"He's dead, get over it!" reads the bumper sticker seen around town in the
state that once inspired the term "Minnesota Nice." The "he," of course, is Sen.
Paul Wellstone, who died with his wife, daughter and colleagues in a fiery
crash in the tamarack bogs of northern Minnesota one year ago this weekend.
Those who sport that withering sentiment, on their bumpers or in their
hearts, don't deserve a further thought. But those who lost their lives do. We
remember them, we mourn them -- and we know all too well that they are dead.
Veterans know it, from the absence of any voice in the Senate to question the
shoddy treatment of our armed forces -- those serving heroically yet
indefinitely in Iraq, those lying injured in substandard medical barracks back home,
those facing pay cuts and reduced benefits for their sacrifices, those being
buried at services their commander in chief has chosen not to attend.
Working people know it, when they see their benefits cut, their pay frozen,
their pension funds depleted and their opportunities dead-ended by the loss of
nearly 3 million jobs since President Bush took office.
Teachers know it, as they grapple with overcrowded classrooms, rigid and
unfunded mandates and slashed "extras" like art, music and gym.
Families know it, when they suffer financial catastrophe because the
insurance industry won't cover treatment for their mentally ill children.
Women and children know it, when they find that the programs that once
offered them health and safety from domestic violence -- programs for which Paul and
Sheila fought -- are no longer funded.
Voters know it, as they watch presidential contenders quibble over who did or
didn't oppose the war in Iraq, as Paul did with his courageous "no" vote in
the final days of his toughest campaign.
Old-school Republicans -- and just about everyone else -- know it, when only
a few bubbles of dissent swirl in the wake of a proposal to spend $87 billion
more for a vague and bloated nation-building scheme in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Seniors, farmers, environmentalists, immigrants, firefighters, parole
officers, nurses and parents know it -- as do, most of all, the surviving families of
those who died.
But tragedy often begets action.
In just one year Wellstone Action, a nonprofit organization designed to
educate and motivate people to get engaged in the grass-roots political process,
has gotten off to a vigorous start, conducting Camp Wellstone training sessions
across the nation.
The Sheila Wellstone Institute, a program of Wellstone Action, has been
created by a broad coalition of domestic violence organizations. (The institute
will hold its first national conference in Minneapolis on Nov. 13, with Arizona
Gov. Janet Napolitano, a leader in efforts to end domestic violence in America,
as the keynote speaker.)
"Carry It Forward," a documentary film about the Wellstones, is underway,
being funded by hundreds of small neighborhood house parties all over Minnesota.
It will be released in time to inspire voters to turn out in the 2004 election.
So about that bumper sticker: Yes, he's dead. But in these new projects,
wrought of grief and gilded by love, the spirits of the dead live on.
As for getting over it? Sorry, not an option. If you really want to help, rip
that nasty bumper sticker off your car and get to work.
Susan Lenfestey (SooLen@aol.com) is a Minneapolis writer.
© Copyright 2003 Star Tribune
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