Do It Anyway
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For decades, rising generations of idealistic young Americans have launched into life crying, 鈥淪ave the World!鈥 But are today鈥檚 youth still being roused by this altruistic call? Or have apathy and entertainment drowned it out?
In her latest book, Do It Anyway: The New Generation of Activists, under-35 author/activist Courtney E. Martin stands up in the face of such skepticism. 鈥淲here is your generation鈥檚 outrage?鈥 a respected professor asks her in the book鈥檚 introduction. And when famed New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman branded her kind 鈥淕eneration Q,鈥 with suggestions that today鈥檚 newest batch of young adults 鈥渕ay be too quiet, too online, for its own good, and for the countries own good,鈥 her defiance peaked.
But it was President Obama, while on the 2008 campaign trail, who 鈥 in Martin鈥檚 opinion 鈥 gave a new face to the instinctive drive young people have to 鈥渟ave the world.鈥 Obama鈥檚 was a call for change in the 21st century, and Martin watched as the hope inspired by his words moved thousands of her 鈥渜uiet鈥 20-something contemporaries to action.
Still, true change does not come from presidential directives. Martin suggests, instead, that 鈥渁ctivism is a daily, even hourly, experiment in dedication, moral courage, and resilience.鈥 鈥淒o It Anyway鈥 is a tribute to such a contention, and leads readers to the front lines of those quiet battles. In answer to those who think the next generation has replaced protest signs with ever-wandering computer mice, readers get to meet nine beautiful, daring, complex young American activists 鈥 eight subjects, plus the author herself 鈥 who each day are working to change the world for the better, even as they are also simply trying to find their way.
There鈥檚 filmmaker Emily Abt, who traded in her efforts 鈥 though not the lessons learned 鈥 as a social worker to pursue a passion for making films with purpose.
鈥淚 was doing what I thought I was supposed to be doing, but I wasn鈥檛 effective.鈥 And in the end, she says, as a filmmaker, 鈥淚 fought harder to tell the story of a welfare recipient than I ever fought for one as a caseworker.鈥 There鈥檚 Raul Diaz, whose work as a prison reentry social worker is what he believes he鈥檚 meant to be doing right now. At home in the streets, Diaz was bold, and could see others鈥 goodness. 鈥淗e would ask full-fledged gangbangers to donate drug money for Easter egg hunts and movie nights for the 鈥榣ittle homies.鈥 鈥 And there鈥檚 Nia Martin-Robinson, an impressive, down-to-earth, environmental justice advocate who went from Detroit to Washington, D.C., representing a minority voice in the environmental movement.
Each profile takes the reader from what the subject does today back to past experiences that hint at the shaping of his or her motivation and values. In addition, Martin offers her own ruminations on the meaning of it all. These stories explore not so much the 鈥渉ow鈥 of activism but rather the 鈥渨ho,鈥 and 鈥渨hat,鈥 and 鈥渨hy,鈥 that lie behind grass-roots movements. Martin works hard to slide in beside her subjects and to show us some of what they see, including their own vulnerability. In the process, she ventures beyond journalistic objectivity and aligns her book with her own particular beliefs and ideology. So, in other words, don鈥檛 expect to meet people who are fighting the anti-abortion fight or toiling for tougher immigration crackdowns or hosting 鈥渢ea parties鈥 here. This book itself is an act of activism, biased perhaps, but true to Martin鈥檚 own vision of a world being made better.
Martin is speaking first to her cohorts, hoping to reinvigorate the healthiest parts of their outrage, call attention to certain social struggles, and inspire toward action. Yet there is also an invitation for an over-40 crowd, wherever their sociopolitical ideas may sway, to listen for a few moments to what a rising group of thought-leaders is saying. And whoever joins in will have a chance to savor the satisfying prose of a gifted writer 鈥 easy, inviting, and profound.
鈥淒o It Anyway鈥 offers no blueprint as to how to be an effective activist. Instead, it portrays a 鈥渨ildly complex, horrifically hypocritical, overwhelmingly beautiful world,鈥 alongside of which walks the hopeful human spirit, expressing both a sense of faith in the moment and in mankind. It is a call to 鈥渄o it anyway鈥 despite overwhelming odds and oft-times abject confusion. For 鈥渙ur charge is not to 鈥榮ave the world,鈥 after all; it is to live in it, flawed and fierce, loving and humble.鈥
Speaking through her book, Martin does so live here, with stunning, effective lucidity.
Forrest Brooks Wilder, a freelance writer living in St. Louis, has worked in the nonprofit (social change) sector for the past decade.