This Saturday, July 15, is the 57th anniversary of John Kennedy’s
speech at the convention in Los Angeles accepting the Democratic Party’s
nomination to run for president. That must seem like ancient history, but one
paragraph still points the way to the future both for our nation, and for Share
Our Strength, given our bedrock belief that people want to be challenged to
give of themselves.
The paragraph is worth recalling because of how courageously different it is
from virtually any other political leader who has followed. Four months
before his Inauguration Day call to “Ask not what your country can do for you,
ask what you can do for your country”, candidate Kennedy foreshadowed that
message with this passage: “The New Frontier of which I speak is not a
set of promises--it is a set of challenges. It sums up not what I intend to
offer the American people, but what I intend to ask of them. It appeals to
their pride, not to their pocketbook--it holds out the promise of more
sacrifice instead of more security.” http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=25966
Most political
consultants working today, Democrat or Republican, would consider that heresy
bordering on political malpractice. Campaign speeches promise tax cuts,
entitlement programs, small business incentives, more benefits for the middle
class. “The promise of more sacrifice.”? Have you ever heard such a
thing?
More than half a century later, it takes a nearly cosmic leap of imagination to
envision such sentiment in our political culture. But this belief in the
capacity of our neighbors and fellow citizens to give of themselves remains
alive in the DNA of Share Our Strength and goes to the heart of what’s made us
successful – challenging people to share their strength, and as we’ve seen most
recently via Chefs Cycle, the greater the challenge the better.
Deep down most of us know that what Kennedy said was right and necessary then,
and now. There are no easy answers. No solutions that can succeed without more
from us. Whatever you believe about the size and role of government, citizen
engagement, in a democracy like ours, is essential to make it work.
You can read
JFK’s words at the link above, or watch and listen @ https://www.jfklibrary.org/Asset-Viewer/AS08q5oYz0SFUZg9uOi4iw.aspx
They need no further interpretation from me. But I do have an accompanying
plea: that you incorporate the spirit of asking more of yourself, each other,
and all to whom we reach out, of setting the bar higher, into all that we do.
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