One Small Voice
Jesse Hartman
Issue date: 11/6/08 Section: Opinion
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We all remember the story of the Dutch boy who upon seeing the trickle of water leaking from the dyke ran over to it and stuck his finger in the hole, staying there all night until someone came and got him in the morning.
Now, the Dutch see this as an important story because as it states on a commemorative statue, it represents their constant struggles against the waters as much of Holland's land is taken from the sea with only the dykes there to keep the ocean from reclaiming it. I choose to see this as a very visceral allegory of the potentially overwhelming power that a problem, which starts out small, can eventually wreak.
The trickle of water through the dyke is like the small concessions that we make every day or allow to go unnoticed because, well, it's only a small trickle and our dyke is a mighty structure that has been there forever. We believe that our institutions and the things we value will not ultimately corrode or be inundated by these seemingly small allowances because these small decisions will have no ultimate or lasting hold over anything of importance.
The removal of the Kinsey Confidential from the newspaper and smaller ordinances (i.e. no wearing 'scary' Halloween costumes by the Greek gods and goddesses on the Halloween dress up day) are both examples.
Independently they seem like small changes or changes that we should not take too seriously or waste time writing opinion columns about, but collectively they represent a serious schism between the ideals of the community and the ideals of the administration who are meant to be the vanguards of our educational interests.
I will remind you of the lesson of the Dutch boy. He knew and understood that the small trickle would eventually lead to a bigger hole and that bigger hole would lead to a weakness of the whole dyke and eventually the whole town and countryside is underwater.
While I don't claim to be the boy with his finger in the dam, I wouldn't even know how to do that nor would I have the fortitude to stand their all night in the cold, but I am pointing to the trickle and yelling for help.

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1
Rachel
posted 11/13/08 @ 3:04 PM CST
The word you were looking for is dike: an embankment, ditch levee.
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