UNLESS WE TAKE A STEP FORWARD…
“Unless we take a step forward, we can not take the next, much less a thousand “- Daisaku Ikeda.
The main paths begin with a single step. The crucial step, the important one, the one that is always the most difficult to take… being more honest: the step I have always have struggled with. I am a woman, dark skinned, and part of the low-lower middle class in Bolivia. I’m not a person living with too many difficulties, but I don’t have the privileged life others do have.
And I know how it feels when someone looks down at you, because you’re in a ‘exclusive’ zone, being the person others want to exclude.
I studied in a foreign country, and I can never forget the day I was heading back home, from college, by bus. Half way through the route, there was only one empty seat, and it was next to me. A very white man boarded the bus, and he gave me this look, the most contemptuous look I’ve felt in my entire life: with it, he expressed that he would never sit next to a Bolivian… a dark skinned and insignificant latin woman… He looked at me with a feeling that I could only feel as repulsion, and he walked to the back of the bus.
I still think I should have done something. I could’ve said something, but I didn’t. Therefore, the African-American person I admire the most is a woman who did say something: Mrs. Rosa Parks, the mother of the Civil Rights Movement in America. She was a woman with real value, despite the difficulties of her time, she took courage as the engine of his life, as the spark that ignited the courage for the struggle of all her African American brotherhood.
On December 1st 1955, when the buses in the United States were divided into provileged “places” for whites, she sat in the place for people of color. And when the bus was full, she refused to give her seat to a white person. All the journey for the reivindication of African Americans began with a forceful, strong, and courageous ‘NO’ that could have cost her jail. But she gave her ‘NO, I won’t give my seat’, which meant not giving in to the abuses of the discriminators of her time. She refused to be an ordinary person and said “NO” …
But truly, with this action, she said: The story will not remain as a testimony to the exclusion of many, for the comfort of some. That’s what makes her an extraordinary person.
Rosey (as her closed ones called her) was a woman full of true courage. But that does not mean that she was aggressive. Those who were close to her say she was the perfect combination of courage and kindness, calmed and unobtrusive in his manner, but with an iron will.
And it just happens that courage is the engine of history. Because Rosita did not know she was making history, but her action, simple and sincere, marked the beginning of a story that fills with pride to all African descendents.
And not just them … Parks’s life fills with pride to the humanists of the world who seek to make the world a good place; to all women who want to practice their rights; and all who are willing to perform acts in their life for the sake of others people’s lives. And of course, to me, Irina.
In Mrs. Rosey, I find the best inspiration for each of the days to come in my life. Thanks for being the best example of a truly brave life Rosey!
Vote for this essay and help me be the winner of the Micro-Writing Contest “International Year of African Descent” FROM THE EMBASSY OF USA IN BOLIVIA! and I need your help to win! ^ ^
Here, the instructions:
How to vote and help me win?
1. Become fans of the Embassy in Facebook with the link: http://www.facebook.com/?sk=lf # / usdos.bolivia
2. Then enter http://embajadaeeuuenbolivia.wordpress.com/2011/06/ and write a comment below THREE SHORT ESSAYS: First, MY SHORT ESSAY: “Escrito No. 7: A menos que demos un paso…” and then, the other two you like … (But please, say that mine is much more fabulous, inspiring, original and demonstrates the value of african heritage… or something like it… haha …) You can write your comments in English… or spanish… no problem with the language… and if you don’t understand the other short essays just write ‘I like it becuase I like the person the writing is about’.
To identify yourselves as the authors of the comments, use the same name you use on Facebook (screenname). That way, the Embassy will check if you really ‘like’ them.
3. Also vote in the poll at: http://embajadaeeuuenbolivia.wordpress.com/2011/06/13/bienvenidos/ link and remember, mine is “Escrito No. 7: A menos que demos un paso…” … REMEMBER, YOU MUST vote for the same three favorites that you commented.
Please give me a good , sincere, and inspired comment, because I gain nothing since they I won a pair of snickers when I was 6 years old … and 20 years later… it’s about time to win something! Also, I have a great plan for the prize (a 14.1-megapixel camera, or an iPod Nano !!!!)
Regards to all, and vote me from all of your accounts on facebook, ask your friends to do it too, ask your families to do it… and everyone you know who could help me with just 10 minutes from their time!
Thank you!!