GLOBAL RELATIONS
District Adopts a Seoul Sister
S. Korean Capital Becomes 10th City to Unite With D.C. in Partnership Program
Ray Bringham, founder of a prayer summit, says a prayer over Mayor Anthony A. Williams, left, and Seoul Mayor Lee Myung-Bak. Council member Vincent B. Orange, right, gives a quizzical look to Bringham, whose blessing was not on the event's agenda. Bringham was whisked away after the unplanned blessing.
(Photos By Sarah L. Voisin -- The Washington Post)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
Tuesday, March 28, 2006
The mayor of Seoul, Lee Myung-Bak, is a Christian. Which turned out to be a lucky thing when Lee paid a visit to the John A. Wilson Building to sign an agreement to join Seoul and Washington in sister city marriage.
Lee and D.C. Mayor Anthony A. Williams (D) had just toasted each other with flutes of sparkling cider and sliced a three-tiered cake decorated with white icing, pink flowers and tiny paper flags representing the United States and South Korea. ("This really is like a wedding," Williams observed.) Suddenly, amid the applause, a white-haired man approached, laid hands on the mayoral foreheads and began to pray.
The man, Ray Bringham, the California founder of an international prayer summit, was not on the guest list. Startled city officials quickly led him away.
But Lee and Williams seemed unfazed by the impromptu blessing.
"Fortunately," said acting Secretary of the District Patricia Elwood. "Otherwise we wouldn't have gotten the sister city relationship off to a very good start."
With the ceremony March 13, Seoul became the District's 10th sister city and the latest conquest in the Williams administration's campaign to firmly imprint the nation's capital on the global imagination. Since Williams took office in 1999, he has signed seven sister city agreements, including pacts with Paris, Athens, Brussels and Brazzaville in the Congo Republic. Williams has scheduled visits to several previously designated partners, including Bangkok, Beijing and, later this year, Dakar, Senegal.
"We've got many countries that want to be sister cities with us," said Elwood, whose office oversees the program. "Chicago has 25 sister cities. So we really are way behind the eight ball on this."
During the ceremony with Lee, Williams acknowledged to a crowd of more than 100 Korean-American business executives that he's "not a big expert" on the sister city program. "There's a whole lot of nomenclature about what sister cities are. I don't know about all that," he said.
But the mayor is a student of the historical importance of cities, and he speaks frequently about their growing influence on world politics and trade, and of their power, "at their finest, to represent what a livable community can be." Direct cooperation among cities generates trade, tourism, technological innovation and understanding of other cultures, he said.
"That's why sister city relationships are so important," Williams told the crowd earlier this month. "And that's why we're so excited about developing a sister city relationship with Seoul."
In July, Williams will co-chair the 50th anniversary celebration of Sister Cities International, the Washington-based nonprofit group that promotes sister partnerships between U.S. and foreign jurisdictions. Since it was founded in 1956 after President Dwight D. Eisenhower convened a White House summit on citizen diplomacy, the organization has matched more than 700 U.S. communities with more than 2,200 communities in 132 countries worldwide.
Executive Director Tim Honey said the network has been critical to rebuilding ties after wars and other conflicts. For example, he said, reconciliation with Germany and Japan was a huge issue after World War II. To this day, the largest number of sister partnerships is maintained with Japanese communities, Honey said, including a pact between Riverside, Calif., and Sendai, Japan, that will be 50 years old next year.







