For the last two years I have served as president of The Whitney Awards, a genre fiction award for LDS writers both in the National and LDS specific market. Robison Wells founded the award program five years ago and left me some very big (and sweaty) shoes to fill. I have enjoyed my opportunity to serve very much and have learned so much about myself, about other people who put their shoulder to the proverbial wheel, and I've discovered a lot of great books I would not have read otherwise. It's been a blessing to me to be a part of this program, and yet I gladly hand the baton to Heather Moore who will be president for 2012. Last night (May 5, 2012) was the Gala where the winners were announced and our Achievement Winners, Jack Weyland and Douglas Thayer, were acknowledged. The Gala is always a bittersweet night for me. I love, love, love hearing the acceptances and feeling the spirit of the night, but I'm aware of the 28 or so people who go home with empty hands. I've been that person and as happy as I've been for the other winners, I still wish I'd have won it :-) It's my supreme hope and prayer that they all feel the tribute of having been a finalist and that those in the audience who weren't finalists this year will have felt some of the spirit of night meant just for them as well. Though the Gala recognizes the winners--and their accomplishment is great--it is about everyone who writes the words. I was asked by a few attendees for a copy of the opening remarks I gave prior to the award portion of the evening. Since I print my blog into a book every few years, I wanted a record of the evening as well so I chose to post it here. You are welcome to use it, within context, in whatever it might support.
Thanks to everyone who has offered their support and encouragement to this award process and to me individually. It's been a fabulous experience I will ever be grateful to have had. For more information about the Whitney Awards, click HERE. To see the winners for the 2011 Whitney Awards, click HERE.
The
Whitney award program was named in honor of Orson F. Whitney—a former member of
the twelve apostles who pursued and encouraged the fine arts throughout his
life. Orson was born on 1855 in Salt
Lake City, Utah. From the time he was very young he had what was described as an artistic
temperament—he loved art, music, and literature. While attending The
University of Deseret—now the University of Utah—he formed the Wasatch Literary Association and
was planning to make a career in theater in New York when he was called to serve a mission
in the Eastern United States. Prior to this time in his life he claimed not to be spiritually
driven. He did accept the call but did not feel as though he himself were
converted until he had a remarkable
dream where he witnessed Christ’s atonement in the Garden of Gethsemane.
By the time he returned to the Salt
Lake valley he had not only been converted himself, but through his
proselytizing he’d grown
remarkably as a speaker and teacher. He was offered a job with the
Deseret News and was called as a Bishop at the age of 22 and, as yet, unmarried. He married Zina Smoot just a
year later and they had their first child a year after that. In the years that
followed, he served a mission to Europe, continued to work at the Deseret News,
and served in local politics. Amid it all, however, he found time to pursue his
passions in writing. His
first book “The life of Heber C. Kimball” was published in 1888 and soon
followed by his first book of poetry—a joy he had worked on in private for many
years.
Politically he advocated Women’s
Sufferage, protection
against persecuted polygamists, and also fought against compulsory vaccination.
He was hired to teach philosophy at Brigham Young College in Logan but
when no one signed up for his classes, he ended up teaching Theology and
English instead and from that point forward began lecturing on a regular basis.
It’s been said that “In literary work, discourses,
lectures, orations, funeral sermons and miscellaneous addresses, along with his
ecclesiastical labors, his mind, tongue and pen were kept constantly busy.”
After 28 years as a bishop, seven of which were
also spent working in the Church Historical Department, Orson F. Whitney was
called as a member of the twelve in 1906 but asked friends and acquaintances to
continue calling him
Bishop Whitney in part because he created most of his literary works as
Bishop Whitney and preferred that identification. Time and again the message of
his talks and presentations was to encourage people to use the gifts God had
given them and see within
those gifts lasting treasures of virtue, accomplishment, and enjoyment. He
served vigorously as a member of the twelve apostles for 25 years until his
death in 1931.
The excerpt of his talk that was chosen as a foundation
for The Whitney Awards is from an address delivered at the Sunday evening session of the MIA
Jubilee Conference held on June 7, 1925.
He said: “We will yet have Miltons and
Shakespeares of our own. God's ammunition is not exhausted. . . In God’s name and by His
help we will build up a literature whose tops will touch the heavens.”
In 1976, Elder
Boyd K. Packer repeated those words and added “Since that statement was made . . . those
foundations have been raised up very slowly. The greatest poems are not yet
written, nor the paintings finished. The greatest hymns and anthems of the
Restoration are yet to be composed. The sublimest renditions of them are yet to
be conducted.”
Tonight we gather in part as a fulfillment of both of these
messages. Words are
a powerful force—they build and destroy nations, build and destroy
ideas, build and destroy people. It is specifically through the gift of
literature that we have our understanding of the creation, of Christ’s
ministry, of Nephi’s journey to the promised land. It is through words that
we’ve learned of science, governments, the universe and the intricate detail of
human nature.
In 1988,
exactly 100 years after the publication of Orson F. Whitney’s first book, Thomas
S. Monson said, “God left
the world unfinished for man to work his skill upon. He left the electricity in
the cloud, the oil in the earth. He left the rivers unbridged and the forests
unfelled and the cities unbuilt. God gives to man the challenge of raw
materials, not the ease of finished things. He leaves the pictures unpainted
and the music unsung and the problems unsolved, that man might know the joys
and glories of creation.”
Writers know the joys and
glories and pain and agony of creation. The experience of that process is priceless
on a personal level, and, as with Bishop Whitney’s life, none of us knows the
journey our lives may take. Our lives unfold one day, one word, one experience
at a time and it is left to us to hone our craft and enjoy the ride we find
ourselves upon.
With such reverence of the gifts and talents overflowing this
room, it is, therefore, an honor to honor the time and dedication that has gone
into the creations of these 35 finalists in the 2011 Whitney Awards. We thank
each of you for your time and efforts. You are working towards the fulfillment of prophesy and
we are grateful to have the chance to acknowledge that.
5 comments:
Thanks for posting this, Josi, and for all your hard work over the last two years. You did a great job.
You were amazing! Thank you for all you did. What a great night.
This is a great post, Josi and typical of your style - poetic! you've done a super job with the Whitney's and are an incredible leader in the LDS market. I'm blessed to be associated with you!
What a great post. The Whitney's are an awesome concept. Thanks for the part you've done in making them happen.
Well-written and, I'm sure, well-spoken.
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