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FORUM Lessons from Nehemiah I Ernie Pitt This & That This is part of the speech given by Ernie Pitt aI the Hous ing Authority of Winston Salem's Residents Recognition Banquet on July /. Pitt was the event's keynote speaker. To the honorable Mayor Joines; Dr. Reid (Lawrence), our chief exec; my fellow com missioners; award recipients, HAWS residents; staff; manage ment; ladies and gentlemen: Why they keep asking me to speak to you all, I really can't say. All I know is that I am hon ored to be in your presence in such a positive environment, with such wonderful people. And I mean that sincerely. And since I do not proclaim to be a speaker as such. I will make my comments as brief as possible especially since that was a part of my overall instructions. Now, Mrs. Young says I ought to have been a preacher. In fact, she thinks I am one. Nothing wrong with that except, as Dr. Lawrence always reminds me. I really was cut out to be a preacher; I just wasn't sewed up right. However, it is interesting that Mrs. Young feels that way about me because tonight 1 real ly am going to preach. Yeah...that's right...I'm going to preach. I'm going to preach because in preparing some remarks for this evening. I did n't want to just come in here and feed you all a bunch of accolades and false compli ments. I wanted my talk tonight to have some profound meaning to you. The only place 1 knew of where I could find something truly meaningful was in the Bible. As I was perusing through the text, I remembered the story of Nehemiah. You all are famil iar with Nehemiah because it was last week's Bible school lesson. A good friend of mine. Ben Ruffin. also used Nehemi ah as the subject of one of his speeches, and I was totally enthralled by it. 1 hope you will relate to it the same way I did. As the story goes, the Jews who were able to escape into exile were back in the province but were in trouble and dis graced because the wall of Jerusalem was in ruin. When Nehemiah heard about this, he immediately offered up a prayer asking God if He would bless him to go and repair the wall. As God's servant, knowing what he knew about the covenant made between God and Moses, Nehemiah wanted to make things right and whole again. He asked the king to grant him written protection so that he would not have any problems when he got to Jerusalem to work on the wall. Of course, when Nehemiah had recruited other workers to help him, they were immediate ly attacked, ridiculed and scoffed. They were despised for trying to restore the wall. They suffered all manner of mockery and insults. Even some of those working with Nehemiah were complaining and griping. When Nehemiah's opposi tion heard that real progress was being made on rebuilding the wall, they actually tried to set him up to kill him. But Nehemi ah was being lead by God and he trusted in God. So the plot didn't succeed because Nehemiah wouldn't leave the wall to go where they had requested a meeting. Nehemiah, through all of the schemes and plots, would not leave the wall. He stayed on the wall until it was finished. And when it was finished, all of his enemies lost confidence because they realized that it was Almighty God who was behind Nehemiah. What is this message that Nehemiah has so eloquently conveyed to us, and how is it relevant to us today? All of you award recipients have been servants of God. You have been servants to the (Housing) Authority, and you have been servants to the many people you have impacted. I am sure that you have been confronted with many obstacles along the way. Nevertheless, you didn't quit; you stayed on the wall. Even when your friends asked you, "Why are you doing that? They don't care about you," you stayed on the wall. When people turned their backs on you...you stayed on the wall. When your friends and enemies alike didn't believe, you knew what you were doing...you stayed on the wall....When perhaps you doubted yourself in ways...you stayed on the wall. When you were down and out...sick and didn't think you could make it...you stayed on the wall. I All of you sitting in here know the problems that we all have experienced for the past five or six years or so. And I say to you tonight, we are here hon oring you because we stayed on the wall. Our wall is not completed, but I know it will be because God has given us the job to complete this wall. I know deep in my heart that my fellow com missioners, Dr. Lawrence and the rest of the staff are all going to...stay on the wall until it is finished. So I congratulate all of you for staying on the wall. Stay up there until your job is done. I have faith in all of you that the job will be done. Thank you and God bless you. Ernie Pitt is the publisher of The Chronicle and the chair man of the Housing Authority of Winston-Salem Board of Com missioners. E-mail him at erpitt@wschronicle.com. Homosexual High Armstrong Williams Guest Columnist A good measure of the gov ernment is how it spends our tax dollars. So let us consider what New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is doing with our hard-earned money. Despite across-the-board tax increases, Bloomberg recently funneled $3.2 million into Harvey Milk High School, which calls itself "the nation's first accredited public high school designed to meet the needs of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and ques tioning youth." Just one thing: High school age children simply aren't emo tionally ready to make radical decisions about their sexual identity. What child, for exam ple, knows for certain that he or she should have a sex change or engage in sodomy the rest of his/her life? Yet the creation of a gay public high school passive ly encourages children to make these decisions, decisions that will follow them around every time they fill out a job applica tion asking what high school they attended. Proponents of the homosex ual lifestyle.consider it a stun ning victory. But there remains something particularly insidious about indoctrinating children in order to push the homosexual agenda into the