Keeping The Kennedy Legacy Alive – What Will You Do?
Posted by Michelle Moquin on August 30th, 2009
Hello…
I didn’t get the chance yesterday morning to watch the funeral of Sen. Ted Kennedy, nor the eulogy that president Obama gave. But this morning I have been heavily perusing the net watching videos and reading about it, and feeling the sadness and loss, that I am sure everyone in this country is feeling.
There are a few articles that I read but I came across one that I wanted to post. We can talk about what Sen. Ted Kennedy has done in his long career as a senator, as the list is long and impressive and absolutely worthy of the praise and recognition. Kennedy became the ‘greatest legislator of our time’.
But to me, honoring him best would be to carry on his legacy of care and compassion, and the never-give-up attitude. How can we keep what he was so passionate about alive and kicking? What can we do?
I like this article because it addresses his many accomplishments, but asks of us, how we can take a little bit of what Ted Kennedy did on a daily basis, and make it a part of our daily lives.
The Dream Lives On: Keeping The Kennedy Fire Alive
As Senator Kennedy was finally laid to rest yesterday, the weight of his passing hit me much harder than I thought. I can feel the collective heartbreak of losing the last of our royal line. It is as if the round table has finally been broken, and all the knight’s swords laid to rest. I am 42 years old, and Ted Kennedy was a state Senator longer than I have been alive. My generation has never known anything else but to live under the legacy of the Kennedy’s ‘American Camelot’ influence. How do we pass this flame of public service to our children, and spark the next generation of leaders?
I think Andy Ostroy said it best in his piece, featured on HuffPo earlier this week:
“Ted Kennedy’s contribution to American culture and society can be seen in virtually every historic issue fought in modern American politics, including health care, social security and Medicare, minimum wages, education, immigration, aid for senior citizens, civil rights, voter’s rights, women’s rights, gay rights and human rights. And he accomplished all this as a gentleman and a respected bi-partisan leader, with civility, grace and humor. A larger-than-life Washington character. Sadly, there’s no one to step in and fill his shoes….on either side of the aisle.”
I was sobbing listening to Vice President Joe Biden give the best speech of his life remembering his old friend at the memorial service, held at the Kennedy library. He spoke of the countless times Teddy had been there for him, and for so many. Beyond his historic accomplishments, it was in the ‘little things’ that Senator Kennedy shined his humanity onto all who were in his giant wake and, “makes you want to be better than you are,” as Biden said.
The grief floating around America this week has been palpable. We have spent a lifetime grieving again and again with the Kennedy family through the years of unending tragedies. Losing Eunice Kennedy Shriver earlier this month reminded us what a fiery feminist can do; and her gift of the Special Olympics is as a legacy beyond measure. When Maria Shriver spoke at her funeral a few weeks ago, she said her mother would have pounded her fist at the podium – asking what we did today to make the world a better place.
The tenacity, compassion and drive to champion the under privileged moves me to want to be a better citizen, and a better parent. All of the Kennedy siblings, and so many of their children, are working in public service. We may never see such a family again. They had their faults, their mistakes and their issues, just like the rest of us. But there is one thing they did not do: stop or give up.
Senator Joseph Kennedy, Teddy’s nephew, reflected on this determination at the memorial.
“He was telling me, never, ever, ever, ever give up. You stay in the race. And if people don’t have health care, you stay in the race. If people don’t have adequate housing, you stay in the race. If people aren’t being treated properly you stay in the race,” he said.
In contemplating the death of Eunice and Teddy, I asked my four kids this week, while driving to get school supplies, what we were doing as a family to make the world a better place. The six year old twins slurped their organic juice boxes and gave me a blank stare, while the older ones tossed it around. My 14 year-old son offered up, “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country?” This seemed to be his attempt to show me the full scale of his Kennedy knowledge.
We finally decided the best way they can “give” to their country, is to develop their character. To try their best, to help someone out that needs it, and to be grateful for what we have. The new generation of children will never know the Kennedy influence. Who is their champion now? Who is going to dare us to be the first to fly to the moon? Who is going to stand up and pound their fist, roar like a lion, and make us want to be better? Where is our fire, our sense of competition, our collective conscience that serving the lesser among us is a right and a responsibility?
The answer for leadership is not just in Barack Obama, although he has the potential – it is in all of us. Everyone must do their part. The current first family is laying the foundations to inspire a new generation in big ways, as well as small ones. From planting an organic garden outside the White House, daring to touch the Queen of England, or encouraging American’s to volunteer – the legacy or making a difference does not have to die.
On Memorial Day, the White House offered a call to service, and at the HuffPo, on the right hand side of this page, you can find links for the “All for Good” campaign. Check it out for opportunities to be in service within your zip code as a great way to get your kid’s engaged.
Arianna Huffington wrote a fantastic piece earlier this week, reminding us that the national conversation about helping the least among us needs to remain the center of bipartisan attention.
Right now, Kennedy’s Health Care Bill is on the precipice, just like the Civil Rights Bill, when JFK was shot. Ted Kennedy introduced the first legislation for health care in 1969, when I was two years old. Let’s get it done as a tribute to our favorite family, and revitalize our momentum as a country. Teddy said,
“the dream lives on.”
Let’s all work together to make sure it does.
-Kari Henley, President of the Board of Directors at the Women & Family Life Center Posted: August 30, 2009 09:09 AM. Huffington Post
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Readers: What if we all made a commitment to ask ourselves every day, “What can I do to make the world a better place today?”, and actually do something that does? How grand life would be….
Do it.
Love, and Gratefully your blog host,
michelle
Aka BABE: Your Bad Ass Bitch Editor
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August 30th, 2009 at 7:48 pm
Hello Michelle,
Senator Ted Kennedy was surely loved by many in this country and will be missed. The Democratic Party has lost a great Senator who was instrumental in making life better for all Americans.
It will be difficult, if not impossible to fill his seat.
I remember the day John F. Kennedy was assassinated, I was walking home from school, 1st grade, and my neighbors were all outside, some were crying.
John F., Robert, and Ted Kennedy, 3 of Americas finest politicians,
they are all gone now, the end of a legacy.
I thought you to be much younger, I have a pair of drawers as old as you that I still wear.
Al
August 30th, 2009 at 11:17 pm
To the TAO: If you have been messing up my cmputer for the past two days, you have been driving me mad with frustration.
I have picked up a half dozen Viruses in the past two days and reloaded all my software and ooperating system. It might have been done as a joke, but I am loosing my composure over this.
It is impossible for this to happen without the interference of a superior technology. I am protected by every possible type of Virus and Spyware protection, yet I keep getting new ones and my computer is acting as if it has a mind of its own.
It has kept me up all night trying to remedy these problems but they just keep getting worse. I have reinstalled my Operating System and initialized my Hard Drive so this can not happen, yet it is driving me crazy.
I have stopped trying at 2 AM this evening and I am going to bed. Please leave me alone if it coming from you guys. I am ready to throw my new computer in the garbage and never go near one again.
Al is a witness to all the weird happenings and they are all impossible.
A joke can only go so far and I can take it as well as give it, but this is just too much.
I am going to bed. I am mentally frazzled and in physical pain caused by the stress brought on by these strange occurrences.
If it is not the Tao, I am sorry for blaming you. Whomever it is, please stop.
HOWIE