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    <title type="text">Living in Common</title>
    <subtitle type="text">Living in Common:</subtitle>
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    <updated>2008-05-14T17:01:21Z</updated>
    <rights>Copyright (c) 2008, Bill Stranger</rights>
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    <entry>
      <title>Eliot Hurwitz | Great Expectations</title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://dharmacafe.com/living-in-common/great-expectations/" />
      <id>tag:dharmacafe.com,2008:living-in-common/24.1291</id>
      <published>2008-05-12T20:47:00Z</published>
      <updated>2008-05-14T17:01:21Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Bill Stranger</name>
            <email>comments@christinesuzuki.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <p>I&#8217;ve been wondering with great expectation, what kind of real<br />
&#8220;conversation about race&#8221; Mr. Obama will now lead us into, following his<br />
amazing speech a few weeks ago. As part of an interracial family<br />
(my partner of 30 years is Asian, our son is now 20) I have a sense of<br />
just how difficult, and important, this is. Even with our years of<br />
&#8220;group process&#8221; training, progressive intention and common spiritual<br />
practice, we (mostly me as the white, middle aged, well-employed,<br />
ivy-league-educated, guy) are often sideswiped by persistent<br />
unconsciousness of the effects of asymmetrical privilege and very<br />
different histories.&nbsp; And in the community we live in, in Napa<br />
California, with a hardscrabble blue-collar past (we were mostly the<br />
bedroom for a big Naval shipyard that closed only a decade ago) and a<br />
decidedly Hispanic future (our largest ethnic group in a decade more)<br />
the racial tension just below our nouveau genteel wine country surface<br />
is evident regularly in our local newspaper letters to the editor and<br />
the more extensive blog postings on the paper&#8217;s web site. In fact, the<br />
paper&#8217;s editor tells me that when some story or other even brushes<br />
against one or another sensitive patch, the email pouch swells with<br />
stuff that never even makes it online, it is so foul.</p>

<p>So it is good, and well done, to make an intelligent, finely felt,<br />
closely observed, personally vulnerable, even courageous speech. But<br />
leading our communities and families into and through this territory<br />
will be far more important, and far more difficult. It will truly<br />
require vast intelligence, feeling, careful observation, vulnerability<br />
and courage. The collective gasp from the nation at this even modest<br />
beginning is a sure sign of just how important this really is.</p>

<p>I am anxious about hopes raised and unmet. And I am thrilled by the<br />
possibility of the challenge engaged. For now I wait with anticipation<br />
Mr. Obama&#8217;s next move &#8212; I hope he has the opportunity to make it.</p>

<p><i>Eliot Hurwitz, editor of DharmaCaf&#233;&#8216;s Sustainable Community section, is Program Manager for the Napa County Transportation and Planning Agency.</i>
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