My week-long program of talks, workshops and consultations in the UK continued in Bradford. Here are more notes from the road: Bradford’s magnificent town hall features a 220-foot clock tower modeled on the Campanile of the Palazzo Vacchio in Florence. In its heyday as the center of the wool trade, Bradford shared with Florence the distinction of being the only […]
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Encounters with an Irrepressible Octogenarian
In my book I write about Richard Hawthorne, a Nottingham printer, who has built a web of friendships in his native UK city: “In the course of a day, a visitor moving through the city with Hawthorne might expect to meet a leading imam, the editor of the newspaper, the president of the chamber of commerce, and a director of […]
From Chaos to Community
A few months ago I took a call from Harold Vines. I had not heard from Harold since the late nineties when he came to take part in a Hope in the Cities training retreat for community leaders in Richmond. Harold told me he had seen the advance notice of The Trust Factor in Washington, DC. He had recently retired […]
Challenging a Racial Caste System
A “racial caste system” is alive in America, says Michelle Alexander, whose book, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, provides some shocking statistics. I heard her speak in Richmond last week. More African Americans are under some form of correctional control than were enslaved in 1850. As of 2004, more black men were disenfranchised (i.e. […]
Moving from Remembrance to Building the Future
On the day of the September 11, 2001 attacks our youngest son, Andrew, who was 15 at the time asked us, “Will this change our lives?” While we wanted to say, “No,” we understood that we had entered a new era of uncertainty. Last Sunday, on the tenth anniversary of that fateful day, my wife and I participated in the […]
The Revolution We Need
I write this from Cape Cod with the winds of Irene rattling the house. On the way from Richmond last week, Susan and I visited the “Breakers,” the seventy-room summer “cottage” built in 1892 by the Vanderbilts in Newport, Rhode Island. The end of the Gilded Age, symbolized by such remarkable monuments to wealth and power and to a grand […]
What to do with our anger?
I was pleasantly surprised by Joe Nocera’s column in the New York Times on August 22. He apologized. In an earlier column he had compared Tea Party Republicans to terrorists. Like many of us, Nocera was outraged that those who precipitated the financial crisis are not being prosecuted more vigorously; by the attempts to undermine the Dodd-Frank financial sector […]
A Theology for Radicals
I’m reflecting on some of the “disconnects” in American life. One is the glaring gap between personal faith and public policy. How is it possible that the most overtly religious nation in the developed world has the greatest gulf between rich and poor? Why does a country with so many churches imprison more of its people than anywhere else on […]
Trust in Investing
If you are feeling cynical about the world of finance and investment you should talk with Patrick Davis. He’s a 25-year-old senior associate with the Calvert Foundation, a Washington-based non-profit that aims to maximize the flow of capital to disadvantaged communities. The organization enables investors – large and small – to earn a financial return while lifting families out of poverty. […]
A Promise Made Under Texas Live Oaks
Mark and Ariane are married. They exchanged their vows shaded by ancient live oaks on July 3. Even at 7pm the Texas sun kept the temperature hovering in the high nineties. In a touch of thoughtful creativity, the order of service was printed on fans. A guitarist played Bach’s Air on the G String. Parents read Letters to a […]