Heroes: Inspiration for All Ages by Robert S. Swiatek - HTML preview

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Introduction

I  published  Heroes:  Inspiration  For  All  Ages  in  January 2014, available only as an ebook. You can download  it  free from my  web  site.   There  are   a   few  other  offerings  there.  Before beginning  that  book,  I  made  a  list  of  amazing  people  and  kept adding to it. After finishing  Heroes, I found that there were a few individuals  that  I  left  out.  The  people  in  this  book  are  some  of them.  As  you  might  guess,  there  were  still  some  heroes  left  for another book, so don‟t rule that out.

Like  the  previous  book,  Heroes  You  May  Not  Know  has eight chapters and  about  three  men or  women  in each.  I  use  the word about  because a chapter  may mention four or  more heroes, rather than a mere three. For example, chapter six has at least five, while chapter four includes dozens, even though all are not named. In   this  book,  there  are  businessmen   included,   such  as  J.   L. Wilkinson, who was the only white owner of a team in the Negro Leagues.  I  also  considered  him as  an athlete,  which I‟ll  get  into shortly. J. L. had teams of all races but his African American teams consistently beat  white  teams  from  the  major  leagues.  Wilkinson was a great man, treating his players with dignity – others too, I‟m sure. He also was responsible for the night baseball with his system of portable lights.

Jackie Robinson was the first black player in Major League

baseball, joining the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, thanks to Branch Rickey.  Not  only a  great  player  on the  diamond,  he  excelled  in football, track and basketball. He had to put up with jeers because of the color of his skin, and the taunts didn't stop in 1947. He was booed and yelled at by spectators in the stands as well as by some players   in   the  opposing  team‟s  dugout.   By   accepting   it  and excelling on the diamond, Robinson did a great deal for others that came after him in the sport.

Roberto Clemento came from Puerto Rico and he too was a great baseball player. When he joined the Pittsburgh Pirates, they were at the bottom of the league. He changed that with his hitting and play on defense.  Talented as  he was,  he also  helped  those  in need,   giving  to  others  when  he  could.  When  the  earthquake demolished  Nicaragua  in  late  1972,  he  pitched  in  to  help  the victims of the disaster.

Cassius Clay, Jr. changed his name to Muhammud Ali and was one the greatest boxers, ever. Consistently winning in the ring, he  even  predicted  in  which round  the  fight  would  end  with  his victory.  He  was  right  many times.  He‟s  included  because  of an event outside  sports.  He  refused  to be drafted  and  go  to  fight  in Vietnam. As a result, he lost his title and didn't box for four years. Eventually, the newspaper headlined his victory in an 8-0 decision, which you can read about in chapter 3.

If you‟ve seen the 1981 movie, Chariots of Fire, you know who  Eric  Liddell  was.  If  you  missed  the  flick,  he  was  a  great runner,  specializing  in  the  100-,  200-  and  400-meter  events.  He won Olympic  medals  and  was  the  first  Scot  to  do  so.  What  the motion picture doesn‟t show is what  he did after his running days waned – he still ran and won races, just not as many as previously. As  a  missionary  in China,  he  followed  in  his  parents‟  footsteps. Unfortunately, he was in China during the time of the invasion of the country by the Japanese.

Wilkinson,  whom  I   mentioned  earlier,   was   a  baseball player but an injury to his wrist ended his possibilities of becoming a great pitcher. Instead, he went into management. It‟s something I never did and never cared to do, but J. L. set an example of what businesses should be.  Sadly,  not  enough bosses knew about  him and  what  he accomplished. In my first book on work, one of the chapter titles is Boss spelled backwards is double SOB.

The   names  of  two  other  phenomenal  businessmen  are David  Bronner  and  Benjamin Montgomery.  David  continued  the family soap production in the way his  grandfather and  father did. They created safe, environmentally friendly soaps while paying the workers what they deserved. David continues doing this while  his company keeps  recording profits.  He‟s  also  a  troublemaker,  who just tries to make the planet better. No one can argue with that.

Montgomery  lived  in  the  nineteenth  century  and  was  a slave who became a plantation owner. He favored labor rights and community, helping those who needed work to find it while paying them a truly decent wage. He believed  in civil rights, treating  his staff the way servants and slaves on other plantations in the south should have been dealt with.

This  book  talks of  many  individuals  who  may have been  artists,  but  I‟ve  only  included  one:  Marian  Anderson.  With  her brilliant contralto voice, her family‟s poverty couldn‟t provide her with  singing  lessons,  but  fortunately  others  helped.  She  was  the recipient of discrimination throughout  her  life, even being turned down to perform in Washington, DC, at Central High School and Constitution Hall.  Both the  Board of Education and Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) rejected  her. Instead she sang at the  Lincoln  Memorial  on  Easter  Sunday,  April  9,  1939,  before 75,000 people.

Hector Garcia  was a  doctor  who  went  to  war.  At  first  he hoped to be a medical doctor there, but instead became an officer in  the  infantry.  Later  they  took  advantage  of  his  degree.  The Armed Services  may be a bit slow.  As a physician,  he served all the people, especially the  poor, relating to them better than white doctors did. If someone couldn‟t pay him for his services, he didn't demand  it  of  them.  A  strong  civil  rights  activist,  he  had  one addiction:  working  too   much.  Fortunately,   his  wife  was   very understanding.

Ida Tarbell was a journalist, and you couldn‟t  find a better one.  Ida  wrote  for  McClure’s,  joining other  muckrakers  such as Lincoln  Steffens  and   Ray  Stannard   Baker.   She   took  on  the criminal corporations – if I‟m not mistaken those two words are a pleonasm.  Tarbell went after the oil companies,  specifically John D. Rockefeller, exposing his monopoly schemes that crowded out other companies. Tarbell grew up in western Pennsylvania, so she and her family knew a great deal about oil.

