Ron Drummond ([info]ron_drummond) wrote,
@ 2008-11-05 01:37:00
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In their song are days to come (a Harlem celebration)
I am temporarily resident in the City that has voted for Barack Obama by a wider margin than any other city in America -- with the possible exception of Chicago. Tonight it was a joy to wander among the growing crowds in Times Square as the first results came in from CNN on giant screens there; to negotiate the well-dressed press at the New York State Democratic Party bash at the Sheraton on Seventh Avenue and 53rd Street. But when Obama broke the 200-electoral vote barrier, I knew it was time to head for Harlem.

On the ride over, those of us on the subway car heading for Harlem found one another and the vibe of community just grew stronger as we got off and walked out and down the long avenues, our many rivulets joining into streams joining into rivers. In the plaza outside the Adam Clayton Powell State Office Building where Bill Clinton minds his post-presidency, at 125th Street and Seventh Avenue (better known there as the corner of Martin Luther King and Adam Clayton Powell Boulevards), another two-story television screen had been put up, and a stage, and the place was so jammed it was almost impossible to move, and the crowd's growing overflow was running ten deep along MLK's far bank. The crowds were so packed that for the first few minutes I thought I may have made a mistake to leave Times Square, where the crowds though bigger had more room to spread out and more screens and better viewing angles -- but that notion soon vanished.

As Barack's count moved closer to the magic number the joy in the crowd just grew. Every race and ethnicity under the sun could be found there, in goodly numbers and every shade and shape and phys, it was a rainbow of humanity and it felt like a rainbow too, so many happy strangers newly minted brothers and sisters -- an awesome feeling, an awesome experience to see that fellow feeling overflow when the screen lit up and held on the words "Barack Obama Elected 44th President." There was a long beat before we reacted, as if everyone had to read it twice, and then the cry went up, and from that moment it seemed all the rest of Harlem that hadn't yet arrived at that intersection began hoofing it there at that moment, all traffic was diverted as the people took joyfully to the streets, the cops were great, they went with it, they ceded the ground and facilitated the redirection of traffic away, traffic honking like crazy everywhere. A brass band pressed through the people, trumpets singing "O-ba-ma," leading chants. Bands of drummers were everywhere. CNN and MSNBC with their talking heads and long views of the huge crowd at Chicago's Grant Park awaiting Obama alternated with feeds from our own stage, as the greatest black politicians of New York's recent past and present came out to talk to us, Charles Rangel and David Dinkins and several African-American members of the state assembly and senate, rap stars and Baptist minsters, a Moslem cleric and a rabbi, and finally New York Governor David Paterson, who spoke eloquently about how African peoples that had first come to this continent as chattel had now centuries later produced a man who had just been elected president of the United States, that a long-lingering wound was finally starting to heal; Paterson said it was only a matter of time before the first woman was elected president, the first Hispanic, the first Asian-American. And just as he finished, on the big screen Barack Obama and his family came out, and the roar we let was of such delight and relief and collective affirmation, affirmation of Obama but even more of one another, that very sense was most palpable of all, you could see it and hear it in every face -- we had done this thing together, and that was the foundation of meaning that would inflect anything and everything that Obama does from now on. Listening to Barack deliver a speech that bore no whiff of triumphalism or self-congratulation but was humble and thankful and calmly serious and full of eloquent reminders that the need for our collective work had not ended but only begun -- was to cry (for me and for others) and to shout and to listen, with full hearts. The inspiration is ours -- everything crucial to what we can create together is ours, and Obama's potential as a leader lies wholly in his ability to bring that out in us, something already innately in us, bring it out not for him but for us, for all of us, for the good we can make together, which is something we have long and often lost sight of. Let us find it again, in the making, in our uncommon common effort.

Afterwards the huge crowd streamed down the middle of Harlem's Martin Luther King Boulevard, block after block of it, laughing and hugging and high-fiving and shouting and beaming, so many glorious lovely human smiles, upturned and lit. And down in the subways, cheering at the passing trains, train conductors honking with us, and slowly the great human river breaks into streams which split into rivulets, and here now in the wee hours of a restored America, in the solitary tributary of living blood pulsing through me ten thousand foremothers sing, I hear them once again: ten thousand foremothers sing. And in their song are days to come, the myriad ways we modulate with dawn, the myriad ways dawn modulates in us: belong, they sing: be long.



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[info]singingnettle
2008-11-05 08:47 am UTC (link)
What a great experience.

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[info]ron_drummond
2008-11-05 09:07 am UTC (link)
Thanks, Susan -- it surely was!

I just cross-posted this to TalkingPointsMemo, where those so inclined can click on the "Recommend This" button to raise its profile there.

