Into the Mist
The fourth weekend of September 2001, San Francisco was shrouded in fog; not an unusual climatic condition for Fog City
that time of year, but a particularly poignant one in the baffling
aftermath of the events of the preceding eleven days. Early Sunday
morning, as I glided south, cutting through the fog on the Golden Gate
Bridge, staring at towers and cables that disappeared into the mist;
from my seat on the starboard side of the bus I stretched to look down
at the current tugging at the channel buoy.
I was still savoring
the richness, the profundity, and the texture, of the most heartfelt
emotions revealed by my new classmates the previous morning. The
humanity, the dignity, the love of these scholars: immigrants from
Africa, Asia, and Europe, refugees who had felt the terror of war,
America’s privileged, as well as the descendants of slaves; would
congeal later that morning into a new poem, recited line by line in
turn, around the circle of this new tribe that was just beginning to
open itself to the notion of new ideas of obligation, responsibility,
and the very important work that implies.
For America, these past
11 days had been an awakening to the grievous injuries our country has
inflicted on the world. For those of us converging on New College this
Sunday morning, it would become an awakening to our roles in healing
these wounds.
--The Awakening
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