News
Publishers Weekly BookLine
Spotlight On…William Wilberforce
By Juli Cragg Hilliard
Publishers Weekly
1/2/2008
William Wilberforce’s battle to end
the transatlantic slave trade inspired
moviegoers who saw it retold last year
in the feature film Amazing Grace. Now a
new book and television documentary
aspire to use the example of Wilberforce
and his Clapham Circle to ignite a new
generation of social activism.
The documentary, The Better Hour: The
Legacy of William Wilberforce, will air
on national public television in early
February, in time for Black History
Month (check local listings). Paired
with the study guide Creating the Better
Hour: Lessons from William Wilberforce
(Stroud & Hall Publishing), edited by
Chuck Stetson and with a foreword by
Rick Warren, it is part of a wave of
Wilberforce rediscovery during the
2007-2008 celebrations of the 200th
anniversary of the end of the slave
trade.
“Modern-day human rights started with
William Wilberforce and the Clapham
Circle,” said Stetson, who initiated the
book and documentary projects; the John
Templeton Foundation funded the
documentary. A managing director of the
New York private equity fund PEI Funds,
Stetson chairs the Bible Literacy
Project—recently renamed Essentials in
Education—and serves on the BreakPoint
Advisory Board, under Chuck Colson’s
Prison Fellowship ministry and until
lately known as the Wilberforce Forum.
Colson contributes a chapter to the
book, as do author Os Guinness (The
Call); former U.S. Secretary of Health,
Education and Welfare Joseph A. Califano
Jr.; Baroness Caroline Cox, an
international humanitarian activist and
deputy speaker of the House of Lords in
the U.K.; and Don Eberly, director of
the Civil Society Project and founder of
the National Fatherhood Initiative. The
book, which includes questions for
small-group discussion, covers the story
of Wilberforce and his group, how they
brought about change, and what is yet
unfinished. It also profiles
contemporary Wilberforces.
Stetson told RBL, “When I was growing
up, people talked about leaving the
world a better place. Over recent years
you see bumper stickers such as ‘He Who
Has the Most Toys When He Dies Wins.’
But I think we can return to the former
goal.”
Stetson said his own model for using
financial success to fund change was his
late father, Charles P. Stetson Sr., who
helped start Outward Bound South Africa
as a uniting force, before it was clear
apartheid would end. The younger
Stetson’s next project deals with how
generosity and philanthropy should be
taught in business schools.
“In each generation, people have to do
what they are called to do,” he said. “I
think we’re all called to serve others,
particularly the least, the last and the
lost. The way I’m focusing on that is
through education.”
© 2008, Reed Business Information, a
division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All
Rights Reserved.
|
 |