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Taking
Heart in the Heartland
A
sermon offered at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Lafayette,
Indiana June
9, 2002
By
Rev. Hilary Landau Krivchenia
From Small Wonder by Barbara Kingsolver
I can clear the brush from a neglected part of
the garden, working slowly until it comes to me that here is one
small place I can make right for my family.
I can plant something as an act of faith in time itself, a
vow that we will, sure enough, have a fall and a winter this year,
to be followed again by spring. This is not an end in itself, but a
beginning. I work
until my mind can run a little further on its tether, tugging
at this central pole of my sadness, for a minute or two while
pondering a school meeting next week, the watershed conservation
project our neighborhood has undertaken, the farmer's market it
organized last year: the good that becomes possible when a small
group of thoughtful citizens commit themselves to it. And indeed, as
Margaret Mead, said it is the only thing that ever really does add
up to change. Small change, small wonders-these are the currency of
my endurance and ultimately of my life. It's a workable economy.
Political emergencies
come and go, but it's a fair enough vocation to light one match
after another against the dark isolation, when arrogance rules the
day and tries to force hope into hiding.
It seems to me that there is still so much to say that I had
better raise up a yell across the wall.
I have stories of things I believe in: a persistent river, a
forest on the edge of night, the religion inside a seed, the startle
of wingbeats when a spark of red life flies against all reason out
of the darkness. I
speak of small wonders, and the possibility of taking heart.
Today is Cole
Porter’s birthday – he was born in 1891.
Four weeks ago my family went on a sort of pilgrimage to
Peru, Indiana. We’d just learned that Cole Porter had been born there –
only an hour or so from Lafayette.
Urbane, witty, cosmopolitan – Porter is a family favorite
– the composer of some of our favorite songs – I Get a Kick
Out of You, Anything Goes, All Through the Night, You’re the Tops,
Brush up Your Shakespeare. In spite of threatening weather, with the fervor of devotees,
we piled into the car, hauled the kids with us, and played Ella
Fitzgerald singing Porter’s hits.
Once in Peru we stopped at a gas station, filled the tank,
and I went in to ask for Porter pointers for tourists.
One clerk – a young woman of about 19 – had, “like,
sort of heard about him, but, like, had never seen anything or
anything”. Still, the
other young clerk knew where the grave site and house were and,
pointed on by a small plastic sign – one you might put up for a
yard sale – we found our way to the Cole Family Plot, where Cole
Porter is buried. We
took pictures, sang songs, and spread out a lunch at the cemetery.
After lunch, we went to find the house where the star of Peru
had grown up. It was
evident that Peru had fallen on hard times.
On the main street were exquisite buildings with classic
architecture of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century –
most looking worn and forlorn, with small businesses trying to
survive in large-windowed, once-shining, and noble storefronts. The Wabash River runs through town and the waterfront holds
the remains of small businesses and old industries. On some of the side streets vintage homes, reclaimed and
renovated, were scattered amongst a majority of homes long
neglected. I’ll admit
it was the sort of town that could make a young man or woman strive
to get away – to travel to New York, Paris, London, to the East or
West Coast – all the places Cole Porter explored in his own ever
traveling life. It was
the kind of town that could make a kid want to run away and join the
circus – but the Hagenbeck and Wallace Circus is the town’s
other claim to fame. I
wondered if the streets had become home to generations of Hoosiers
who ran away to Peru.
We made our way to the house at Huntington and Third – a
marker on the corner confirmed, despite our disbelief, that this was
the childhood home of Cole Porter.
Once a lovely home, this building was split into apartments,
and it was appallingly run down. My father and I were dismayed and disheartened.
On our way back
through town, we stopped at the local museum and historical society. I asked about the Porter home and the women there shared
their frustrations, too. Much
had been tried. Much
failed. I wanted to
write a letter, send in the “This Old House” Cavalry – I
wanted to do something.
They gave me the address of the Mayor. Still,
I thought about the relative insignificance of the old house of some
celebrity. True he’d taken generous care of all his surviving
relations, true he’d had a revolutionary impact on the genre of
American Musicals, and he’d written some of the most enduring
songs – but his house couldn’t compare in urgency and scope to
the truly horrifying events in the global news.
It was circus peanuts compared even to the struggles of the
living residents of Peru today. Yet, I was fired up. I
wrote to the mayor, Richard Blair, among other things: “I do not
know all of the intricacies of the attempts that you may have made
to reclaim this home – but it should be open to the public,
restored, and a place of pride for the city of Peru and the state of
Indiana. Few
songwriters have been as creative and renowned as Cole Porter.
He is a national treasure.
I write to ask that you make the restoration of his home on
Third Street a civic priority.”
