• Sojourn to the Past: An Interview with Writer Kevin Woo

    Kevin Woo is one of our longtime writers, and he's always finding great stories to share with readers. His latest, "Stepping Forward," is one of the best articles he's written for us. It tells the story of Sojourn to the Past, a 10-day field trip across several states that educates today's youth about the U.S. Civil Rights movement. It's more than that, though. Students on the trip learn valuable lessons about inclusion, freedom and identity, and their lives are ultimately changed. 

    Since it's such a great story, I reached out to Kevin for more background on the story and his development of the narrative. I also wanted to know how he see this story applys to meeting professionals. 

    One+: Why is this story important for meeting professionals to read?Kevin Woo

    Kevin Woo: What struck me as I wrote this story was how important it is to look beyond your own personal bias or preconceived notion of a meeting destination and as a result reject it as a possibility before you’ve had the time to think about the message you’re trying to send or the atmosphere you’re trying to create for your attendees.

    When I got this assignment I thought, “Alabama? It’s probably a regional meeting destination, since no one from a big city would want to go there, so that’s what I’ll focus on.” I was wrong. Selma, Montgomery, or Birmingham, Alabama, may never be on a meeting planner’s Top 10 destinations list but they should be, depending on the time of meeting you’re organizing and atmosphere you’re trying to create. For example, if you’re a meeting planner and your job is to organize an HR or team-building event I can’t think of a better place than Alabama.

    Look at what happened throughout the state 50 years ago—protest marches, rioting, beatings, church bombings, assassinations, lynchings, etc. Today, in museums throughout the state, there are tributes to Dr. Martin Luther King and his Southern Christian Leadership Conference that stand alongside artifacts depicting the history of the Ku Klux Klan. That’s powerful.

    If a meeting planner wants to send the message that a group of people can overcome anything, no matter how difficult the task, walk through a museum in Alabama.

    Sure, destinations such as New York or Chicago are more fun, and those cities offer more things to do. But so much of what all of us do each day is tied to working together and for a common cause, I can’t think of anything more powerful than seeing historical pieces from Dr. King and the KKK under the same roof. Fifty years ago, no one would have thought that would be possible. 

    One+: What was your research and writing process like for this story?

    KW: The research process for this story was the longest and most thorough I’ve conducted for any piece I’ve written thus far. I easily read 2,000 pages of background material starting with the Sojourn to the Past binder, ancillary materials that are given to the students, and the book, Walking With the Wind, by Congressman John Lewis.

    I read old newspaper clippings from the 1950s and 1960s to get a feel for how the press covered the events at that time, and I watched a lot of videos on YouTube to get an idea of how the events were covered on television.

    Most of my time was spent interviewing the subjects. I spent hours talking to them and having them take me through the events of the day and explain how their lives have been impacted in the 50 years since.

    I spent a lot of time talking with Jeff Steinberg, who was able to put the information gathered through interviews and the material that I read and watched into context with how he teaches Sojourn to the Past.

    One+: What drew you to this story?

    KW: I must admit that I never realized I ignorant I was, and still am, about the Civil Rights Movement before writing this story. My only exposure to the Civil Rights Movement was the PBS documentary, Eyes On The Prize, thumbing through old Life magazines when I was a kid and watching the movie Mississippi Burning

    Sojourn to the PastIn part, my naiveté is due to the fact that I am too young to remember the events as they happened. What captivated me was the fact that high school students would ride buses for 10-days through five southern states to learn about the Civil Rights Movement. That fact alone fascinated me, and I wanted to know why they did it. As I read about each stop the students made along the way and its historical significance, the light bulb went on. I understood the story, why the sojourn is important, and now I think every high school student should go on the sojourn and be exposed to the people who made history.

    One+: What did you learn from the story?

    KW: I’m not sure that I fully grasp all that I’ve learned from the story. I am ashamed that I don’t know more about this period of American history. I never stopped to think about my right and duty to vote, but as we approach this presidential election I’m very aware of the people who risked their lives and died for the right to vote. I view this presidential election differently than I’ve viewed past elections.

    My “ah ha” moment has yet to come. I’ve been invited to join a Sojourn next year. I’m going to have the chance to meet the people I’ve written about. I’ll have the opportunity to break bread and ride the buses with them; and I’ll have a chance to spend 10 days with 150 high school students as they make commitments to themselves about hatred, what to do when they seeing someone being terrorized, non-violence and whether or not to be a silent observer when they see bad things happen.

