Sister Cities
January 1st, 2010We were lucky to start Songs of Hope through the Sister Cities program. Sister Cities International is still going strong, by the way. It was the brainchild of Dwight D. Eisenhower. After World War II, former General Eisenhower, then a hero of the war, ran for President. When he was elected, he found himself facing a world as complicated as today’s. The prolonged violence of World War II had crushed national economies, shattered countries, and caused the deaths of millions of people. Old enmities continued. The years of conflict created new ones. Much had to be rebuilt. New national relationships needed forging.
One of Predient Eisenhower’s ideas, encouraged by St. Paul resident Louis Hill, was to use people-to-people exchanges to get folks in the United States and in its wartime enemy, Japan, to see each other not as faceless enemies but as human beings with mutual desires for peace, security, and all the other essentials of human life: food, shelter, family, culture, happiness, and health. Eisenhower and Hill concocted the idea of creating “Sister City” relationships between U.S. and Japanese cities, with citizen committees from the Sister Cities organizing exchanges and sharing with each other. Fittingly, the first “Sister City” relationship was between Saint Paul, Minnesota and Nagasaki, Japan.
Over the years, Sister Cities International grew, and the concept of Sister City relationships between the United States and Japan expanded to embrace relationships between other cities in other countries. By the time Jeanne and I started organizing the first Songs of Hope project, Saint Paul had relationships with the Sister Cities of Nagasaki (Japan), Changsha (China), Modena (Italy), Culiacan (Mexico), Lavaiikamp (South Africa), and Novosibirsk (Soviet Union). Some of these relationships were older than others. All had local committees which met regularly, though some were better attended and more active than others.
As I say, we were lucky. Through the Sister City relationships, Jeanne and I met a lot of people who believed in the power of face-to-face exchanges across borders to build friendships and promote peace. We met a lot of people who loved the diversity of cultures in the world and who relished the richness that cultural differences might bring to their lives and to the lives of others. As we introduced Songs of Hope, there was some natural skepticism, but much more often, we were greeted with enthusiasm, energy, and a real, “I get what you mean” reaction when we described the benefits that the project could bring to the participating youngsters and their audiences. It was a great joy for us to meet so many caring, generous, imaginative, and globally-visioned people of all ages, and from all walks of life. Had Songs of Hope never happened, meeting all these people would have made the effort worth it!
