July 03, 2022

Virginia Swain: Differences aside, it's time for a common civic purpose

Mother Teresa once said Americans are the poorest of the poor in the world because of our lack of spiritual and moral values. In April 2022, participants from all over the country joined me to address Mother Teresa’s concern in a strategic visioning process. Together, we imagined Americans finding common ground, reducing the divides in our country.

Our conversations were part of the National Week of Conversation, in partnership with America Talks and the ListenFirst Project. My involvement with these initiatives grew out of my commitment to build a culture that embraces a shared moral and spiritual vision of solidarity, guided by heart-centered leadership. Americans require a broad-based set of tools to connect with others of different backgrounds and beliefs. The need is so great. I appreciated every single participant’s presence and contribution.

We all came heavy-hearted, reeling from the horrors of Ukraine and worn down by the gridlock and acrimony in Congress, but we set our minds and hearts to envision healing what divides us. We were heartened to learn that there is a group of bipartisan representatives in Congress, led by Rep. Derek Kilmer, who introduced HR 6843, Building Civic Bridges Act and a Senate companion bill introduced by Senators Coons and Sasse on June 29, 2022.

That is why I encourage you to contact your representative and senators in Congress to sign on to the Building Civic Bridges Act (HR 6843), joining Rep. Kilmer and Senators Coons and Sasse in a bipartisan effort to build relationships across lines of difference and forge a sense of common civic purpose. Nine Democrats and nine Republicans introduced this bill in February and three more co-sponsors have joined them. I am pleased to report that on 6/29/22 Senator Coons and Sasse introduced HR6843 in the Senate as well.

The bill would create a non-partisan pilot program within AmeriCorps to support community civic bridgebuilding, bolstering a grassroots movement that has been growing among concerned citizens, including myself, far beyond the headlines. Through grants, training, research and public conversations, this program would promote the ability of local communities to tackle sources of division, while empowering participants and organizations with a foundation on which they can address contentious issues and ultimately, bridge divides.

Bridging divides has been at the heart of my life’s work. I have spent the past two decades bringing people together to identify their spiritual strengths and how to use them to resolve conflicts and build trust with one another. My work is born out of a vivid dream I had in New York City, where I had just witnessed the tragic attacks of 9/11. In my dream, I saw a phoenix rising from the ashes of Ground Zero, a symbol of the power we each have to heal the spiritual and moral vacuum of a divided America and fractured world.

To facilitate the spiritually grounded change that is needed, I have drawn on my work of over 30 years with the United Nations to develop and train Reconciliation Leaders who can provide the kind of thoughtful, heart-centered leadership needed so badly by our country at this time. In the past, I have worked with Worcester high school students to serve as peer mediators, bridging differences among their classmates who come to our city from around the world, speaking close to 90 different languages. I used the visioning process with them, too. Soon they lined up at the door of my office to ask me to help them de-escalate their anger and confusion, using art materials.

Last month, the group I convened, with several talented co-facilitators, undertook a series of visioning exercises, sharing their individual and communal dreams of a nation reunited through the passage of this bill, followed by action plans to realize their dreams. They also created a composite image of all their images to help them be in community together and stay connected.

We all have special gifts and talents that we can use to heal our country. Let us stop blaming one another and be accountable by focusing on the inner states of our hearts, conducting, as one Reconciliation Leader wrote, “a deeper spiritual analysis alongside the political and social … no one is immune.” Then I encourage you to reach out to someone who may see the world differently and find common ground.

On June 1, 2022, with the help of Becca Hartman-Pickerell or Interfaith America and my affiliation with the Friends Committee of National Legislation,  I organized a group of District 1 constituents to meet with our Congressman James McGovern to ask his co-sponsorship of H.R.6843. As a result of our meeting, not only is Rep. McGovern co-sponsoring, he has also agreed to ask a Republican representative to join him.

Virginia Swain of Worcester is the principal of VirginiaSwain.com, providing life and career direction for professionals and leaders at any level of accomplishment. She is also the founder and director of the Institute for Global Leadership (www.global-leader.org), which she founded in 2001 in Worcester.


By:  Virginia Swain
Source: Telegram and Gazette