
If we take the time to look very closely around the world, we can see the impact of the works of our fathers on the societies that they left behind. Leaders and citizens of successful societies always maintain a consciousness of history and do their best to stay close to the foundations and guiding principles laid by their founding fathers. They are grateful for the sacrifices of those who came before them and lead as if they are guided by the ghosts of those fathers to maintain a sense of responsibility and diligence to the paths paved by history. In such societies, individuals and groups anchor their sense of pride on an identity carved and projected by their understanding and belief in a living history that was built and preserved by selfless visionaries who understood that they were called to a purpose greater than themselves. An immoral and distasteful leader may arise at some point in the life course of such a society but then another leader soon comes who rights the course toward history’s trajectory as envisioned by the fathers long gone
In unsuccessful and struggling societies, on the other hand, history is destroyed rather than preserved, shunned rather than embraced, and relegated rather than elevated. Also, the role of culture and tradition is in some cases disregarded in favor of what is thought to be modern, however alien. In such societies, the young have no knowledge of the depth of their society’s history because those who should teach them have abandoned their roles. In their quest either for survival or fame, those who ought to protect and pass along the memories of service and respectability that their societies’ fathers represented embark on the dangerous course of ignoring the ghosts of their fathers. Yet, the evidence is all around us that individuals and societies that ignore history wander aimlessly, often blind to the fact that others can see through the hollowness of their momentary trappings of success.