“ONE SMALL STEP…”
Is anyone
in the USA unaware that this week marks the 50th anniversary of
human beings stepping out onto the surface of the moon? We are in such sad shape as a country, and we
are so fearful for our future, that it is no wonder that Neil Armstrong’s
touchdown on the moon on July 20, 1969, is being heralded so much. It was an extraordinary achievement, and in
light of the book and movie “Hidden Figures,” I am aware that is a deeper story
than white, male achievement.
I’ve
thought about it for many reasons over the years, but two stand out. First, I met Neil Armstrong in 1964 when he
was an astronaut in training. I was a
participant in the National Youth Science Camp in West Virginia that
summer. Two white males were selected
from each state to attend the national camp, and I was nominated by my high
school and selected as one of two to represent Arkansas. My congratulatory letter was signed by
Governor Orval Faubus, the infamous governor of the 1957 debacle at Little
Rock’s Central High School, when black students sought to join with whites as
students there. My flight to Charleston,
WV, would be my first airplane flight, and I was truly astonished at seeing the
land, as we flew first to Cincinnati, then to Charleston.
I loved the
intellectual part of science, but I hated the physical parts of science. I’m still enthralled by the theories, and I’m
terrible at the engineering. Neil
Armstrong and two other astronauts came to the camp that summer after my senior
year in high school. I don’t remember
what he talked about, but I did get my photo taken with him. And this leads to the second reason I’ve
thought about that walking on the moon in 1969.
I was living in Nashville at the time, working at Operation Breadbasket
(Rev. Jesse Jackson’s group), seeking to get better wages for black workers in
grocery stores and better prices and produce for the stores in poor, black
neighborhoods – we were into “food deserts” before it became a thing. I watched Neil Armstrong walk on the moon at
almost 10 PM CDT, and I wanted to be cynical, but the monumental achievement
and my connection to Armstrong kept me glued in my spirit.
The next
day, my roommate David Kidd and I flew to LaGuardia Airport in New York, on the
way to a “Radical Seminarians” conference in Deering, New Hampshire. There were seminary students from all over
the country, gathering to be motivated to oppose the Vietnam War and to
mobilize against it. I was not a
particularly radical seminarian in those days, but this conference helped to
change my perspective. Indeed it helped lead me in the next year to reject my
automatic exemption from the military draft as a seminary student and to
finally apply for conscientious objector status – that’s a story for another
blog. The connection to Neil Armstrong
is that David and I had a layover at LaGuardia before our flight to Manchester,
NH. Upon landing in New York from
Nashville, we learned that the Manchester airport was fogged in that morning –
it would be an hour wait for the fog to clear.
As often happens in such weather situations, the hour wait turned in to
eight hours, and since it was the day after the moon landing, all the TV news
in the airport was tuned to one thing:
Neil Armstrong saying again and again, “One small step for {man}, one
giant leap for {mankind}.” I must have
heard it at least 100 times that day, and thus I will never forget it.
I worked in
the Roses Creek Folk School that next summer of 1970 in the Appalachian
mountains of east Tennessee, and I was shocked to hear many of the mountain
folk respond to my eloquent words about the scientific achievement of the moon
landing – they felt that it was a lie, that humans could never walk on the
moon, and that it was a government conspiracy to get more money in the budget. As I reflect on it, there were so many
streams flowing through that skepticism:
“alternative facts,” an accomplishment so profound that it is still
mind-boggling, and a healthy disbelief in government communications!
So, as I
celebrate my connections to this remarkable human and technological
accomplishment 50 years ago, I am aware that we separate children from their
families at the border and keep them in filthy cages, that the same technology
killed milions of Jews in Europe, and that 20,000 children die each day around
the world in starvation-related deaths.
We’ve done a lot, and we’ve got a lot to do.
Fifty years ago I was 12 years old and remember that one of my grandmothers believed the moon landing was a hoax. Asking myself now what difference did it make?
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