The thing have noticed about "movement people" is that none of us seem to have strayed very far from the values, convictions, and commitment that led us to our social action involvement 40 years ago. Whether we have stayed in the community action, political, public policy, advocacy
arena, pursued teaching or other service professions, or responded to
issues and problems in the communities in which we have simply lived and
worked, most of us have remained on the side of the angels, doing our best
to lead socially responsible, effective lives, to make the world a safer
place for the children. This is a space for conversations about where we
are now, and where we can--and need to--go from here.
To some of us, this means considering the meaning of what we did then,
what was accomplished, what we learned from it, how that led us to here
and now, and what that tells us about possibilities for the future. Some
of us draw our perspectives from other places and experiences. It took
all of us, from the astonishing spectrum of realities we represented, to
accomplish the impossible of 40 years ago. It will take all of us now.
While the landscape has changed radically from that extraordinary time,
the needs and goals which prompted us to action then have not substantially
changed. We might argue over the extent to which lasting, positive change
has occurred, and/or the nature of that change (who, us?)--but I cannot
imagine anyone disagreeing that at best, the outcomes of that monumental
effort have been incomplete. I will even go out on a limb here and assert
that we need each other now in many of the same ways we needed each other
then. And so does our national community.
--DLouis Jan/00