Where were you born?

"Whether you are a national or a foreigner depends upon the accident of birthplace. I could just as well been born a Russian, an Englishman, or an American. For the state to value the nonessential accident of birthplace higher than the essential of birth itself, one’s life, seemed to me degrading and undignified. It seemed to me that I was born to live for humanity, that the importance of being born was that and nothing else." 

Freedom to Live: The Robert S. Hartman Story; Hartman, 2013, p. 15

I was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA – I am an American. But I could just as well have been born an Australian, a Ukrainian, a Cuban, or a North Korean.

Where was your birthplace?

Does your birthplace determine your value?

Hartman spent his life searching for the answer to the following question. What is the value of a human life?

Recently, I was heartbroken by a comment made by one of our Institute Board Members during our quarterly Board Meeting who shared with us that they will likely face some challenges in getting a travel visa to attend our annual conference here in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, in October.

This caused me to reflect, and I am also posing the following questions for your reflection:

Is their freedom to live of less value than mine?  Than yours?

Who gets to determine this?  The accident of our birthplace?

Does the value of a human life change according to the time, context, and circumstances in which you were born and in which you currently live?

What is the value of your life?

Edward Korbal

Organizational consultant elevating leadership, culture, and purpose through formal axiology, self-leadership, and values-based transformation. Founder of Cycle of Experience.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/edward-korbal/
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Recap of the 2023 Archives Trip