Aug 28 2008
August 28th – Then and Now
The following is a very personal story from Jeff Blum, Executive Director, USAction
Sitting here in Denver and anticipating going to this historic speech tonight, I’m reminded that my adult life has been book-ended by August 28th. As a 16-year high school student, I attended the march on Washington D.C. on a bus rented by my synagogue on August 28, 1963. Standing in that hot sun with my family, I was called to dream what seemed to be a distant dream of what our nation could be.
Three months later, I cut class with some of my friends to return to Washington D.C. for an entirely different purpose. This time, we stood in another crowd and watched as John F. Kennedy’s casket pass us by on its way to the nation’s Capital. The dream seemed dim on that day.
America has changed a lot since that time; some changes clearly positive, some, not so much. Yet those two events helped shape my path into a lifelong activist for democracy and justice, which is the work of USAction.
Our country is facing new challenges and new opportunities that we could not have imagined back then. Who would have thought that 45 years later, I would be sitting in a sports stadium listening to Barack Obama receive his country’s nomination for the Presidency of the United States of America?
This Thursday night, on August 28, 2008, as President Kennedy said, “That torch will be passed to a new generation of Americans—one who is unwilling to witness or permit the slow undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed.
As we noted at our founding convention 10 years ago, the 1848 Seneca Falls conference was the first national event in the struggle for women’s right to vote. On the 88th anniversary of this conference, I watched the soul-stirring speech from the first female front-runner for U.S. President, telling her 18 million followers to “keep going”.
We here at USAction are firmly committed to helping people from all walks of life and all backgrounds find their voices, respond to this nation’s challenges and demand that our leaders live up to the rhetoric and promises during their time in office.
I believe we are ready to take up the torch that was passed to us from the previous generation. I believe that America is now impatient for big, visionary change that will improve people’s lives and call for peaceful resolution to world conflict. We need elected leaders who will challenge us to think bigger. Who will offer us leadership batons of our own, and who will show us new ways to make our American democracy truly one of liberty and justice for all in the 21st Century.








