Barbara Terao

Terao.jpg

I feel a lifelong connection to the United Nations because of the book, Three Promises to You, by Munro Leaf (1957). It summarized, at a child's level, the purpose of the United Nations. The Three Promises of the book's title are: No war, Fair treatment for all human beings, and Better living for everybody by sharing what we know. With Leaf's cartoons, we learn that "Whatever you look like, YOU are an important human being--a person."

 Inside the front cover I wrote in childish print, "Do not take this Book. Please because it is Barbara's Book. Thank you." The irony of my less-than-generous request and my tight grip on a book about sharing and caring only occurs to me now. Later in life, I happened to formally begin my Buddhist practice, with its goals of both inner and outer peace, on October 24, which is United Nations Day.

 How are the global promises of the United Nations fulfilled? We can walk toward peace, equality, and shared knowledge day by day. Perhaps the promises are a direction more than a final destination. With my father, who gave me the book, I marched against war and stood up to bulldozers. Now that I am an adult, I can, at the very least, open my tight little fist to share the wisdom of the book's message. This is the legacy of my father and my promise to my children.

Barbara Wolf Terao

Barbara Wolf Terao is an author, mother, and grandmother from Northfield, Minnesota; and Evanston, Illinois; now living in the Pacific Northwest. Her memoir, Reconfigured, is available wherever books are sold and her Substack essays can be found at barbaraterao.substack.com/p/quote-and-tote

Previous
Previous

Jim Dorr

Next
Next

Manny Brown