I should not have been working yesterday; after all, it was
a National holiday - the celebration of Martin Luther King, one of the most
influential people on my life.
"I have a dream when my four little children will one day be judged
not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character."
Most all our country's State and Federal workers had off yesterday. They were
shopping, running errands (you know how working can delay picking up one's dry
cleaning), perhaps even lingering longer at the gym.
"Yes, if you want to say that I was a drum major, say that I was a
drum major for justice. (Amen) Say that I was a drum major for peace. (Yes) I
was a drum major for righteousness. And all of the other shallow things will
not matter. (Yes) I won’t have any money to leave behind. I won't have the fine
and luxurious things of life to leave behind. But I just want to leave a
committed life behind. (Amen) And that’s all I want to say."
My Dad came to this country in 1938; at 16, barely speaking English, he was
scared but confident young Jewish boy. He attended DeWitt
Clinton High
School which produced people such as the writer James Baldwin
and Marty Glickman, the Jewish Olympic sprinter (and later, a New York sports announcer) who experienced
the wrath of anti-Semitism while Jesse Owens “ran down” Hitler and his Nazi ideology.
Who did my Dad pal with while in high school? Not the white boys who teased him
for his accent and religion but the young black boys who felt equally similar
persecution and negative behavior. My Dad remembered his friends his entire
life.
Growing up, it seemed as if I spent more time in Harlem than in the Five Towns
on Long Island. Clothes, haircuts, home
furnishings and other things purchased came from my Dad’s high school friends.
Even as Dad became more successful, he never forgot his friends and he always
worked with him in his professional business and our family’s personal life.
One generation passes on relationships to the next one.
Just as bigotry is taught and learned, so is righteousness. Yet there are times
when to change people’s attitudes, beliefs, and values, it is necessary to
create statutes. Hence, the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
[Within a few hours of passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
President Lyndon Johnson signed it into law in a nationwide television
broadcast from Washington,
passionately speaking about why the CRA was required.]
“We believe that all men are created equal - yet many are denied equal
treatment. We believe that all men have certain inalienable rights. We believe
that all men are entitled to the blessings of liberty -- yet millions are being
deprived of those blessings, not because of their own failures, but because of
the color of their skins.”
“The reasons are deeply embedded in history and tradition and the nature
of man. We can understand without rancor or hatred how all this happens. But it
cannot continue. Our Constitution, the foundation of our Republic, forbids it.
The principles of our freedom forbid it. Morality forbids it. And the law I
sign tonight forbids it...”
In principle, recruiting is pretty much to most companies about exclusion. You
may not want to admit it and HR as a function may not want to admit it, but
when was the last time YOU were interviewed and the recruiter actively looked
for ways to uncover reasons to include you and move you on to the next step
(and further, fought for you because they saw things that the hiring manager
has not seen)? Do you actively recruit for inclusion versus exclusion? Or do
you bow to the pressures of the hiring manager - or the organization - and (whisper,
whisper) keep looking for the perfect candidate?
[Benjamin Mays and the Rev. Martin Luther King promised each other: He
who outlived the other would deliver his friend’s last eulogy. On April 9,
1968, Mays made good on the promise.]
“I close by saying to you what Martin Luther King Jr. believed: If
physical death was the price he had to pay to rid America of prejudice and injustice,
nothing could be more redemptive. And, to paraphrase the words of the immortal
John Fitzgerald Kennedy, permit me to say that Martin Luther King Jr.’s
unfinished work on earth must truly be our own.”
The fact is that at any point in time, everyone benefits from the CRA. Too
young or too old, too black or too white, too tall or too short, too thin or
too fat, too much hair or too bald, too placid or too outspoken. As recruiters,
we spend too much time working under rules of exclusion as opposed to
inclusion. No one said recruiting was easy; you can always find another
profession if it’s too much work. Remember what Dr. King died for; remember
what LBJ had to do to pass the CRA.
No, I’m glad I worked Monday. As usual, I continued to drill down past the
resume looking for reasons to include people. Looking for possibilities is not
only civil but it’s my job.
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comments
Nice Post Steven
posted 1/24/2008 at 10:58 a.m. PT by Martin Snyder
Yup, I read your blog every time I see a new post....
I really think the USA is moving (not everyone of course) beyond racism into the much more exciting world of classism. Obama has surprised a lot of people, but I don’t think he surprised very many people from the business world at all.
Today, and with nearly all the younger folks I know, where you live, what you drive, how you speak, and what you buy are now way more important than the color of your skin.
I would even go so far as to say that many Americans see dark skin as a fashion item; well accessorized, it can be quite pleasing aesthetically. I’m sure that a great many white folks would rather be black than fat, for one example.
Yet you are so right about recruiting (especially at the high end) being an exclusionary exercise. It will never change, because the core of the human walnut brain only knows a few things; dominance and submission, youth and vigor, in-group amity and out-group enmity.
Classism is corrosive (like racism) and will rot a society and culture just as surely, but there is precious little said about it, and anyone who goes after it is said to be engaged in class-warfare.
Good luck trying to hire a poor person; these days, its always their fault and it's moral failures that made them poor, so who would want them as employees* ?
* Other than for the dirty jobs, of course……SOMEBODY has to keep the country running by sitting on a tractor, walking a warehouse, or assembling stuff……
Taking martin Luther King Day Off
posted 1/25/2008 at 8:03 a.m. PT by Cathy Neal, AIRS CIR
My husband and I utelize our personal day and take it off every year. There are tons of memorial celebrations at musems and churches in just about every city if you would like to take the day off next year. It's a great way to celebrate with family and friends.
To work or not to work on Martin Luther King Day
posted 1/29/2008 at 8:25 a.m. PT by DeeDee Doke
In 1991, I worked for a US daily newspaper serving military communities that had little sense -- as have all American communities -- about how to properly observe Martin Luther King Day. Some chose to observe the day by hosting commemorative bowling tournaments. I decided to investigate whether Dr. King bowled, because this seemed such a ludicrous expression of "respect" for a great man. I spoke to one of his colleagues on the phone who suggested to me that the best thing to do on Martin Luther King Day was to go to work -- to celebrate the fact that equal opportunities provisions, many of them brought about by Dr. King, allowed Americans of all races and ethnicities to have meaningful jobs. I think he had the right answer.
Eloquent Post
posted 2/2/2008 at 7:04 a.m. PT by Sue Danbom
I agree that exclusion is something that we as recruiters face daily.
My hope is that with the managerial changing of guard, (Boomers out and X-er's in) a more open-minded way of hiring will emerge. Candidates will be considered for what they can accomplish for the organization, not what mold they fit into. We as recruiters must be advocates for that. I don't share the vision that things will "never change." They are changing at warp speed.
(From a Stodgy, old Boomer.)
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