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Ronald Reagan’s RainbowPaul Kengor
Paul Kengor is author of God and
Ronald Reagan. He is also professor of political science at Grove
City College and a visiting fellow with the Hoover Institution. Ronald
Reagan was a man who had it all. It is difficult to identify an American
who lived a fuller or greater life—what he understatedly called “An
American Life.” In nearly everything he did, Reagan succeeded wildly.
When he left his parents’ home in 1932, he landed a coveted job in
radio. Then came the movies and television, in the heyday of each
medium. In the 1930s, when most of America suffered, Reagan soared. By
the 1940s, he was one of the top box office draws in Hollywood and
received more fan mail than any actor at Warner Brothers except Errol
Flynn. His hosting of the number-one rated television show, “GE
Theatre,” from 1954 to 1962 made him one of the most recognized names
in America. Of
course, after that, he entered politics and twice won the governorship
of the nation’s largest state and the presidency of the world’s most
powerful nation. And I’m certain that his epitaph will be that he was
the president who won the Cold War. Where
did this record of achievement begin? It started with humble origins: at
the Rock River at Lowell Park in Dixon, Illinois, where a teenage Reagan
was a lifeguard 7 days a week, 10 to 12 hours per day, for 7 summers. He
was the rock at the Rock River, always watching. He saved the lives of
77 people there: “One of the proudest statistics of my life,” he
said later. Saving a drowning victim is not easy under any circumstance,
but it was especially difficult in the treacherous Rock River, where the
swirling water is so deep and murky that swimming there today has long
been banned. Still,
the job was a labor of love for Reagan. “My beloved lifeguarding,”
he later called it. Even when Alzheimer’s meant he couldn’t
recognize his closest friends when they visited him in his Los Angeles
office in the 1990s, Reagan could point to the painting on his wall, a
colorful illustration of the spot where he patrolled the Rock River, and
longingly reminisce. On
November 5, 1994, Ronald Reagan handwrote a letter informing the world
that Alzheimer’s disease was riding him into “the sunset of my
life.” That choice of words was astonishing: Alzheimer’s is a
horrific disease that robs memories. In just a few years, Reagan
wouldn’t even remember the White House. How
could he refer to that impending doom as the sunset of his life? Was he
ignorant of the disease? Not at all. As president, Reagan made eight
separate statements on Alzheimer’s—an average of one for each year
in the White House. It is chilling to read those words today.
Alzheimer’s, said Reagan, is an “indiscriminate killer of mind and
life”—a “devastating” sickness that “deprives its victims of
the opportunity to enjoy life.” [It]
ranks among the most severe of afflictions, because it strips people of
their memory and judgment and robs them of the essence of their
personalities. As the brain progressively deteriorates, tasks familiar
for a lifetime, such as tying a shoelace or making a bed, become
bewildering. Spouses and children become strangers. “Slowly,”
reported Reagan, “victims of the disease enter profound dementia.” Reagan
had unwittingly forecast his own demise. So,
how could Reagan, obviously knowledgeable of Alzheimer’s, describe the
onset of his disease as a coming sunset? I’ve watched sunsets on the
California coast, indeed from the very “Ranch in the Sky” that
Reagan did. The answer was Reagan’s secret weapon: his optimism. He
called it an eternal optimism, a “God-given optimism.” He
first discovered that gift through his mother, Nelle Reagan, who (along
with Nancy) was the most important person in his life. Nelle instilled
in her son the Christian faith so fundamental to his very being. She
taught him that the twists and turns in the road are there for a reason.
The bad things are part of “God’s plan” for the good. There is a
rainbow waiting around the bend. God, Reagan reasoned, was in control
and worked everything for the best. Reagan
preached this theology in his memoirs and in countless private letters
that today sit in the Reagan Library. It became a kind of grief
ministry. He would write to a widow: It’s
a tragedy that your husband died and I write to send my deepest
condolences; if it’s any comfort, God has a plan . . . In
1962, the woman who shared such thinking with Reagan, his mother, died
of what the family called “senility”; what we today would likely
diagnose as Alzheimer’s. Yet, Reagan remained optimistic. His
mother’s death, he told friends, was a step through an eternal
window—to that rainbow waiting around the bend. “How
we die is God’s business,” Reagan told his daughter Patti. Our duty
is to accept it. As a 17-year-old, he wrote a poem called “Life.”
Here is a revealing excerpt: [W]hy does sorrow drench us When our fellow passes on? He’s just exchanged life’s dreary dirge For an eternal life of song. All
of this explains how the eternal optimist, in that November 1994 letter,
could be positive even as Alzheimer’s was crowding in, about to cast
his mind into oblivion. It is telling that in that brief letter to the
American people, Ronald Reagan mentioned God and faith four times.
“When the Lord calls me home,” he wrote, “I will leave with the
greatest love for this country of ours and eternal optimism for its
future.” Since
that goodbye, it has been an unpleasant 10 years for a man whose life
was so richly blessed; he enjoyed precious few sunsets. Now, at last,
Ronald Reagan can rest in peace. Enjoy that rainbow, Mr. President. Ω “There
is no question that we have failed to live up to the dreams of the
Founding Fathers many times and in many places. Sometimes we do better
than others. But all in all, the one thing we must be on guard against
is thinking that because of this, the system has failed. The system has
not failed. Some human beings have failed the system.” —Ronald
Reagan (1973) |
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