Thursday, March 26, 2015

The moment of truth for Chefs Cycle for No Kid Hungry


            There comes a moment in the planning of every major quest when the questions shifts from whether it will happen to how well will it do.  Here at Share Our Strength that time is now, and as is often the case, it is the indomitable passion of chefs that is propelling us forward.   

            Nearly 50 chefs and restaurateurs from around the county have committed to take off their aprons and put on their riding gear for Chefs Cycle for No Kid Hungry.  From Australia’s Jason Roberts to Shake Shack’s Jenny Conrad, from Jamie Adams in Georgia to Jeff Mahin in California, they are making a statement about the myriad ways to share strength, and committing provide millions of meals to kids in need.

Suddenly, the focus is on granular details. This week Debbie Shore and her team met to plan routes, overnight stops, identify the right food, drink and energy/protein goos for riders, and advance the publicity campaign and social media strategy that will bring the excitement of Chefs Cycle for No Kid Hungry to millions of people.

            Amazingly, more than $20,000 is already in the door and there remains 10 weeks to go before the two 300 miles rides – from New York to DC, and from Santa Barbara to San Diego, commence.  Check out our website @ http://www.chefscycle.org/   Support one chef, or support ‘em all. Either way you’ll be making a huge difference in the life of an American child.

Yet Again, the Power of Bearing Witness


Our colleague Andy McMahon recently found and shared this clip of President Lyndon Johnson 50 years ago this month speaking of hunger in the classroom during his famous March 15, 1965 speech to a joint session of Congress on the Voting Rights Act. @ http://www.c-span.org/video/?c4531247/lbj-saw-hunger-classroom That speech came just a week after the infamous violence in Selma, Alabama. In it Johnson adopted the anthem of the civil rights movement and proclaimed “we shall overcome”.  Passage of the Voting Rights bill followed five months later.

            Near the end of his remarks, Johnson said: “My first job after college was as a teacher in Cotulla, Texas, in a small Mexican-American school…. My students were poor and they often came to class without breakfast, hungry. They knew even in their youth the pain of prejudice. They never seemed to know why people disliked them. But they knew it was so, because I saw it in their eyes….Somehow you never forget what poverty and hatred can do when you see its scars on the hopeful face of a young child.”

            “I saw it in their eyes.”  When else have you heard a U.S. president speak this way? It’s an all too rare example of how the act of bearing witness shapes a leader’s character, fuels their ambition, and ultimately impacts policy that changes the world. Whatever one thinks of President Johnson, few disagree that his force of personality made him effective as a legislator and later as a President getting legislation enacted into law.  Part of that personality was forged by being in a position to see firsthand how others lived, and to let himself feel something about it.

            “I saw it in their eyes.” This crucial element of leadership too often goes missing in our politics today. In its place we have “I saw it in the public opinion polls” or “I saw it on cable news”.  But it’s not coincidental that LBJ declared war on poverty, or that he was the last president to elevate the issue so high on the national agenda. He was a consummate politician but what he’d seen and felt clearly did not, could not, dissipate even decades later.  Just the opposite. It remained vivid enough to share with 70 million Americans who watched that prime time broadcast and the U.S. government assembled in its entirety under the Capitol dome.

            “I saw it in their eyes.”  To bear witness in this way, to enable others to do so, is not just a task for politicians and elected officials. It also remains the most solemn and powerful of our many responsibilities at Share Our Strength and Community Wealth Partners.  (Share Our Strength's most recent report on Hunger in Our Schools can be found @ http://www.hungerinourschools.org/ )