To What Do We Pledge?
US 250
Wednesday, July 29
6:00pm - 7:30pm
Central Library
Community 1A facilitated conversation to connect, reflect, and learn.
While the opening of the Declaration of Independence gets the fanfare and the fireworks—“When in the course of human events” and all that—the closing clause contains a quiet promise: “We mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor.” When we talk about the founding, we often think of it as a severing from a distant power and a proclamation of individual rights. And yet, buried in that big individualistic origin story, there is a pledge of support, solidarity, and mutual aid. Today, as we witness political violence, hostility, and polarization, this facilitated conversation invites us to explore what it means for us to be bound to one another and to ask ourselves: Is there any idea, any value, any dream for the future that we care about enough to tie ourselves to one another to protect or pursue it? What would it mean to “mutually pledge” ourselves to one another today? What would it look like? Feel like? Is it even possible?
This is a Conversation Project program sponsored by Oregon Humanities. For fifty years, Oregon Humanities has offered programs and publications that help Oregonians connect, reflect, and learn from one another. The Conversation Project brings people together to talk about their beliefs and experiences around timely and important issues and ideas.
About the Facilitator

Wendy Willis is the founding director of Oregon's Kitchen Table, a statewide community engagement program housed at Portland State University. She is also a poet, an essayist, a stitcher, and a self-proclaimed democracy geek. Wendy was raised in Springfield, but now lives with her family in Portland.
Questions? Contact emilyc@deschuteslibrary.org
AGE GROUP: | Adult |
EVENT TYPE: | Adult Program |