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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

TRIBUTE TO MY CHILDHOOD HERO: JESSE OWENS

"...Jesse Owens the grandson of a slave will go down in history not only for his athletic achievement but for his repudiation of Hitler's racial ideas..."


 

The first meaningful email I got this morning was from the University of Alumni Association congratulating 4 Notts students for carrying the olympic torch in London. I later glided to UBC homepage to download something completely different. BOOM again, the first flash news was about UBC olympic representatives. Then, it sunk in that there is only 28 more days to the 2012 London Olympics. Well, my memory of olympics dates back some 3 decades ago when I was still a thinny whinny bit. I have indelible photographic childhood memories from our cute black and white Sanyo TV. No doubt that these memories are endless but here are selected few divided into groups: 1)  Cartoons (e.g., yabadabadoo - the Flintstons, Stingray, the Muppet Show, Tom & Jerry, the Incredible Hulk, etc); 2) TV Shows & Sit-Com (e.g., Hawai'i Five O), Miami Vice, Star Trek, the Jackson 5, Different Strokes, the Cosby Show, Good Times, the Jeffersons, Sanford & Son etc) and 3) Documentaries and World Politics (e.g., the Ethiopian Civil War, Apartheid in South Africa, Jesse Owens biography, etc).

"...Ohio State was not desegregated at the time so Jesse Owens attended school there which meant that he  had to live off-campus, he was not able to eat his meals with his white colleagues and there was no scholarships for him so he had to work on multiple jobs in order to pay his tuition..."





Well, this reflection is about Jesse Owens - even as I write, I can still hear the loud chants from the TV screen "Jesse Owens" as he returned from the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. As a child, I understood nothing more about the complex world or racism, discrimination, slavery and violence. But those photographic images have stuck with me and have gradually transformed my thinking into curiosity and now incessant drive to contribute towards building a knowledge society to enhance social justice, equality and respect for diversity. Jesse Owens was, is and forever will be my hero.

"When Jesse Owens came back from the Berlin games, he was greeted with a hero's welcome. They had a ticket-tape parade for him in New York city that was a celebratory reception for him at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel and the irony is he had to take the freight elevator up the reception because he was black"


Because of his inspiration, talent and humility today many of African descend have gone on to set world records and more...to yours and your unborn generations to come - HAIL TO JESSE OWENS!