woensdag 16 mei 2007

Studs Terkel 2


Om opgewekt naar bed te gaan.

Hij is mijn held, een van de allergrootste journalisten ooit en hij leeft nog, 95 jaar oud, Studs Terkel. De auteur Jan Donkers kent hem en heeft mister Terkel geinterviewd voor de VPRO. Give 'Em Hell, Mr. Terkel. Nooit cynisch geworden, altijd opkomend voor de onderkant, met een geweldig respect voor iemand anders persoonlijke integriteit en de waardigheid van gewone medemensen. Hij heeft een prachtig gezicht, een van de mooiste mensen die ik ken.

Amy Goodman van Democracy Now schrijft:

'Give ’Em Hell, Mr. Terkel
Posted on May 15, 2007


Studs Terkel, the great journalist, raconteur and listener, turns 95 this week. He was born in New York City on May 16, 1912, to a tailor and a seamstress. He says: “I was born in the year the Titanic sank. The Titanic went down, and I came up. That tells you a little about the fairness of life.”
His life’s work has been to tell the stories of the working class, the down and out, the forgotten and ignored. I interviewed him in a Chicago studio, his white hair made even more unruly by the headphones he puts on to hear better. His hands leaning on his cane, Studs exclaims: “Ordinary people are capable of doing extraordinary things, and that’s what it’s all about. They must count!”
Characters pour forth as Studs spins the stories of hundreds into a coherent tapestry of this century just past. His recall is extraordinary, his store of anecdotes prodigious. Without missing a beat, Studs threads together early icons of the labor movement, from Eugene V. Debs, to anti-Vietnam War organizer David Dellinger, one of the Chicago Seven charged with organizing the famed protests in Chicago in 1968, back to legendary miser Hetty Green.
He has written a dozen books, won the Pulitzer Prize, had a play produced on Broadway, won the National Book Foundation Medal for distinguished contribution to American letters, the George Polk Career Award and the presidential National Humanities Medal. He hosted a daily radio show on WFMT in Chicago from 1952 through 1997.
His parents moved to Chicago, opening a rooming house. There Studs learned of the essential dignity of work, of working people, of self-esteem. The residents worked in tool-and-die factories, on ships that plied the Great Lakes, and, sometimes, as prostitutes. He watched the devastation these folk endured when the Great Depression hit. The workers sat around then, drinking and fighting. Studs feels passionate about the New Deal, and about its Works Progress Administration, the WPA, which put people to work during the Depression. “Working class means you work!” he shouts. “With shovels and rakes. And there was work for artists!” In fact, work for him. Though he graduated from University of Chicago Law School, he was a WPA actor and writer. “There were artists and painters and dancers and singers. This was all part of the New Deal!”'

Lees verder: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20070515_give_em_hell_mr_terkel/

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