Heroes for My Son (9 page)

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Authors: Brad Meltzer

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—
MOTHER
—
clara hale

Foster mother. Harlem resident. The heart of Hale House.

Clara Hale turned a Harlem brownstone into a refuge. For over twenty years, she cared for infants born suffering from drug withdrawals and HIV/AIDS. For those children—and all the people who joined in to help—Hale House was proof of the power of one person.

 

 

S
he started with the foster kids, raising forty of them, eight at a time, in her Harlem residence.

At sixty-three years of age, Clara Hale thought she was done.

Then came the drug-addicted mother with the two-year-old falling from her arms. Clara couldn't refuse.

Soon, twenty-two infants of drug-addicted parents were in Clara's five-room apartment.

 

City officials weren't impressed. Despite her 90 percent success rate, they tried to shut her down.

 

It didn't stop Hale House. Or Clara.

 

People started sending their own money—like the Englishman who called, looking for the “old lady of Harlem.” It was John Lennon. He gave her $10,000.

 

Clara kept taking them in: children born addicted to crack, those dying of AIDS, the ones no one else wanted.

 

When she died at eighty-seven, Clara had helped raise almost one thousand children of every race and ethnicity.

 

She didn't have money.

She didn't have power.

Clara Hale had love.

It was endless.
*

Go to her house some night, and maybe you'll see her silhouette against the window as she walks the floor talking softly, soothing a child in her arms—Mother Hale of Harlem.

—Ronald Reagan

—
THE GREATEST
—
muhammad ali

Boxer. Prognosticator. Personality.

Muhammad Ali's grace and tenacity, combined with his rope-a-dope style, made him the undisputed heavyweight champion of boxing. He didn't just fight boxers, though. He took on the U.S. government, which charged him for refusing to serve in Vietnam. But what made him most powerful was his unbridled pride in himself.

 

 

N
o one floated faster.

 

No one stung harder.

 

No one taunted louder.

 

And no one—black or white, activist or athlete—brought more beauty, grace, or personality.

 

But what made him the greatest?

 

He never—
ever
—apologized for being who he was.
*

Champions aren't made in the gyms. Champions are made from something they have deep inside them—a desire, a dream, a vision.

—Muhammad Ali

I hated every minute of training, but I said, “Don't quit. Suffer now and live the rest of your life as a champion.”

—Muhammad Ali

—
ORATOR
—
barack obama

President.

The journey of Barack Obama, the forty-fourth president of the United States of America, is just beginning, but even his critics acknowledge the amazing story of everything it took to arrive at the White House.

 

 

W
hat do you call the son of a Kenyan economist and a girl from Kansas?

 

A black boy raised by white grandparents in a cramped two-bedroom apartment in Hawaii?

 

A rebellious student who scooped ice cream at Baskin-Robbins?

 

An idealistic college graduate searching to make a difference?

 

A law professor still struggling to make peace with the memory of his father?

 

A senator who favored the power of
hope
, igniting generations of believers?

 

You call him proof that, in America, anyone can be president.
*

I will never forget that the only reason I'm standing here today is because somebody, somewhere stood up for me when it was risky. Stood up when it was hard. Stood up when it wasn't popular. And because that somebody stood up, a few more stood up. And then a few thousand stood up. And then a few million stood up. And standing up, with courage and clear purpose, they somehow managed to change the world.

—Barack Obama

—
NOVELIST
—
harper lee

Author of To Kill a Mockingbird.

In 1960 Harper Lee's first and only novel began influencing readers' perceptions of race and innocence. It is perhaps the most celebrated American novel of the twentieth century.

 

 

S
he didn't think the story was there.

 

Five years after starting, she was convinced her novel wasn't worth a damn.

 

Maybe she should've become a lawyer after all.

 

It was then that she threw open her window and tossed the manuscript out, scattering it in the filthy snow.

 

In a fit, Harper Lee called her editor Tay Hohoff. No one knows what Hohoff said to her.

 

But when Harper Lee hung up, she went outside, gathered the pages, and saved the manuscript.

 

She revised and revised and revised—until
To Kill a Mockingbird
was ready.
*

I think there's just one kind of folks. Folks.

—Scout

According to the Library of Congress,
To Kill a Mockingbird
is second only to the Bible in being most often cited as making a difference in people's lives.

It is the only novel Harper Lee ever published.

—
ARCHITECT
—
thomas jefferson

Author of the Declaration of Independence. Thinker. Statesman. President.

Thomas Jefferson was delegated by the Continental Congress to write a document proclaiming the colonies free from British rule. His Declaration of Independence became America's first words.

 

 

F
or seventeen days, the thirty-three-year-old secluded himself in a rented room in Philadelphia.

 

On a small, portable desk, he began writing, laying the foundations of this new American government. Unlike every nation before it, this country's heart would not beat with the blood of royal lines. This would be a nation based on ideals.

 

It took Thomas Jefferson seventeen days to find the right words. Seventeen days of writing and rewriting before he nervously presented his document to John Adams and Benjamin Franklin.

 

The Declaration of Independence became the greatest decree in Western civilization.

 

Jefferson could've easily taken credit for writing it. But he never bragged about his accomplishment. Even when he was elected president, most Americans never knew he was the author of their independence.

In fact, his authorship didn't become common knowledge until years later after his death.

Because to Jefferson, the Declaration of Independence was written not just
for
all of America, but
by
all of America. It was the manifestation of a new nation and a new mind.

 

He was merely the messenger.
*

In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock.

—Thomas Jefferson

—
IMMOVABLE
—
mahatma gandhi

Spiritual leader. Political icon. Pacifist.

Through nonviolent civil disobedience, political and spiritual leader Mohandas Gandhi united India in a struggle for independence. Known as Mahatma—“The Great Soul”—he fought for religious tolerance, economic self-sufficiency, and the end of British rule over his country. He went to prison. He fasted. He preached. But Gandhi never raised his hand in anger. It worked.

 

 

O
ne day, you will fight.

 

So how should you fight?

 

With your fists? With threats? With words? With weapons?

 

They all work. They've been tested—successfully—for centuries.

 

But to fight by purposely avoiding violence?

 

To refuse to raise your fist, no matter what is raised against you?

 

Some would call that
lunacy
.

 

Madness
.

 

But what it really is, is
courage
.
*

In a gentle way, you can shake the world.

—Gandhi

Whenever you are confronted with an opponent, conquer him with love.

—Gandhi

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