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Asha Sanaker's avatar

I never imagined I would be so struck by the death of Jesse Jackson, but I am. That thing they said in his NYT obituary about him being the bridge between King and Obama hit me right in the gut. I feel my own life existing, generationally, on that bridge between the mid-20th century civil rights movements and whatever is going to emerge, is emerging probably even now, in this second quarter of the twenty-first. Growing up in D.C., I remember being around some of the greatest of that era-- Jackson, Bernice Johnson Reagan, even Marion Barry before he got caught up in crack. I remember seeing Bishop Tutu speak. Watching him walk past me and feeling the force of his light, shining.

And now they're all gone and it's hard to convey their weightiness, or what it meant to be alive and awake in a world they shared and molded with such dedication and moral clarity. I think of my own parents, both of whom were involved in movement and of an age with Jackson. How deeply imperfect they were, and also how noble and inspiring. Maybe humans are always that way, but being so intimately tied to that generation, being raised up by them, that combination of incredible nobility and human imperfection feels deeply poignant today.

La Finaude's avatar

Ten months ago Brignone crashed on a slalom run; she suffered catastrophic injuries to her leg. It was a long time before she could even walk & she's on record as being joyfully grateful that she even made it to these Olympics. Hector & Stjernesund (as I understand it) planned to bow to her just because she completed the run. But, as it turned out, they were acknowledging the amazing accomplishment. You talk about yer Olympic ideals...

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