From there I went on. The
Mayor is a gentleman and only a couple of days later I received this
letter in return, detailing the efforts that the city had made to
recover this building from slum landlords. The
Honorable Mayor thanked me for my concern and sent me a Cole Porter
commemorative stamp cancelled in Peru, on Porter’s birthday, by
the postmaster general of the United States in 1991 – one hundred
years after Porter’s birth. I
still felt foolish at caring about this old house in the face of
world crises. Yet,
reading the Mayor’s letter, I felt more hopeful about the future
of that town – that it might deepen its civic pride, its sense of
culture, history, and its role in the arts – so important to the
development of the human heart.
I wish Peru luck – like so many places – they have
obstacles to surmount.
I can become enthralled – like a gaper on the road – with
the desolate state of things. I
find myself and watch others stymied, feeling helpless to create any
change. To take even a
small step feels good – like stepping free of some immense
fly-paper. I feel
alive, purposeful, connected. Growing
up on the big struggles when it all seemed so clear – racism: bad,
War: bad, sexism: bad, non-union: bad, it’s possible to find the
challenges of our present time daunting and yet – there is a path
-- both simple and powerful – there is a path and it begins – as
it must – locally. It
is locally that we are taught our values, learn empathy, creative
thought, learn to move beyond what we are sold. Barbara Kingsolver writes: we see so much, understand so
little and are told so much, by pollsters and advertisers, about
“What We Think” that it begins to feel like an enormous effort
to listen at all to our hearts.”
Just so -- It is wherever we truly are, wherever we are
-- that we can move toward our hearts and know who we might truly
be. Though we sometimes
go far from home, it is locally that we learn the language, if we
can, of a politics of meaning.
A politics of meaning says that our values and our social
decisions are connected, our principles and our social programs must
be aligned, that greed will consume and generosity will create
bounty, that hate will beget hate, that love will beget love –
even if it takes generations, and that people behave from their
hearts – from their hopes and loves and fears.
Despite or in despair – we are meaning-driven creatures –
our actions speak our meanings – our deep values.
It is locally that we
first learn about power. Locally
we learn about relationship and, as Frances Moore Lappé wrote in The
Quickening of America, “Power is always relational.”
Remember Clarisse in Fahrenheit 451(Lafayette’s One
Great Read Program Book)? It
is the wild and unpredictable connection, though brief and shrouded
in shadow, that Montag finds with her – her gentle words that open
his mind and begin to free his heart.
Locally we learn to care about the consequences of our
relationships and of power and powerlessness.
If we learn these consequences well locally, we can
understand what choices we face when we encounter others globally.
It is, as Kingsolver said, not an end by itself – the world
is too much hurting for that – but it is surely a beginning.
It is that first act of faith that begins to teach us about
all other possible acts – of creativity and faith, of social
action and work for justice and peace – all those subsequent acts
of faith.
As we work locally we flex our change muscles – and we set
the conditions for a society of creativity, discourse, caring,
democracy, and change. As this Sunday approached, I realized that what I needed to
hearten me for this time of work and study coming up were your
insights and the insight of this land, Indiana.
I needed my global views to be made keener by local eyes –
to find heart in this Heartland.
Not to sound like a sampler – but home is where the
heart is -- more – it is where the heart is shaped – and emerges
– not to travel the world for fame but to work for the shared
good.
I haven’t needed to look further than this congregation to
find acts of faith, courage, vision, and generosity.
Summer has scattered many of our folk -- so some I mention
are away today. And
there are many outside our congregation who also bring me hope.
Local leaders willing to risk to make a human rights a local
policy. Religious
leaders willing to come together and honor the shining truths in one
another’s religions. Educators
who gave our children time to reflect on the events of last fall
without reverting to thoughtless temporizing or sloganizing.
Against a background of manic consumption and a culture of
selfishness there are countless acts holding forth a generous beacon
to light a new path.
When Mark, my husband, moved down here – he got involved in
the Earth-craft farm collective.
This cooperative brings labor help to an organic farmer and
loads of fine organic produce to the members.
It sets people free of the grocery store chain for some of
our food needs and gives the soil and our bodies a rest from the
well meant work of the food engineers and scientists.
It keeps our dollars local, connects families with one
another, and helps people find new friends and cohorts.
It is local but it ripples outward to touch the world.
On our way back from Peru, Mark stopped in Delphi to check
out the Canal Park. I
learned that Beverly Seese – a person in our church community has
been active in the Park system of Delphi.
Delphi’s parks are remarkable – it’s a small town but
has five great parks and is on the Erie-Wabash Canal.
Beverly was chair of the Park Board for six years.
She got into that trouble this way: soon after the Seese’s
moved to Delphi from California to be near Carl’s family, Bev was
caring alone during the day for a small, active baby boy.
