Chicago Sun-Times

Recent events show how people continue to work to create ‘ a more perfect union’

- SETH LIMMER Seth M. Limmer is senior rabbi of Chicago Sinai Congregati­on. Sun- Times CEO Edwin Eisendrath is a member of Limmer’s congregati­on.

In 1787, when America’s founders convened in Philadelph­ia to draft a constituti­on, the union of territorie­s- turnedstat­es was not only new but fragile. At our birth, our nation was far from perfect.

Even today, the goal set out then of seeking to create “a more perfect union” clearly has not been fully realized.

We still are faced with a debasement of dialogue, unbearable gun violence, structural racism, the vilificati­on of immigrants and inequality in education, among the more obvious signs of American imperfecti­on.

Yet ours is still a time in which people are working hard to make America more perfect. Witness the events of just the past two weekends.

June 23 in Washington, D. C., was the culminatio­n of the Poor People’s Campaign’s 40 days of protests and civil disobedien­ce. Led by the Rev. Liz Theoharis and the Rev. William Barber, an interfaith gathering covering more than two blocks of the National Mall shared a vision of America that was inclusive and supportive of all, especially those who have been marginaliz­ed by the brutality of poverty.

On June 30 in Chicago and across the nation, we saw no fewer than 700 marches as people protested what has been the president’s policy of separating families at the border. In Chicago, an estimated 60,000 people gathered in and around Daley Plaza, despite the dangerous heat and stood unified to remind us all that our nation has long celebrated immigrants and their contributi­ons.

Then, there is this weekend’s protest against the scourge of gun violence, with the Rev. Michael Pfleger and Pastor Chris Harris leading Chicagoans in a march on the Dan Ryan Expressway to call attention to our city’s insufficie­nt response to shootings and killings.

July 4, 1776, was the birthdate of our nation. America was founded neither complete nor perfect but as a project to continue to create — through growth, evolution, good government and citizen protest — the most perfect nation we can.

The perfection of America never has been solely in the hands of our elected officials. The work of ensuring that we live up to our highest ideals is the work of every American. Reassuring­ly, many of us are taking to the streets to play our part.

 ?? JAMES FOSTER/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? People take part last week in the “Families Belong Together” rally at Daley Plaza.
JAMES FOSTER/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES People take part last week in the “Families Belong Together” rally at Daley Plaza.
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