with each other, serve in each other's board rooms, go to church, volunteer for each other's causes, and give money (there's always money). But they also are making the connection between their actions and the actions of our administration.
When a member asked a question about the what role the global trade of oil had in the wars we're in, he linked his question to our own actions in reducing our energy usage.
What I was seeing was civic involvement, of the kind that made America. People standing up and caring about what was happening, and thinking, even blindly, that they can change the world. They believed that they matter. It's this kind of confidence that I both find most irritating and most admirable.
Guiliani should have been at Wednesday's meeting...his team includes neo-con Norman Podhoretz, who advocates "bombing Iran as soon as it is logistically possible" .
Determinination of policy should not only come from the top, but from the middle and the bottom. Leaders need to know that people do NOT want a war with Iran.
Thursday, October 25, 2007
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1 comment:
Very well written as is always the case here at Clio's. I share that rather cynical distrust of such groups. It is not limited to Rotaries, Lions, or Moose either. My pet club is called a church, and I don't care which one, they generally are all the same, with exactly the same underlying agendas.
However, that is cynical, and I know it. There are very good things that come from these groups as well. Occasionally, they show signs of what you are talking about.
There is a phenomena born of our info age that has further degenerated these groups. Too many things to focus on, too many issues, and everyone wants to be a leader.
But it sounds to me like this is a group that has a clue. I am glad. I wonder if (and hope that) individuals in groups everywhere are becoming just a bit more clued in, and caring.
I wish I could have heard that speaker. Sounds as if he got peoples attention. His point about Iran is one that I had not conceived of prior to your mentioning it. ... for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.... . Physics and politics.
I will think about these things for a while... . There are a lot of things in your post that demand further contemplation.
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