Good morning,
Last nite I visited with Milt Cohen's family after
a memorial service at his synagogue. Milt stopped biking at age 96, about
the time I moved to town, so I didn't know him first hand but I knew him by
reputation. I spent time talking to his wife and sons and heard some
amazing stories. Many of you may know that most of our current bike laws
date to the early 60's when Milt's middle son Gar got him into biking for the
first time. Milt's 3 sons are all now active bicyclists - Neil is a racing
cyclist, Gar rides recumbents and Jonathan lives car-free in San Francisco
using a bike.
It got me motivated to start taking action on an
idea I've had for a while. Since we started
Positive Spin we've operated on a shoe string financially, but we've been
rewarded richly with the stories that people tell about their bikes. It's
been an ambition of mine to capture these stories somehow in a way that they can
be preserved and passed on. I've claimed the internet domain name
"ifwheelscouldtalk.org" for the purpose, but don't know how to proceed
next. Ideally I would like the story collection to involve school age kids
as a way of exciting them about writing and storytelling (maybe interviewing
adults or digging for stories). The model that inspired me is David
Egger's 426 Valencia Project
I can't take this much farther alone. I'm
looking for volunteers (teachers, tutors, english majors, authors, historians or
anyone who is excited by this idea) to help launch it. Ultimately I
envision city-wide story contests and published books for these stories.
Currently it will be run under Positive Spin to take advantage of our non-profit
status. For now though here are the specific items that are
needed.
Webhosting
A way of indexing the stories (written, spoken and
video)
Volunteers to record the stories
Volunteers to engage kids in writing the
stories
A leader to direct the program
I don't expect this all to happen overnite.
It's a great idea that can take time to build into a substantial part of the
community. However, I'd like to get volunteers to help record and organize
stories from the Cohen family while they are still in town for the next few
days.
Thanks!
Nick Hein