    Being with Jeff Steinberg, Elizabeth Eckford, Reena Evers and 150 students is going to change my life. Walking into the 16th Street Church with Maxine McNair, Denise’s mom, and standing in parking lot of the Lorraine Motel where Dr. King was killed, will, I’m sure, humble me. I’m looking at the trip as one for the ages and something that someone my age should feel blessed to be invited to attend.

  • Arizona Bill with an Alabama Twist

    This past Wednesday Alabama captured the nation’s attention when a federal district judge ruled on the state's controversial immigration law, HB 56. "This is an Arizona bill with an Alabama twist," Alabama Rep. Micky Hammon, one of the bill’s co-authors stated.

    A number of provisions make the Alabama law the strictest immigration legislation in the country.  The law upheld by U.S. District Judge Sharon Blackburn contains such hotly contended provisions as:

    • Public school officials are required to check the immigration status of students
    • Nullification of any contracts entered into by an undocumented person 
    • Arizona's "reasonable suspicion" clause which grants law enforcement the authority to check the status of people they have “reasonable suspicion” of being undocumented and can detain suspected undocumented persons

    Similar legislation in Utah, Indiana and Georgia has been blocked by federal judges.  As other states fight for enactment of immigration law similar to Alabama's, how should the meetings and events industry respond?  We’d like to hear your thoughts.

    Associate Professor Tyra Hilliard from the University of Alabama recently conducted a WEC session which included the topic of state immigration law.  For information and updates on legislation and industry advocacy, stay tuned to PlusPoint and Engage.

  • Pork Rinds

    I received the following press release today, and had the compunction to share with you, our dear PlusPoint reader, this one example of the vast amounts of ridiculous nonsense our public relations counterparts fill our inboxes with each day. 

    MEDIA ALERT: Local Business Donates Truckload of Pork Rinds to Birmingham
    WHO: Southern Recipe
    WHAT: Southern Recipe, Dallas-based and the world’s largest manufacturer of pork rinds, and is donating $10,000 of their signature snack to The Today Show’s Lend a Hand Tour in Birmingham, AL. Southern Recipe is sending volunteers to help with the secret pork rind delivery as a surprise to the Alabama Soup Kitchen to aid the tornado disaster relief.
    WHEN: June 16 at 7:00 a.m. EST

    MEDIA CONTACT: To arrange an interview with an executive from Southern Recipe LIVE from Birmingham, or for more information on Southern Recipe donation, please contact Kate Finley, 614-794-2008 or email Finley@rmdadvertising.com.

    Yes, Southern Recipe thinks that the one item victims of the recent storms need is pork rinds.
  • Pulitzer Hotel w/Pulitzer Library

    Coastal Fairhope, Alabama, will soon be home to the world's first Pulitzer Hotel, complete with a lobby Pulitzer Library. The hotel is being built by Mac Pulitzer, the great-grandson of Pulitzer Prize founder Joseph Pulitzer and son of New York Times best-selling author Roxanne Pulitzer. 

    "I had never heard of Fairhope until I met my wife, Kourtney," Pulitzer said. "Kourtney's extended family is from Fairhope, and she vacationed in Fairhope, swimming in Mobile Bay and roaming the scenic downtown area. My wife and I have visited Fairhope many times, and each time I learned more and more of the incredibly rich literary history in this place which sits on the highest sea cliff from Maine to Mexico." 

    Fairhope is home to two Pulitzer Prize-winning authors, two Pulitzer Prize nominees, 14 Oscar nominations, six Academy Awards, four New York Times best-selling authors and many other acclaimed authors. 

    "During the last couple of years I have been looking for the perfect place to open a luxury boutique hotel," Pulitzer said. "About eight months ago Kourtney's uncle, Mike Bernhardt, showed me a parcel of land he was developing right in the heart of the downtown area, and I knew immediately this was the location for what I had in mind." 

    Fairhope and the surrounding area is or once was home to the following.  

    • Author and Pulitzer Prize-nominee Winston Groom, whose Forrest Gump was nominated for 13 Academy Awards and won six 
    • Pulitzer Prize-winning author Rick Bragg and Pulitzer Prize nominee Fannie Flagg, whose Fried Green Tomatoes was nominated for an Academy Award 
    • W.E.B. Griffin, a New York Times best-selling author with 40 million books in print in 10 different languages 
    • Andy Andrews, author of best-seller The Butterfly Effect  
    • Watt Key, author of Alabama Moon, which is soon to be released as a major motion picture
    • Jimmy Buffett, New York Times best-selling author, singer, songwriter and composer  
    • Tom Corcoran, author of The Mango Opera; Sonny Brewer, author of The Poet of Tolstoy Park
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