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Long before reality television shows like Survivor, some people walked across the United States and Europe to Russia on real-life, Survivor-like projects. This is the inside story of one of those break-down-the-walls projects during the height of the 1980s Cold War by a journalist trained to be as objective as possible. The walk was covered by more than 2,000 newspapers and other media outlets. The participants met officials in all countries, including Russia, in an effort to get them to reverse the arms race and work together for the good of humanity. The book details the sometimes intense internal conflicts of this project and others. The book covers the dangers that included one participant of a 1987-88 march in India being hit by a bus and almost dying. It is a timeless story of not just trying to walk through barriers like the Berlin Wall, but of attempting to break through internal walls, unseen walls between fellow human beings, walls between one's self.
"Have feet, speak Truth" is a shorter, earlier version of "Walking through the Wall" by the same author.
"...A courageous story....You have made an important contribution to the cause of peace." -- Robert Ellsberg, Orbis Books, Maryknoll, NY
"Yours is a fine mission, and I send you every encouragement as you walk across our great nation for the cause of peace and understanding among all peoples." -- former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, Atlanta, GA
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Subjects
antinuclear movement, peace movement, world peace, peace walk, environment, Berlin Wall, Cold War, Soviet Union, Antinuclear movement, Peace movements, Political science, Travel, Voyages and travelsPeople
Dale James Outhouse, Kevin James Shay, Adele Kushner, Pamela Blockey O'Brien, Ronald Reagan, Mikhail GorbachevPlaces
United States, Washington, DC, New York, London, Paris, Dublin, Brussels, Frankfurt, Berlin, Vienna, Budapest, Geneva, Moscow, WarsawTimes
1984-1988Showing 3 featured editions. View all 3 editions?
Edition | Availability |
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1
Have feet, speak truth: My four year odyssey around the world & other journeys
January 1, 1999, Shay Publications
Paperback
in English
- 1st ed., rev edition
1881365735 9781881365730
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WorldCat
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2
Have Feet, Speak Truth: My Four-Year Odyssey Around the World and Other Journeys
January 1999, Shay Publications, Random Publishers
Paperback
in English
1881365751 9781881365754
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zzzz
Libraries near you:
WorldCat
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3
Have feet, speak truth: my four year odyssey around the world & other journeys
1993, Shay Publications
in English
- 1st ed., rev.
1881365735 9781881365730
|
aaaa
Libraries near you:
WorldCat
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 167-168) and index.
Classifications
The Physical Object
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Excerpts
“I made it,” I smiled. “I busted through that Wall.”
Patrick nodded. “Does it look any different from this side?”
I turned around and stared for a moment. “Naw, it looks about the same.”
Three years later, East Germans would march out of the country. Many would stay and fight for freedom and political reforms. Police would violently squelch protests in East Berlin.
Gorbachev would call for hard-line East German leader Erich Honecker –the designer of the Berlin Wall –to retire. Honecker’s successor, Egon Krenz, would allow people to freely walk through the Berlin Wall to try to retain power.
And the Berlin Wall would tumble down.
So would Krenz, as just three weeks later he would be ousted in the midst of political reforms. My sister, Kathy, would observe the strange, joyful scene of people from both sides ripping apart the Berlin Wall while touring Europe herself. And she would bring a piece of that Wall home.
But on that cold, gray day in November 1986, it was hard to foresee such earth-shattering events as I stood on ground that I had been forbidden to walk upon a year earlier.
As I looked closer, the structure began to not even look like a Wall. It just looked like any other man-made structure.
Maybe that’s the key to walking through the Wall, I thought. You have to first see it as not being a Wall, even though everyone you know still sees it as a Wall.
In my mind, I saw the peace walk button I tossed the year before, flying over that structure from the other side, to be picked up as a keepsake of another attempt to break through.
Then the Wall disappeared.
And I saw my hand reaching out to another.
“C’mon, Patrick,” I said. “We’ve done all we can here. Let’s go home.”
Brings home the purpose of the project, getting through the ultimate symbol of division, the Berlin Wall, several years before that wall came down for good.
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