Recent interviews with Jackie Kennedy Onassis have been the subject of recent BBC broadcasts, and, as usual, a comment or two taken out of context (or even in context) can sound sort of sensational ( apparently Martin Luther King Jr. was drunk at John F. Kennedy's funeral and made loud derisive remarks at the time about the service, for which Jackie never forgave him. And so on).
There are also her fascinating memories of the Cuban Missile Crisis, which was the closest the world came to nuclear Armageddon in the Twentieth Century and avoided it only because Nikita Khrushchev, a survivor of the horrors of WWII in Russia, could not bear to face another massive upheaval of the life of the world and also inflicting incredible amounts of new suffering on the then-Soviet people who were still reeling from both the earlier war and the reign of terror of Josef Stalin...(At the time, it was seen as a face-off in which Khrushchev "blinked first'...also witnesses in Cuba later testified that Fidel Castro was actually ready to have a nuclear war and his kind of insane anti-American fanaticism totally shocked Khrushchev).
Leaving Jackie aside for a moment, ( hard to do, granted what a life she had) I am inspired tonight just to go back to John F. Kennedy's book "Profiles in Courage," which had a profound impact on me when I first read it ages and ages ago --the book had been around for some time before I got to it, but it was still a revelation to me then.
I have just re-read a summary of the book and find it fascinating what I have remembered and what I have forgotten.
Here is the summary from an internet site of the U.S. Senate:
Profiles in Courage
John F. Kennedy (1956)
John Kennedy had long been interested in the topic of political courage, beginning with his senior thesis at Harvard. The thesis, later published as Why England Slept, was a study of the failure of British political leaders in the 1930s to oppose popular resistance to rearming, leaving the country ill-prepared for World War II. Kennedy’s election to the House in 1946 and the Senate in 1952 gave him personal experience in dealing with the conflicting pressures that legislators face. When Kennedy took a leave of absence from the Senate in 1954 to recover from back surgery, it gave him the opportunity to study the topic of political courage. The project resulted in the publication of Profiles in Courage, which focuses on the careers of eight Senators whom Kennedy felt had shown great courage under enormous pressure from their parties and their constituents. His own battles with physical pain and his experiences in World War II as a PT boat commander also gave him inspiration.
The subjects of Profiles in Courage are John Quincy Adams, Daniel Webster, Thomas Hart Benton, Sam Houston, Edmund G. Ross, Lucius Lamar, George Norris, and Robert A. Taft. Each chapter from the book is summarized below.
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