An annual tradition in our family is to go to Mohonk Mountain House on
President’s Day weekend. It’s a tradition started by my wife’s father and
stepmother and we are happy to take part in it.
This year Mohonk Mountain House is celebrating its 150th anniversary
(called a sesquicentennial if you want to use a big word and impress yourself).
As part of its observation of this milestone, the historic resort plans to
create a time capsule to be opened in 100 years. They invited all of their
guests to fill out postcards to be sent 100 years into the future, presumably
to be poured over by historians or glanced at by bemused guests in the next
century.
One hundred years ago, much of the Western world was still
recovering from the First World War, though no one would have called it that at
the time because another 20 years would pass before the next World War would
start. World War I was called simply “The Great War,” and Western civilization
had not seen anything like it. Technology had helped nations create weapons
that had not been used in large scale before and casualties were enormous. In
fact, there are still areasof France off limits today because of the plethora of unexploded
ordinance from the First World War.
Today our world is not in the after math of a great war but
rather adjusting to the dissolution of the world order that was began after the
Second World War. We have a new dominant world power in China and the world’s
greatest superpower, the U.S., deeply divided. There is no shortage of conflict
in the world that is taking a drastic human toll.
The world is still a scary, violent place, just in different
ways than it was in 1919. We didn’t have mass school shootings in the U.S. in
1919, but we had a flu pandemic that killed more than 180,000 people. We didn’t
have MS-13 gangs, but we still had anarchist bombings and labor and race riots.
It’s not a bold statement to say that the world of 2119 will be frightening to
the historical researchers who read our Mohonk postcards. Between now and then
the world will change dramatically in ways we can’t predict, but human nature
and the existence of conflict will remain.
But what is also constant, and what I tried to convey in the
card, is that while conflict is never ending, so is hope and the human drive
for improvement. As long as people have killed one another and destroyed past
civilizations with sloth and greed, they have also constructed new communities
and sought out the better angels of their natures.
In the postcard we left for the 100-year time capsule at
Mohonk, I wrote to a future that would be as conflicted and fearful as our own.
I conveyed to them that now, as will be the case then, people gathered to see
the beauty of nature and share good times with the people they loved.
I added our postcard to the gathering mass of missives to
the future, hopeful that maybe one of my great grandchildren will be enjoying
some time at the Mohonk Mountain House and get to read our note from the past.
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