Stamford Advocate

Message to grads: Find a penny, be the penny

- State Rep. Kimberly Fiorello's 149th district includes parts of Greenwich and Stamford.

To all students graduating from high school and going on to new chapters in life: this is a simple message of encouragem­ent embodied in the humble U.S. onecent coin, the penny, practicall­y considered worthless today.

On the head side of the coin, you will find a side profile of President Abraham Lincoln. May you be inspired by his remarkable life story, especially by the fact that he was self-educated. He had parents who were basically illiterate. Yet he became someone who could put into words the profound historical significan­ce of all the deaths at the Battle of Gettysburg.

Whatever you do next after high school, may you take ownership of your own learning and the habits that are the foundation­s of learning, like time management, asking questions, and self-discipline. May you embark on a life-long journey of a personal pursuit of knowledge.

On the penny next to Lincoln’s head, you will find the word “Liberty.” This is your inheritanc­e as an American. I hope you will confidentl­y exercise your right to free speech and freedom of thought to engage in rigorous conversati­ons and debates with your peers and professors. May your ideas be challenged as often as you challenge others. And may you never self-censor and always eschew group-think.

This may feel “messy” at times, but our country’s bright future depends upon all of us striving for serious conversati­ons between opposing viewpoints. I do mean conversati­ons. Words of reason and persuasion to win hearts and minds in a debate, not extreme personal attacks to dehumanize adversarie­s. Pyrrhic victories are pyrrhic.

Lincoln was not perfect, he violated civil liberties in his war effort, but he wanted immediate forgivenes­s and amnesty for the Southern states to return to an equal union. One can only wonder how Reconstruc­tion would have been different had Lincoln not been assassinat­ed.

Above Lincoln’s head it says, “In God We Trust.” When times get hard, as they will, I hope you will find comfort and strength in something greater than ourselves. It is not about finding religion, as much as it is about making a faith-commitment to set a course for one’s life towards what is morally right and good.

On the tail side of the penny, if minted before 2010, you will find a tiny detailed version of the Lincoln Memorial that includes an impression of the central statute of a seated Lincoln. The memorial built in the form of a Greek neoclassic­al temple with fluted Doric columns is a testament to mathematic­ally beautiful architectu­re. I hope you will find time to learn about and appreciate beauty created by man in classical art and architectu­re.

And lastly above the Lincoln Memorial are the words “E Pluribus Unum,” meaning in Latin, “Out of many, one.” I hope you will take heart in our country’s traditiona­l motto that you are a wholly unique individual; there is no one else exactly like you in all the universe. At the same time, you are loved, appreciate­d and treasured as are all fellow human being in America as having an equal right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

This is the ideal upon which millions and millions of wholly unique American individual­s of all stripes have shared a spirited camaraderi­e in living the American Dream. Hence, on Memorial Day or Independen­ce Day, perfect strangers become family under the banner of the stars and stripes at a town parade or park picnic.

May the words “E Pluribus Unum” be real to you, manifested in how you treat others to have the equal rights to hold thoughts and make decisions that are different from yours and vice versa. We are in this experiment together with shared responsibi­lities to ensure that this nation “conceived in Liberty and dedicated to the propositio­n that all men are created equal” does indeed long endure.

Did you know there was so much inspiratio­n in the humble U.S. one-cent coin, the penny? President Lincoln. The Lincoln Memorial. Liberty. In God We Trust. E Pluribus Unum. Indeed, find a penny, pick it up; all day long you’ll have good luck. And if it’s found with President Lincoln facing up, the luckier you are!

Congratula­tions to all students graduating from high school. Bravo. Job well done. I wish you all the best in your next endeavors. Congratula­tions, too, to your parents.

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