National Mall
Lincoln Memorial |
The 36 columns in the Parthenon-like Lincoln Memorial building are the 36 initial states. The 19 ft tall marble Lincoln sits in deep contemplation, perhaps pondering the state of our country then and now. On the walls is his second inauguration speech.
and protests in between
If you were given a voice?
What would you now say, Abe?
We walked on the trail around the Tidal Basin all the way to Jefferson Memorial. Along the trail are many of the monuments like the Korean War Memorial, MLK Memorial, Roosevelt Memorial, etc. What a grand and wonderful tribute to the ideals of democracy and our history.
We could stop only at a handful of them as we had to get back. Washington Monument was closed for repairs unfortunately so could not get an aerial view of DC. Next time.
MLK Memorial |
Washington Monument |
"Out of a Mountain of Despair, A Stone of Hope" - MLK Memorial |
"Among American citizens, the should be no forgotten men and no forgotten race" - FDR memorial |
"The test of progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much, it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little. "- FDR Memorial |
Lovely sentiments
Powerful messages
Set in stone, eons ago.
But what do we do?
We read, we admire... the words, the history.
We think we contemplate the meaning and grandeur of it all
We think we understand.
We really think we understand.
We really really think we understand.
We think we come away better folks.
Oh yes, we are now better folks.
That we do not.
Oh No, that we do not.
Glanced at words, easily forgot.
Post on social media, then forgot
It's back to 'real' life, says we
The White House
A second sightseeing jaunt happened after our Hill Day visit on Friday, Jun 21 evening. Can't leave DC without a peek at the White House.
Two of my ACI friends Lia and Rebecca accompanied us. I'm so glad they both came along as they really enlivened the outing with their lively chatter and comments.
Though The White House is just a little more than a mile away from Capitol Hill, it took forever for the Uber Driver to get to us on the steps of the US House of Representatives Building and then take up there as the traffic is pretty congested in DC.
The White House |
Opposite The White House was a man camped out under an umbrella surrounded by protest posters. Deja Vu! It so reminded me of all the protest posters that line Sproul Plaza on the UC Berkeley campus.
Poster reads "Wanted: Wisdom and Honesty" - opposite The White House |
I even met another Cal (UC Berkeley) student there. She came up and asked if I was going to Cal and nostalgically remarked that she's just graduated. And added, "Go Bears!!"
On the way to the White House, there was a quick photo stop in front of the Treasury Building.
US Treasury |
It was a super hot day and my suit jacket just got soaked with sweat. So off came the tie and jacket but could do nothing about my long sleeve shirt.
The Smithsonian
We were also hoping to catch a Smithsonian Museum if one was still open. Turns out the Smithsonian American Art Museum was still open.
Smithsonian Museum of American Art |
Feb 22 - I share a birthday with George Washington |
Except the Spanish large print book had the English version inside and vice versa.
A braille version too. My train of thought immediately went to what I'd read in Georgina Kleege's book, "More than meets the Eye: What Blindness brings to Art," and the interview I'd done with her for the A&E at the Daily Cal.
I wondered what the braille print book said - did it give a sensory description of each image or did it just verbatim copy the explanations on the wall by each picture - meant for visual people.
I'm a tactile person too in many ways, I was hard-pressed to not touch impulsively touch the images.
My class with Prof. Victor Pineda last semester also really made me think of accessibility in a whole new way.
Accessibility at the Museum |
The president who happened to sign the ADA |
What a lovely visual - showing the "emergence" of the Special Olympics |