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[info]sphinx_n_herhat
2008-11-05 09:40 am UTC (link)
And here is your rhapsody -- with such a lovely event to spin off from. I was wondering what the reaction was like in other cities. There was spontaneous partying in the streets here. People were literally dancing at the intersection of Broadway and John. And if the Scandinavian-descended Seattleites can be carrying on in such a fashion then I figured it must be going on lots of other places. You were probably in one of the best.

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[info]ron_drummond
2008-11-05 04:30 pm UTC (link)
Thanks, Carolyn. I thought of that after I posted it -- that just maybe it had attained the level of rhapsody that you had encouraged me to write. I was delighted that you came upon it so soon thereafter, pleased too to hear of dancing in Capitol intersections -- I saw a two-minute clip of Pike Place celebrants on cnn.com.

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[info]joculum
2008-11-05 04:24 pm UTC (link)
We could only watch the celebrations at Ebenezer Baptist Church and the King Center on television, but a small, amazed, appropriately multiethnic group of us were watching a small television on the sidewalk outside a photography gallery exhibiting Michael David Murphy's documentary photographs from Obama's campaign (inside was reserved for performance art and video). The spontaneous fireworks displays from the surrounding neighborhoods and the enthusiastic stream of horn-honking carloads of Obama enthusiasts passing by made our little coterie feel as much part of a dispersed community celebration as if we had been at the traditional gathering place of Manuel's Tavern, which was essentially filled to capacity by six p.m.

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[info]ron_drummond
2008-11-05 04:28 pm UTC (link)
Lovely! It really seems like spontaneous dancing in the streets broke out almost everywhere.

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[info]fringefaan
2008-11-05 04:41 pm UTC (link)
I watched it with Denys at home, and when MSNBC showed the crowds in Harlem, I looked for you. What a wonderful place to be on a wonderful night in America.

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[info]farmgirl1146
2008-11-05 07:00 pm UTC (link)
Wonderful. Thanks for writing about this.
I shed a few tears of happiness, too.

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[info]purple_mark
2008-11-06 05:26 pm UTC (link)
Great encapsulation of the moment, Ron! Wish I would've been there. We had similar celebrations here in Seattle, but nowhere near your scale. I just hope ( yes that word again ) that we can bring our country back from the edge
that it's been teetering on for way too long now and I think that Obama is only a step back from that edge. We still
have the passage of Proposition8! Which goes to show how backwards this country still is. I wish we could try the
present administration for their war crimes and I wish we could take back the money that was given to companies
like AIG who used it to go on luxury holidays! Still it is a great moment in America and I think, the world itself is
breathing a collective sigh of relief!

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[info]ron_drummond
2008-11-07 06:03 am UTC (link)
Thanks, Mark, your good word always means so much to me, bless you! I think we can bring our country back from the edge if we're willing to work to make it happen -- that's what I love about Obama's message -- he can't solve our problems, instead he affirms that we can solve our problems ourselves, by working together in good faith and common purpose. An old old message, often forgotten or ignored, and part of Obama's genius is his ability to take that old message and show it to be something ever-new. And dang it all, two days on and I'm still weeping at the drop of a hat over his victory -- over our victory.

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re: Harlem Celebration
[info]purple_mark
2008-11-07 05:52 pm UTC (link)
Dear Ron, I'm hoping that when LJ retools their friending proceedure this will get easier. But in the meantime could you friend me, I can't seem to do it from here and I want to veiw your posts and maybe
vice versa. I've been Rewriting my Novel as a private NaNoWriMo and so far it is going fairly well, I just
didn't want the pressure of doing it on-line. Best Regards!

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(Anonymous)
2008-11-06 05:56 pm UTC (link)
I can't imagine how it would have felt to be there in the middle of such celebration, wonderful and overwhelming I guess. I watched the results on tv with my 12 yr. old son. It was wonderful to watch his interest in the whole campaign and election process. I have been trying to identify what exactly it was I felt when the networks announced they could call Obama the winner. It wasn't elation or joy, rather time seemed to stop and then it felt like a slow expansion and my heart filled with warmth. The most moving moment for me was the image of Jesse Jackson standing quietly with tears streaming down his face as everyone around him cheered. Seeing that drove home for me the healing power of Obama's victory.

Rebecca

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[info]lavelleslist
2008-11-06 09:23 pm UTC (link)
Ron, thanks for that report. Things were pretty electric here in Brooklyn too. And your comments about his speech are right on. It was a resounding affirmation that the right decision was made that night.

Hey, don't know if you're still going to be around this weekend but I'm actually giving a tour of Harlem on Saturday at 1pm. It meets in front of the Schomburg Center at 135th and Lenox. You're welcome to join in. Drop me a line if you want more info.

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[info]ellen_kushner
2008-11-07 09:14 pm UTC (link)
Beautiful, Ron! Thanks for posting this and letting me know. Sure wish I could have been with you on that train.

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[info]martianengr
2008-11-19 07:41 am UTC (link)
Thanks for taking me there to Harlem and back.

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