History doesn’t repeat but it does rhyme
A couple of weeks ago, in response to my article “Microsoft, Chase Bank, and what’s good for America,” a Pakistani-American acquaintance emailed me:
“An interesting perspective with a very ominous undertone. For someone like me and many others who waited years to get the blue passport so we could call this country a home, we are even more stranded than the American born. We don’t belong to our country of birth, nor our country of choice. Is it time to fix this country [America] or to flee, like we fled from our home when the going got tough? I say we stick it out, but I am not sure I have the answers. It’s up to the intellectuals, thinkers, writers (like yourself) and ideologists to create a movement to make the future brighter for our children. Your burden just became heavier, because people like you must take the lead with your words.”
If there’s anything our times cry out for it’s leadership, and if I can provide some tiny portion of that with my words, so be it. Words do count as action. But the real leaders of the new America we find ourselves stranded in are people like 84-year-old Dorli Rainey, who might go down in history as the Rosa Parks of our day. Watching her extraordinary 9-minute interview with Keith Olbermann, I found myself wondering why I hadn’t been there with her. The downtown square where – if there’s any justice in this world – Seattle’s finest will be remembered for having pepper sprayed a little old lady is a 20-minute ride by city bus from my front door. Why wasn’t I there?
I’ll cut myself some slack for now, because different people play different roles, but this is not a time for timidity. If you’re not willing to put yourself, in one sense or another, in harm’s way, then you’re not part of the solution. For my part, the least I can do is to try to use words that depict reality accurately and convey meaning and hope.A telling detail is that, like my friend quoted above, Dorli Rainey is an immigrant to America: She grew up under the Nazis. “I remember Goebbels,” she told Olbermann. (There aren’t many people left, in Germany or America or anywhere else, who do, so I think it’s a good idea for us to listen when one of them has something to say.) One of my premises, as an American writer and citizen, is that my relatively privileged mainstream background makes me no more American than any other American; this was drummed into me by my parents, my grandmother, and the tradition of civics education that was still (barely) current when I was in school in the 1970s.
Last month in Oklahoma City – deep in the heart of America – I told a conference of international educators:
“Orwell defines patriotism as a good thing, and nationalism as a bad thing. Making the distinction between the two explicit in today’s America is important, because it’s important for young Americans to know that loving our own country does not have to mean hating or fearing other countries and other people. This is important partly because millions of those “other people” are in fact also Americans, here to stay, just as (for example) I’m here to stay because my Irish and German and French ancestors came here and stayed. We’re all in this together, and there’s a lot of work to do to try to make a new, improved America in the 21st century, so it behooves us to get to know each other and to work together.”
The point I was making to that mostly white audience was that immigrants are, by right and by tradition, welcome in America. The corollary point I would turn around and emphasise to Pakistani-Americans and other immigrants is that, if you hoped that by coming here you were leaving behind the instability, injustice, and other afflictions of the country you came from, it turns out you were mistaken. You’re here now. Welcome to America; make yourself at home – and please make yourself useful. If, up to now, you’ve enjoyed the middle-class (or better) way of life that America has allowed you to make for yourselves and your children, now America needs you to give back, no less than your country of origin does (and the two needn’t be mutually exclusive).
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