U.S., Hungary, 2010, 1989, 1956

Martin Luther King's birthday is an official holiday in the US, but King's example of non-violent resistance is not a US idea. So once again we have decided this non-traditional version of We Shall Overcome is appropriate. I've heard and sung this in churches, union halls, in the streets and in concerts for four decades and it inspires wherever and whenever it is sung. This 1996 version features Diana Ross in full concert hall regalia, backed by a symphony orchestra. The venue is Budapest, Hungary and more than one member of the orchestra and the audience were undoubtedly thinking of their own history. A bloody uprising in 1956 was savagely put down by Soviet troops. It was the simple act of opening their border with Austria in 1989 that started the unraveling of the Soviet Union.

One day they did overcome. An American holiday. But a universal hope:

More like this

I am powerfully affected by music. I've sung in countless demonstrations, concerts, benefits over the decades and through all those years, We Shall Overcome has been perhaps the most powerful anthem in the many struggles against affronts to dignity and the battle against hopelessness. It rang…
Today is Martin Luther King's birthday. It is a holiday in the US but has a universal meaning. Because I am powerfully moved by music I could only commemorate it with music. There are three songs in the two videos that follow. The first is the great Billie Holiday singing Strange Fruit. The "…
In his proclamation honoring Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday, President Obama reminds us of the value of service, and of the value of education. "Education can unlock a child's potential and remains our strongest weapon against injustice and inequality," the President writes. Education was at…
Last night, I had the absolute pleasure to hear Midori, one of the top violinists in the world, play with the Oregon Symphony Orchestra. (For those of you wondering, she was spectacular.) What does Midori sound like? Here's her playing Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto fifteen years ago with the…

Beautiful. Once again, thank you.

By GrannySue (not verified) on 18 Jan 2010 #permalink

Thank you!
I'd like only to add that while the act of removing the border fence in May 1989 might seem simple, the events that made it possible ware anything but:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolutions_of_1989
I suppose you know that but some might think, why the border fence did not fall earlier?

By hat_eater (not verified) on 18 Jan 2010 #permalink

Fortunately for the Hungarians, the Soviets allowed them to do so. Had a hard-liner been in power, it would have been 1989 all over again.

Well, had a hard liner been in power in the USSR, there would be neither Solidarity legalization nor the Round Table in Poland so the rest of the members of the Warsaw Pact would not make a peep. And the whole communist block would crumble later and probably quite violently.

By hat_eater (not verified) on 19 Jan 2010 #permalink

You've been in a church??

Joe: LOL. I've been in many, not just for political meetings. I am diligent about family obligations (Mrs. R.'s family and children's in-laws) and do it cheerfully and without demur. I am nothing if not a good sport. The fact that lightning has not struck any of the structures during my visits is further evidence there is no God.