In contrast to California, where children could play in the
park year round, Bev was shocked to discover that in the winter here
it is not a good idea to take your baby out to play as they may
freeze. Finding a gym
underused, Bev went to the mayor and suggested that a play space be
opened for children during the day while the junior high school was
not using the facility. She
initiated it and many parents began to bring their children to play
there – it was like an indoor park – there were floor and wall
mats from the wrestling team – it was perfect for small running
children. Parents
brought toys. Meetings
started up in the rooms around the gym and groups of older citizens
began to use the periphery of the gym for midwinter walking,
circling as the children played in the center.
After that, Bev was roped in as Park Board Chair,
superintending the parks as a volunteer -- a more than full time
task. Finally, she
brought the city council to her house, arranged her Park Papers in
organized piles in her living room and took the Council on a tour of
the work she was doing. Soon the town created a paid position for a park
superintendent. This
summer, Sharon McKnight our gifted, resident folk musician, inspired
by the accomplishments of the Canal Association and the Delphi Parks
has organized a series of concerts to keep the parks lively.
Locally, I found the
footprints of Lee and Marguerite Trachtman, both long time activists
who have made a difference in the greater Lafayette area for many
years – and managed to pull many other people along for hard work
and a more tolerant and liberal County.
I’ll see Della Willman and John Wilms at our General
Assembly. They, together, formed the Partners in Probation program that
helps people on probation to find support and the means to stay out
of jail and offers meaningful service opportunities to so many
people.
I could go on and on – I won’t -- but I can’t resist
mentioning Gale Kvam – our civically agile black belt.
This week she spent two evenings, past midnight, learning
about school law. Gale serves on the West Lafayette School Board and
is one of a number of people in our congregation who have worked on
the Vision 20/20 project. She
said that we’ll see in the upcoming years fruits of that dialogue
– that included people from both sides of the Wabash, from
business, the arts, and the university; invited them to share their
visions, hear one another out, and that the best outcome of the
Vision 20/20 process was all the connection and communication it
produced among diverse people. In school Board work, too, she advocates strong communication
-- between districts, for programs that address the whole child, and
create our hope for the future because our hope sits in our schools
every day. I hope that
they’re learning, not how to take tests but how to thrive in the
test of life, how to change the conditions of life, be creative,
feel connected to diverse people, understand their place in the long
unfolding of history, and learn both responsibility as citizens and
the accountability of business and government to the citizens.
Gale is a voice for living education and citizen empowerment.
These are small wonders but they are meaningful in our lives
– good produce and small farmers, better education, more open
government, fewer people returning to the hopelessness of prison, a
restored park, an intergenerational play space – they are local
steps but they begin the process of changing the world.
Once you’ve walked into the mayor’s office it is easier
to walk into the next office and the next – easier to understand
and support someone else on a mission of justice or hope.
Once you’ve made something new and positive happen in your
community you hearten people in communities far and near – our
Earth-craft Collective is part of a national – no – an
international movement of “Slow Food.”
Michael Lerner wrote:
“Much of human history has been the history of smaller groups
beginning to see common interests and ties to larger groups, first
as clans, then as tribes, then as peoples, then as nations.”
We must grow a sense of humanity beyond borders – in the
face of differences, in spite of – and because of histories -- to
see over or even dismantle our walls.
Robert Frost, the poet wrote: “Something there is that does
not love a wall.” Barbara
Kingsolver responds – “we who are alive in this moment did not
build these walls, nor did we ignite the fury that has smoldered for
generations and hurls itself at us now as a burning question.
But we have inherited the urgency of answering it. Somewhere
there must be a door through. The alternative is to construct higher walls and they higher
they grow the harder they fall.”
I hesitate -- but I am reminded of Ralph W. Emerson’s
phrase, “In every wall there is a door.”
The present cries out that, in every wall of despair, we must
make a door – and here is where we begin.
This is the meaning of our faith -- that between all
religions and people there are doors -- walls too, but real doors of
understanding, of wisdom, and of the radical healing of our world.
Our Unitarian Universalism calls us to make and find those
doors – beginning in our congregations and opening out onto the
world. This is the core
meaning of our religious heritage – not a new wall – but a new
foundation and new doors. We
have inherited the urgency of opening the doors in those
rising walls. Or in
causing the ground to heave up with the vitality of our
meaning-making, springing like flowers from once frozen earth – to
cause the walls to crumble – as the poet hoped.
As Hoosiers, you know by now that if Cole Porter can spring
out of the plain and fertile soil of this Heartland anything can.
He was a wild prairie blossom.
Thich Nhat Hanh says as a greeting – “A lotus for you –
a Buddha to be” – meaning that each of us can grow to love and
work for the healing of the world.
Rabbi Tarfon of the 2nd Century of the Common Era,
said: “It is not upon you to finish the task but neither is it
upon you to ignore it.” Soak
up the commitment in these walls – not walls of division but of
support – soak in the commitment in these leaders, the strength of
character in these stories and know that you can begin anywhere –
but you must begin. You
can begin at anytime – but you must begin in your heart.
You can begin anyway – but let us continue together –
Blossoming like flowers and taking heart in the heartland.
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