Finding authentic hope: Stories from the Hope Unraveled book tour

Thursday, December 22, 2005

(The Harwood Institute for Public Innovation)For the past three months, Rich Harwood and members of The Harwood Institute staff have criss-crossed the country – to 13 different cities – to engage citizens in a dialogue about the people’s retreat from politics and public life, and what collective action must be taken to forge an alternate path. What we heard from coast-to-coast, in areas ranging from urban to rural, wealthy to impoverished, and in communities of great promise to those in decline, was that people are tired of leaders peddling false hope – the kind based on promises that can’t be kept; unrealistic goals that can’t be met; and entreaties that appeal to us as consumers, not as citizens.

In Hope Unraveled: The People’s Retreat and Our Way Back, Rich argues that to begin to reverse the people’s retreat, we must pay much more attention to what engenders authentic hope in people. Authentic hope is generated when people seek to create change not by dropping a boulder into a lake to create a large “splash,” but rather by dropping small pebbles – little civic actions – that ripple out, and in time, overlap. Just as the overlapping ripples merge to create new ripples, these overlapping actions create new norms for collective action in communities.

Here are some stories we heard on the Hope Unraveled book tour. Each story illustrates how people in their own small but powerful way are stepping forward, dropping pebbles into the lake, and beginning to build new narratives in their communities based on authentic hope:

  • In Las Vegas, the Nevada Community Foundation has created a panel of ordinary citizens who will work together to decide how to spend millions of dollars in funds for their community. These individuals are going through training sessions right now that will help them think more deeply about how their philanthropy can have the most meaningful impact on community life. These people are showing us all that you can still maintain your individual spirit and join together to build a common future.
  • In St. Paul, Minnesota Public Radio has created Public Insight Journalism, which is a new way to engage citizens in the media process. The premise is that people in the communities – ordinary citizens – are the experts on their neighborhoods and possess public knowledge that can inform and enhance news coverage. MPR is striving to fight one of the key public challenges uncovered in Hope Unraveled - that the news media fails to reflect the reality of people’s lives in their coverage.
  • In Atlanta, individuals and organizations are stepping forward, crossing divides, and striving to build new ways of working together. Take Major Gloria Reagan of the Salvation Army Training College, for example. The campus sits in a gated enclave in the middle of one of Atlanta’s poorest neighborhoods, but people in Atlanta told us time and again that Major Reagan is working to tear down those walls – figuratively if not literally – every day. With each step forward, the Salvation Army becomes more of a genuine community partner with those beyond its walls. There’s also Katrina Green – “Miss Trina” as she’s called – who left her first home, which she built with her own sweat equity as a single mother, and moved to a middle-class neighborhood, only to return to a poor part of town because she wanted to make a difference. The Annie E. Casey Foundation is also working in Atlanta to bring people like this together so that they can draw on one another’s strength and work together to start making an even greater impact.
  • Finally, in Flint, Michigan, which has recently been devastated yet again by the announcement of more GM layoffs, a small group of catalytic leaders are helping to write a new narrative for this community. They include individuals from organizations like the United Way of Genesee County, Career Alliance, Salem Housing, Court Street Village, the Community Foundation of Greater Flint, the Flint Cultural Center Corporation, Woodside Church, and several others. A few years ago, when The Harwood Institute studied this community, people could only identify a handful of leaders they believed held credibility and trust with the community. Today, citizens can identify scores of them. These individuals, like Johnny Appleseeds of public life, are spreading new norms and a different way of working together across Flint.
Indeed, people are yearning for authentic hope across America. To start forging an alternate path for our politics and public life that is rooted in authentic hope, all of us will have to step forward and act. If you are interested in wrestling with your own role in public life, and the role of your organization, click here to learn more about how you can work with The Harwood Institute.

 

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