1982
– The Myth of Kumbaya (Part 2, When I First Heard The Story)
(40 Summers 40 Lessons Series)
I have heard a great version of the Kumbaya song/story
on two different occasions. The first was from a great guy named “Cookie” (I do
not recall his real name). He was from the Verdugo Hills, California area and we were
sharing a bus going from VH to Pasadena and then on to camp (about a
four-hour ride in all).
Cookie was one of those tall, long legged, tan
outdoorsy people with a beard. He always had a smile on his face, and he seemed
to have his guitar with him when he needed it. He would be doing an activity
and interacting with campers and it just showed up. His guitar would be in his
hands and I would always think, “Was that there a minute ago?”
It was the summer I turned 18. Cookie must have been at
least a decade older just from how he carried himself and his demeanor.
Our responsibilities
that week were to chaperone the campers from our respective region (Verdugo
Hills and Pasadena, respectively) and make sure that they incorporated everyone
into the general camp population with the Orange YMCA (the primary lead group
for the teen session).
We shared a room at the lodge and I never recall seeing
him there other than late at night or as he was walking out the door in the
morning fully prepped for the day with his guitar on his back.
Cookie and I had some great talks in passing moments
throughout the session and late at night. It was after twilight on Wednesday of that week he said, “Let’s
go to the tent cabins” (a grouping of three cabins near the archery range where
they shared a small campfire space in between the buildings. We both had
campers that had been intermingled into those cabins and they had invited
several of the older girl’s cabin group for a late evening fire.
It was very social to begin with and Cookie and two of
the other leaders with guitars began leading songs. I was standing near the edge of one of the
cabins and he wandered over to ask if I knew the song “Kumbaya?” He had a gleam
in his face and I think he winked as he asked me about the song. I had answered
yes, and he nodded towards the fire as if to say, stand with me. And, I
did.
As he was strumming, he began telling a story about his
life and background. It was past that gloaming part of the evening. Cookie
seemed to have everyone’s attention and respectful silence without having to
do anything then stand, strum, and share.
Earlier that day, two of my campers from the Pasadena
area had been struggling with homesickness and had been feeling like they were
not part of their cabin groups. The conflict erupted as a result of a simple lack of respect for one another and a classic us versus them attitude that is ingrained in every culture.
I had intervened at the request of the overall
Camp Director. I shared with them my own attempts to be part of the staff team
even though I was not from their area. My empathy skills were still a long way in developing,
and I thought sharing my own struggle would be a way to bond and overcome the conflict.
I had also shared
with them to find someone that they admired and would want to be like, and I
used Cookie as an example. That evening they were smiling, talking to other
campers, and nodding their comfort level to me as I followed Cookie up onto the
dirt center stage.
Cookie’s story meandered about his background and he
got to a point where he shared about his not too distant ancestors who were
coal miners. He spoke of the factory towns. He spoke of how they were a lot
like camp. Everyone supported one another in good times and bad. There was a
deep connection.
His story turned as he talked about the times when a
mine collapses. The siren would blare, and everyone would run to the mine to
help or wait for word from below. His guitar strumming took a turn into the
cords of what I recognized immediately as “Kumbaya,” having had his earlier
cue.
It was magical and it captured the evening at the end
of the day of strife and homesickness as well an air of reconciliation.
“Someone was crying” went the lyrics and then they were
“Praying,” followed by “laughing” and ultimately the interpretative “Come by
here.”
By this time, there seemed to be camaraderie in the air
and my conflicted campers where all side by side hugging and swaying.
It seemed to my youthful eyes and senses; that at the end of that day, holding hands, and singing Kumbaya was a great
lesson.
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