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WilliamPitt

(58,179 posts)
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 02:30 PM Jun 2015

Robert Kennedy died today.

I wrote this a bit more than a year ago.



The Lost, Lingering Legacy of Robert F. Kennedy

Forty-six years ago, on the fifth of June, 1968, the presidential campaign of Robert F. Kennedy came to an abrupt and horrific end. Having just given his victory speech after winning the Democratic primary in California, Kennedy was struck by three bullets fired by a man named Sirhan Sirhan in the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel. He clung to life for a time at the Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles, and died early the following morning.

History, as recorded, has a way of focusing on the primary colors of a particular individual's impact. The Robert Kennedy who is generally known is remembered to be the son of a rich industrialist, the right-hand man of Senator Joseph McCarthy during the Red-Scare witch hunts, one of the original architects of the Vietnam War debacle, the Attorney General, the Senator, and finally, the brother of an assassinated president. His own run for the presidency in 1968 lasted 82 days, and ended on a dirty kitchen floor in Los Angeles, with his life's blood pumping into the empty air along with the hopes and dreams and aspirations of millions.

But Robert Kennedy - son of the oligarchy, scion of a family of the ruling elite after his two older brothers were laid low by war and another assassin - was so much more than that. When President John Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas in November of 1963, Robert Kennedy was destroyed. Annihilated. Ruined utterly. He disappeared within himself and his overwhelming sorrow for a time, emerging eventually to win a US Senate seat for New York in 1964...and that is when the new, true Bobby Kennedy emerged.

You see, Bobby Kennedy had been a child of exceeding privilege and astonishing power from the moment of his birth. At no point, from his birth until his dying breath, did he ever know want, or hunger, or discrimination. When his brother was murdered in Dallas, however, the comfortable world of Robert Kennedy exploded, and for a time he was lost...and then he found himself anew, reborn, and unleashed himself upon American politics as an avatar for the poor, the downtrodden, the sick, and the hopeless.

The all-encompassing agony of his brother's murder, the bottomless loss he felt in the aftermath, birthed him again into the real world, and he saw the pain endured by so many people, and shared it as if it was his own, and went to work to try and fix it immediately.

Robert Kennedy, in the mid-1960s, ventured where few American politicians dared to go. He went to rural Mississippi, and saw Black children living in squalor with distended bellies because they were starving to death, right here in America. He went to places like the Pine Ridge Reservation, where Native Americans lived with no jobs, no running water, no electricity, and no hope. He went to the urban core of American cities, where Black youth seethed at the utter disdain the so-called "American Dream" had for them, and reached out his hand, and swore he would make things better.

There are two stories about Robert Kennedy that stand out in my mind, one well-known and the other nearly unheard-of.

The first story, well-known: Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated on April 4th, 1968, just as Kennedy's campaign was getting underway. Kennedy was in Indianapolis, slated to give a speech to a large crowd of Black supporters. When he arrived, no one in the crowd had heard the grim news, and it fell to Kennedy to tell them.

(snip)

Every major American city burned that night, as the rage in the aftermath of King's murder took hold...except Indianapolis.

The second story, far less known: Robert Kennedy had been an advocate for Native Americans since well before his time in the Senate, and had visited a number of reservations over the years. His work was so appreciated by Native Americans that the National Congress of Indians in 1963 adopted him into the tribes, and bestowed upon him the name "Brave Heart."

During his 1968 presidential campaign, he had only two days to spend in his swing through South Dakota, and over the bellowed protestations of campaign staffers concerned about votes, spent one of those two full days at the Pine Ridge Reservation. He spent the entire day in the company of Christopher Pretty Boy, a 9-year-old child whose parents had been killed in a car accident the week before. Kennedy sat with Christopher for hours, and when he went on a tour of the reservation, held Christopher's hand the entire time.

One year later, Robert F. Kennedy and Christopher Pretty Boy were dead.

The 1968 presidential campaign of Robert Kennedy centered on two distinct yet inseparable themes: The blood-soaked immorality of the Vietnam War, and the astonishing fact that the richest nation on Earth tolerated the enormous poverty and deprivations suffered by its poorest citizens while vomiting billions of dollars into the bucket of that war. He spent 82 days shouting these desperately uncomfortable truths from the rooftops, until he was laid low.

Forty-six years later, the legacy of his campaign, of his cause, has been all but forgotten. Today, our politicians again wage war for political and financial benefit, ignore the rampant poverty and suffering of the citizenry, and in fact work hammer and tong to devise bold new ways to rob from the poor to fatten the rich. It is all too easy to imagine the better world that may have come to pass had Kennedy not walked into that kitchen, but that, in the end, is fantasy. It happened, and we are here.

There was a time all those years ago when, for 82 days, we were given an opportunity to believe that we as a nation can be better than what we are. The legacy of Robert Kennedy is still there, lying fallow, waiting to be born anew.

