Palaima: Work long and hard for what you know is right for society
Thomas G. Palaima, REGULAR CONTRIBUTOR
Friday, September 25, 2009 In 700 BCE, the Greek farmer-poet Hesiod was stuck in a
backwater as hard on farmers as the Texas Hill Country in the 19th century. Greedy local big men controlled power and perverted
the rule of law.
Hesiod wondered about the same things we wonder about. Why do bad luck and bad people ruin the lives
of good people? Why doesn't God — in his case, Zeus — bring about justice? Why is life so hard?
Hesiod
saw only one answer: "There is no shame in hard work."
There was a little of Hesiod in President Barack Obama's
message to the schoolchildren of our country.Many Americans share Hesiod's and Obama's belief in working long and
hard for their futures and for what is right for society as a whole.
This quality of resolute perseverance was on display
on Sept. 10 at the ceremony for community awards sponsored by the University of Texas at Austin at the Mexican American Cultural
Center. In UT professor Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez whose U.S. Latino/a World War II Oral History Project celebrated its 10th anniversary.
How important it is to capture for history the realities of those who gave so much for a country that treated them as second-class
citizens. In Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo's commitment to making our police force supportive partners with all Austin
neighborhoods and sensitive to Austin's cultural diversity. And in educator-scholar Raymund Paredes' tireless efforts
to improve education at all levels in our state, especially through the high school text he co-edited: "Mexican-American
Authors."
These community leaders were praised publicly. But what stuck with me was the praise I heard in many
private conversations I had, for them and for the other recipients, Jesus Ch?vez, for 30 years an educator and now superintendent
of Round Rock ISD, and Joe and Teresa Lozano Long. Their philanthropy has empowered human beings to educate themselves and
give back to our community.
I had a long talk with educator Leticia Hinojosa, an award-winning principal in 1997 at
T.A. Brown School on Anderson Lane.
Hinojosa made clear what it took to "stand and deliver" in an area and
school where gang violence, prostitution, drug use, poverty and broken homes prevailed. The values and behavior of parents
sometimes made her feel deep sympathy for even the most hardened and violence-prone student.
Hinojosa had to overcome
teacher and student apathy, administrative inflexibility and the widely shared feelings that the problems were too big to
be overcome. She and willing teachers and parents worked and worked and worked.
All these people
embody the thoughts of Thomas Merton that inspire Ray Tapajna from Cleveland, Ohio, a tireless advocate for the forgotten
common worker:
" Do not depend on the hope of results. When you are doing the sort of work you have taken on, you
may have to face the fact your work will be apparently worthless and even achieve no worth at all, if not
perhaps, results opposite of what you expect. As you get used to this idea, you will start more and more to concentrate
not on the results, but on the value, the rightness, the truth of the work itself."
See the
problem. Do the work. Follow what is right and true. The results will be what they will be.
tpalaima@sbcglobal.net