Daisy Bates was a civil rights worker who was responsible for  the  integration of Central  High  in  Little  Rock,  Arkansas,  in 1957. Nine students  volunteered and  they had great  support  from teachers,    parents,    friends,    Daisy   and    her   spouse,    Lucious Christopher Bates, who also served the cause. Unfortunately, there was much opposition to the black students entry into the school, as the  Little  Rock  Nine  suffered  from  the  racism  of  students  and adults.  The  school was  integrated,  but  it  took time  and was  very difficult for many people.

The three women, Sylvia McLaughlin, Kay Kerr and Esther Gulick, were housewives living in San Francisco  in the middle of the twentieth century.  They saw  what  was  happening to the Bay, which was being used as a  landfill. They took action and though they  had  great  support  from  their  husbands  –  professors  with connections –  they and others saved the Bay. Their  initiative was the beginning of the earth movement, which set an example for all nations and continues today.

John  Wesley  Powell  and  Aldo  Leopold  were  two  other environmentalists born in the nineteenth century. John lost an arm in  the  Civil  War,  but  that  didn't  stop  him  from  exploring  the Colorado River. Aldo lived out west and saw the need to preserve the beauty of  nature, rather  than exploit  it.  The  two were of like mind – both naturalists.

Despite  all  the  civil  rights  activists  already  mentioned, there were others. A. Philip Randolph advocated  for the rights of the workers, especially the Sleeping Car porters.  George Pullman created the luxury car as well as the town of Pullman, Illinois, and hired African Americans to serve the people traveling in luxury. At the same time, the black workers on the train were paid as little as possible. Randolph helped change that, but his struggle and that of the porters  was a  difficult one  as  the Pullman people stalled and stalled, before finally settling.

Ella  Baker  was  another  civil  rights  leader.  Her  mother envisioned  her being a teacher and though Ella never was trained for  it, she did  a  great deal of teaching while  leading others. She was a member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored   People   (NAACP)   the   Southern   Christian   Leadership Conference    (SCLC),    the    Student    Nonviolent    Coordinating Committee (SNCC), the Congress of Industrial Organization (CIO) and more than three-dozen other organizations.

Paul Kagame  is  one  of the  politicians  I  selected.  He  led Rwanda   through  extremely  difficult  times.   Before   coming  to power, the Tutsi and Hutu were engaged in genocide. The conflict may   have  been  over,  but  another   could   have  been  brewing. Encouraging  forgiveness  and  even  being  almost  a  dictator,  he brought the country to a semblance of order. You don‟t find many today, but he is truly one good politician.

Another  was  William  Wilberforce  of  Great  Britain.  He started out in Parliament and kept advancing. While on a journey, his faith was questioned and he thought he might  have chosen the wrong profession. Instead he put them together and worked for the people.  He  is  largely  responsible  for  ending  the  slave  trade  in England and leading the way for other nations to follow.

Robert La Follette was a  lawyer  who became a politician. He was also a  Republican.  That sounds  like three strikes against him, but he was progressive. Don‟t forget that Lincoln was also of the same party as well as a lawyer. La Follette wouldn't defend the guilty and spent hours on cases. He continued that process once he joined  the  Congress.  He  always  fought  for  what  was  right  and represented   the    people.    He   stood    up   against    monopolies, corporations,  the trusts, anti-Semitism,  the Ku Klux Klan, World War I, the League of Nations and racial discrimination.

Barbara  Jordan came  from  Texas  and  served  in both the Texas Senate and U. S. House of Representatives. She was a civil rights  leader  and  didn't  avoid  a  good  party,  especially  a  fine barbeque.  She  was  an outstanding  speaker  and  the  first  African American woman to deliver the keynote address at a convention of the Democrats. For her unselfish service she received many honors including the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Many of  these  heroes  were  leaders,  writers,  teachers  and humanitarians.  I‟ve  already  mentioned  Liddell  and  Wilberforce and their religious quests, but there are three more in that class: St. Thérèse   Martin   (the   Little   Flower),   Pope   Francis   and   Jerzy Popiełuszko.   Martin suffered the  loss of her  mom when she was four  and  it  deeply  affected  her.  As  a  child,  she  wanted  to  be  a Carmelite  nun  and  she  was  accepted  when  she  turned  fifteen. Those at the abbey made her wait  until after Easter and once she entered  there,  many of  the  religious  treated  her  very badly.  She accepted  it  and  only  lived  to  be  24.  She  had  been  sickly  and conditions at the  nunnery could have been better. After her death, miraculous events occurred, resulting in her sainthood.

Pope Francis  hasn‟t  been the  Bishop of  Rome  very  long, but   already   his   life,   influence   and   acceptance   have   made   a presence.   He   has   always   believed   in   mercy,   simplicity   and forgiveness. The way he  has  and continues to  live  has  impressed many people around the globe.

Fr.   Jerzy   Popiełuszko   was   small   of   stature   and   frail throughout his life, but he became a priest and was assigned to St. Stanislaw Kostka Church in Warsaw in the early 1980s. This was the time of Lech Walesa and the Solidarność movement. In fact, he became the priest of Solidarity and a labor leader. As expected, he had a  great  following. When he said  Masses at  Kostka,  not only was the church filled, crowds were massive outside.

All these inspiring people that I read about and write about in Heroes You May Not Know amazed me. One seemed to outshine the other, but they were just doing what was and is right. A few are still  living and continue to  impress. Now I‟m working on a book about  four  legged  heroes  with the  tentative  title,  Smart  People? Smarter  Animals.  The  title  should  tell  you what  it‟s  about.  As  I said, my list of humans still has quite a few more heroes.

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