mainstream. Nonetheless, Bloomberg has signed on, ostensibly to protect our children from all of the bate-spewing antagonists out there. "I think everybody feels that it's a good idea because some of the kids who are gays and lesbians have been con o Michael Bloomberg stantly harassed and beaten in other schools," Bloomberg told The Associated Press. No doubt these things happen, but segre gating homosexuals in their own high school does nothing to confront the discipline prob lem that underlies the abuse. And a fat lot of good it does for the vast majority of homosexual - or merely effeminate - stu dents who remain in public schools. Instead of building a wall around a couple hundred stu dents. why not address the real problem by, -instituting a zero tolerance rule for bullies who harass other students based upon their ethnic, social or cul tural heritage? Because the alternative is to create separate schools for every group that perceives itself as oppressed - blacks, Jews, members of the occult whose ancestors were enthusiastically tortured during the Salem witch-hunts, etc. Truly, this is an alarming thought. For 200 years public education in America has brought diverse groups togeth er. It has socialized a vast tapes try of individuals and allowed for the friction of diverse minds to generate progress. Are we ready to turn our backs on that tradition by willingly segregat ing ourselves? Has our culture become so soft and marshmal lowy that we feel every child who is picked on is owed his own special corner of the uni verse from which to learn. That's a warm and endearing thought. But it also removes words like individual striving from the cultural dialogue. The bottom line is, all soci eties have a certain propensity toward aggression and malice. At some point, children have to get out there and join the fray. Along the way, they may get picked on. And we should remain deeply sensible about that possibility. But splintering our public school system - our society - along sexual, ethnic and cultural boundaries does lit tle to help the situation. This kind of self-segregation only encourages tribal ignorance and hate. See Northern Ireland. See the Balkans. See the United States circa 2003. This is the new American myth. Gone is the "rags to rich es" ethic. Now it's "woe is me, give me some special treat ment." In this country it is now taken for granted that the princi ples by which our culture has traditionally functioned are no longer deemed appropriate. Those who engage in a homo sexual lifestyle are the victims of social intolerance, not subtle destroyers of tradition. In fact, they even deserve their own schools. It's a desperate situa tion. made worse when Mayor Bloomberg and countless others enthusiastically tote the homo sexual agenda. They think this is a good thing, a PC thing - just one more indicator that our cul ture has become unhinged. www.amrslmngwilliams.com Nigel Alston is on vacation. His Motivational Moments column will return next month. Gntu^i Real Estate for the Real World Barbara Brown Century 21 Muyfleld & Hill Properties, Inc. 250 Executive Park Blvd.. Suite 107 Winston-Salem, NC 27103 Cell: (336) 692-0970 Barbara.Brown2@century21.com ? h ? Ikrmrd Iradrmart of ( 21 Hral tjhk ( onwratfcw < 2UMI I rnlur> 21 Real I .1.1. ( ur|nraU.Hi. Aa ?<4iul Uppunaailt < ?apaay ? Mu.l Huwla* <>w>.-nua?. ??h CENT! Rl 21 IMIkT I. InR.^ad.nllt Oawd aad <H?r.lrO A Han ??????I SCHOOL OF BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS tS.2!!wl EVENING MBA PROGRAM KiiIwWHII *ilh concentrations m: tfilj N Financial Services ? Health Care Management ElTi 3 Management Information Systems ? General MBA Campus Bo* 19311 ? Winston-Salem, NC 27110 phone (336) 750-2344 ? email: mba@wssu edu School Update! We're newly renovated. Check out St. Leo School for affordable private school education. PS-Grade 8. Call 748-8252 for tours and information. Visit @ www.stleocatholic.com Rep. Larry Womble NC House of Representatives 71st District Tel (336) 784-9373 Fax (336) 784-1626 E-Mail: LWistm@aol.com Home Address 1294 Salem Lake Road Winston-Salem. NC 27107 Louise E. Harris ? Bankruptcy ? Consumer Problems ? Traffic Tickets & DWI ? Divorce ? Eldercare Law 102 West Third Street. Ste. 485 Call 24 Honrs Winston-Salem, NC (336) 761-0222 Specific Parenting Skills Needed: Loving children regardless of their behaviors Providing a temporary or a permanent home Building self-esteem in children Providing Independent Living Skills Developing character Mentoring If you can do these things YOU can make a difference in the lives of children between the ages of 1(1-16. PLEASE CALL: I Brigitte Lindsay. Recruiter , Forsyth County DSS Foster Home/Adoption Services 727-2446 OR 727-2023 The Chronicle The Choice for African-American News 617 N. Liberty Street Winston-Salem. NC 27101 The Chronicle was established by Ernest Pitt and Ndubisi Egemonye in 1974, and is published every Thursday by Winston-Salem Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc. The Chronicle is a proud member of National Newspapers Publishers Association ? North Carolina Press Association ? North Carolina Black Publishers Association ? Inland Press Asso ciation National Advertising Representative: Amalgamated Publishers. Inc., 45 West 45th Street. New York. NY 10036 212/869-5220 Contact Us: Himmie 336 / 722-8624 k 336 / 723-9173 iMs*gifa! www.wschronicle.com nkiUm: news@wschronicle.com Copy tditor 723-8448 Circulation 722-8624 Solos Staff 722-8628 Businoss Office p Paul Collins Ericka Asbury Paulette Lewis Andrea Moses TheChronicle Home Delivery Subscription Order ? YES, Please send me The Chronicle ? 2 years: $40.95 out ?r county/state i r 1 1 " t-l/> -JO : >rars 54595 J 1 year: $30.72 i year ^12 i ? 6 months: $20.48 }*?** i 3 iTlos IS.24 Name Address Phone |. - City Suae * Ejji ? VISA ? Mastercard ? American-Express ? Check enclosed ? Please bill me Account Number I \punon Dole 853*55 Send to: The Chronicle. P.O. Box 1636. Winston-Salem, NC 27102
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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