“The farther back you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see.” ~ Winston Churchill
Life is complex. The issues our leaders face in helping our communities to thrive are not easy. Rosabeth Kanter, a noted authority on leadership, stressed that the power to construct (or reconstruct) the past creates the power to shape the future. In conceiving of a different future, movers and shakers need to be expert historians as well. When innovators begin to define a project, they are not only seeing what is possible, they are probably learning a lot about the past. One of the prime uses of the past is in the construction of a story that makes the future seem to grow naturally and in ways compatible with the community or organization’s culture.
The people who lead us should have a good grounding in history while also being adaptive. Their understanding of history should not be simplistic but should reflect all sides of an event or issue. Those who compare today’s mandates to the Gestapo or the oppression that Anabaptists faced in the 1500’s are missing the context of their current time and the historic time. I suspect that if we studied and researched the contexts of these events we would see vast differences in the intentions of those in authority, the actual issues at stake, and in the response of those being targeted from then to now.
One of the roles of museums like the Mennonite Heritage Village (MHV) are to provide a setting for people to get to know their history well. Our current exhibit ‘Mennonites at War’ is a great example of that. The exhibit shows the different sides Mennonites have had on this issue over the centuries. On September 25th, our first fundraiser event, in two years will include personal tours of this exhibit and our housebarn restoration project. An exhibit tour with its creator and curator is the best way to go in-depth. One of the objects on display is a tongue screw replica that was used on Anabaptists to keep them from sharing their new-found faith to those gathered at their stake burning. How this compares to our current mask mandate I’m not sure. Visit our website today to book your visit!