The time is just right, and anything - everything - is possible.

http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/24908-william-rivers-pitt-

"Even in our sleep, pain which cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart, until, in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful grace of God." -- Aeschylus, by way of Bobby, on the day Martin Luther King, Jr. died

18 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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randys1

(16,286 posts)
1. Was listening to Ira Blue on KGO, report came in, ran to my mom and dads room and told them
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 02:31 PM
Jun 2015

my dad said "the bastards"

I met him, sort of, a couple days prior to this

he was in my hometown or where I lived at the time

hlthe2b

(102,225 posts)
3. Ted Kennedy's eulogy for his brother, Robert, remains one of the most wrenchingly poignant
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 02:33 PM
Jun 2015

& beautiful that I've ever heard.

RIP, Robert, Teddy, and John.

jwirr

(39,215 posts)
13. Yes, and the death of his brothers went a long way in creating Ted's greatness as well. Forged in
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 04:23 PM
Jun 2015

fire.

CaliforniaPeggy

(149,583 posts)
5. Oh, wow, my dear Will...
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 02:42 PM
Jun 2015

What a hauntingly beautiful eulogy it is.

I feel so much despair. We continue to allow the PTB to rob us and cheat us of what our birthright really is. We have not learned the lessons of Bobby Kennedy or of Martin Luther King, either.

We must keep trying.

Thank you for this great post.

mnhtnbb

(31,382 posts)
6. In the mid 70's I worked with a black RN who was on duty in the ER
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 02:48 PM
Jun 2015

at Good Sam the night they brought Robert Kennedy in.

I still get chills remembering her first person telling of the story. What a horrific
night that was.

marym625

(17,997 posts)
7. beautiful.
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 02:51 PM
Jun 2015

You make me feel, deeply, whatever you write about.

I was 19 days shy of 5 years old when Robert Kennedy was murdered. Yet, I remember everything. Coming from an Irish, Catholic family, with a grandmother the same age as Rose Kennedy, they were part of our family. I know most Irish Catholics felt the same way.

We watched the funeral train as it crossed the country. We went to mass and we prayed. We cried with the Kennedys, with the country and with the world.

So, being just 19 days shy of 5 years old, it was indelibly marked in my mind and my heart.

Thank you for sharing your beautiful tribute, William Pitt

Hepburn

(21,054 posts)
8. My then boyfriend and I were at a drive-in movie
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 03:45 PM
Jun 2015

We both were attending UC Santa Barbara at the time RFK was shot.

I returned home to my apartment in Isla Vista after the movie and turned on the TV and there it was. OMG...I sat up all night watching. Really nothing was on the screen. Just could not leave my place on the couch.

What a horrific loss.

Faygo Kid

(21,478 posts)
11. Thank you. I posted a video, and let's keep remembering.
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 04:03 PM
Jun 2015

Long time ago, but those of us old enough to remember need to recall the dream for those who don't recall.

 

CanSocDem

(3,286 posts)
12. Great essay.
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 04:14 PM
Jun 2015


"The legacy of Robert Kennedy is still there, lying fallow, waiting to be born anew."


K&R

.
 

craigmatic

(4,510 posts)
15. He probably could've turned around the 60's but there's no way the party bosses would've let him get
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 04:30 PM
Jun 2015

the nod. This is illustrated by the fact that Humphrey won without ever competing in the primaries. Hell even Gene McCarthy should've got a chance to be on the ticket but was cast out. 1972 or 1976 would've been Bobby's time.

hfojvt

(37,573 posts)
16. "His swing through South Dakota"
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 04:40 PM
Jun 2015

That's where I remember seeing him. Actually I just remember waiting to see him at the airport with a large crowd. Don't actually remember seeing him. Swinging through South Dakota at all is kind of a waste of time when it comes to seeking votes. Even McGovern could not carry his own state in a Presidential election, although, strangely enough, Carter came close, and then promptly threw South Dakota under the bus in the name of deficit reduction.

As I understand it, RFK stopped at my hometown because it was also a hometown for the current Vice President, one Hubert H. Humphrey.

pangaia

(24,324 posts)
17. Thank you for posting this.
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 05:07 PM
Jun 2015

I was a college music student when I heard that JFK had been shot. It was just before an orchestra rehearsal. When I reached the rehearsal I knew nobody else knew. I told the conductor. He was, well.....
When the orchestra was in place, he announced, forcefully, and in a quite strong voice, with almost uncontrollable emotion, that "The President of the United States..has just been assassinated." He was just stunned. And looking back, I think he was really, reaslly pissed.

We were scheduled to rehearse the 2nd movement of the Beethoven Third Symphony, the Marcia Funebre.
INSTEAD, in a move that has affected my life ever since, he chose to rehearse the 3rd movement, the Allegro vivace.
I shortly thereafter went to JFK's funeral. I can still hear, and play, the drum cadence.

I was in Memphis, teaching at what was then Memphis State University, when MLK was assassinated. The night before I had been downtown playing a jazz gig. After the gig a few of us went over to Beale Street and its environs to catch some after hours blues....

Little did we know...

And then, just two months later... another.....

mountain grammy

(26,619 posts)
18. Except for May 1st, the day I gave birth to my first born son, 1968 was a pretty shitty year.
Fri Jun 5, 2015, 05:40 PM
Jun 2015

I was up late (it was nearly 4 am on the east coast) nursing my infant son and watched Bobby give his acceptance speech.. "now it's on to Chicago and let's win there.." and then, boom!
So soon after Dr. King's murder, I thought, "they'll kill us all"


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