Saturday, November 22, 2008

Times to Remember

I could tell by the look on his face, something was terribly wrong. It was just after lunch at Russell Sage Junior High School, in Forest Hills, NY. We were heading to Mrs. DeBarcza’s art class when I locked eyes with Mr. Heitner, our usually cheerful science teacher. He had a look I had never seen before. As a 12 year old I could see that he was concerned for us, his students, but it was not the usual sort of student-teacher attention; it was much bigger. When I asked if everything was okay, he answered, “Just go to class. There will be an announcement in a few minutes”.

A few minutes later, our principal, Dr. Charles Tanzer, got on the PA system and told us that

President Kennedy had been shot, in Dallas, and was being rushed to the hospital. Not long after that announcement, the school dismissed us and we all went home. JFK was dead. The date was November 22, 1963.

If you are a certain age, it is a day you will never forget. Forty five years later, the memory is vivid, indelibly etched and still painful. After the assassination, television news became our national focal point. Continuous coverage replaced regular programming. We watched as a tall Texas lawman, in a white Stetson hat, recoiled helplessly as Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald on live TV. And we followed the new president, LBJ, as he took charge of a nation in mourning.

A few days later, we heard Senator Mike Mansfield describe the First Lady’s reaction at Parkland Hospital, where President Kennedy was taken, mortally wounded. He told us that Jackie Kennedy, “took a ring from her finger, and placed it in his hands”. And we watched young John Kennedy Jr. snap a salute to his father’s flag draped casket.

As we approach Thanksgiving, these memories remind us that our resilience as a nation honors those who do great things. As we remember JFK, those old enough to remember December 7, 1941 inform our lives with recollections of that time and the war that followed. And for the current generation, we will remember September 11, 2001, decades from now.

Thanksgiving is a time to reflect, to give thanks and look ahead. Our current moment is perilous, even though we are not experiencing a single cataclysmic event with a specific date to recall some day. We’ve elected new leadership to guide us through our economic crisis. The trials of the months ahead will test us and require perseverance and sacrifice. The consequences of unemployment, diminished savings, and collapsing credit, profoundly affect the lives of many.

For those who gather and present the news, opportunities to tell compelling stories with real substance form the foundation of history and can rise to the level of literature. Those who are up to the challenge can serve an important role in bringing about a turnaround by informing the public and holding officials and business leaders to high standards. When news organizations do their best work they help us through difficult situations; they draw us closer as a country when we are most vulnerable. This is such a time, even if nobody is attacked, nobody is shot, and planes keep flying without interruption.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Irv,

Read the only book (out of an entire industry of books on the subject) that matters on this day, JFK and The Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It Matters, by James Douglass.

Bruce S said...

Irv - apparently you were a few years behind me. I was in the 9th grade when President Kennedy was assassinated. I was in Mr. Jackson's math class when the announcement was made. I also had Mrs. DeBarcza for art. In the 1980s Dr. Tanzer came to the New York Public Library at 5th Avenue and 42nd street where I worked. We chatted briefly about the integration of Russell Sage.

Bruce Slutsky

Nishad Jiwa said...

Thanks Irv..fascinating observations and insight

Bloomies said...

Beautifully Written. Have a wonderful Thanksgiving with your family.
Wendy Bloom

Leonard Krouner said...

Good article Irv. Best, Len