BOOK- Why
Leaders Are Made, Not Born
Inspired by her own
struggles, Harvard Business School historian Nancy Koehn turned to figures from
the past who overcame adversity to leave a lasting mark on civilization. She
learned that true leaders are those who can forge through impossible odds with
intelligence, compassion and resilience. Koehn has captured the stories of five
inspiring historical figures in her book, Forged In Crisis: The Power of Courageous Leadership in
Turbulent Times. They include Abraham Lincoln, who presided over the United
States at a pivotal time in its young history; Frederick Douglass, an
abolitionist who escaped slavery to become a writer and a statesman; Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, a German clergyman who became a double agent against the Nazis;
Ernest Shackleton, a polar explorer who survived a shipwreck on an ice floe;
and Rachel Carson, a scientist whose work sparked the modern environmental
movement. Koehn recently joined the Knowledge@Wharton show on SiriusXM channel 111 to discuss her book and why true leaders are made, not
born.
An edited transcript of the conversation
follows.
Knowledge@Wharton: Where
did the idea for this book come from?
Nancy Koehn: Ironically, the
germs of the book came from finding myself in a series of completely unexpected
crises, both personal and professional. My father died. Three months later, my
husband walked out after 15 years of marriage. I got cancer with no risk
factors. A couple of years passed, I got cancer again, befuddling all the
doctors. I was beset by high waves and huge, big, strong winds.
I realized I’m a historian by training, so I grabbed for books
of Abraham Lincoln’s writings. I started at the back of his life, the end of
the Civil War, and I reread backwards. With each of his letters and speeches
and columns he wrote for newspapers, I kept thinking to myself, “Nancy, you
think you have crises; Lincoln had much more to deal with, both in terms of
being president and dealing with all kinds of personal losses he and his wife
had suffered.”
That was the genesis. How do we navigate through crisis? How do
leaders? Because this was so clear in Lincoln’s case. How do leaders not only
navigate and lead their followers through crisis, but how do they become
better, stronger, more embracing of a worthy purpose with more access to their
muscles of moral courage? I thought that was such a compelling question. That
was really the beginnings of the book. Then I found these other four
fascinating people with their jaw-dropping, gripping stories, and I was off to
the races.
Knowledge@Wharton: Lincoln’s
story is well-known to most Americans, as is perhaps the story of Frederick
Douglass. But the other people you selected — Ernest Shackleton, Rachel Carson
and Dietrich Bonhoeffer — are not exactly household names.
Koehn: That was part of
the reason to include these stories I stumbled on. I didn’t know much about
Douglass, even though I’m a historian. I was trained as a European historian. I
think a lot of Americans don’t know the astounding challenges he overcame as a
slave who escaped to the North to get his freedom, and then as a tireless
activist to abolish slavery.
Ernest Shackleton was this explorer whose boat goes through the
ice off the coast of Antarctica in 1915. He’s stranded with lifeboats, some
canned goods and no means of communication, and somehow he’s got to get his
27-man team home alive.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a German Lutheran pastor who was active
in the resistance to Hitler throughout the 1930s. In the 1940s, he becomes a
double agent within with the Nazi government to try and kill Hitler and
overthrow the Third Reich.
Rachel Carson is this very quiet, retiring scientist and writer
who literally rocks the world and almost single-handedly launches the
environmental movement when she publishes Silent Spring in
1962.
I just thought these stories are amazing. They’re like the best
movies we’ve ever seen. I’ve got to tell them.
Knowledge@Wharton: Bonhoeffer’s
story as a double agent and a pastor is something that a Hollywood movie
scriptwriter would love.
Koehn: I could not agree
more. You can’t make this stuff up. Here’s a man who’s a pacifist, who’s a
deeply committed Christian, who has spent years of his young adult life
lecturing on Jesus’s Sermon on the Mount as the noose of Nazi evil tightens. He
has family members who are working inside the government as resistors, so he
knows the inside story of what the Nazi government is doing, including the
beginnings of what we call today the Holocaust. He is more and more frustrated
by his inability to do something, through alternative churches that he and
others have helped found, to resist the Nazi government.
Eventually, he has to come to terms with this terrible moral
dilemma, which is, “We may have to kill Hitler in order to stop a much greater
evil. Yet we cannot escape the moral consequences of what we’re doing.” He
grapples with that and ultimately decides to cross that line and do that. The
story is fascinating inside and out in terms of what he experienced.
Knowledge@Wharton: Wasn’t
one of his problems also the fact that Adolf Hitler and Nazis really didn’t
respect the church that much to begin with?
Koehn: Not at all. They
had no patience for the true teachings of Christianity, either in the Old
Testament or in the New Testament, and for Judaism. They had absolutely no
respect for the nobler messages of a lot of great religions. They were doing
everything they could to manage and control churches toward messages that
supported their power, that supported Nazi teachings. Again, here’s someone
who, everywhere he turns, is stymied by an authoritarian regime bent on war and
bent on making war on its own citizens, anyone they considered enemies of the
state. Some of the really interesting and gripping parts of the chapter are the
Gestapo trying to trap Bonhoeffer.
Knowledge@Wharton: Unfortunately,
Bonhoeffer was assassinated. At that time, that was the only option that Nazis
considered. If you were thought to be against their establishment, they were
willing to get rid of you and not even think twice.
Koehn: Right. And
Bonhoeffer was from a very well-connected family in Berlin, a storied family
with a great deal of power. They were not supporters of the Nazi regime, but
they were historically very important people. It speaks to their determination
to literally eliminate suspected enemies that they murdered Bonhoeffer. He is
killed by the German state in April 1945. Two weeks later, the place where he
is murdered is liberated by Allied Forces advancing into Germany. But for a
couple of weeks, this brave, serious, very courageous man would have lived.
Knowledge@Wharton: Did
I read correctly that he spent some time in the United States?
Koehn: He spent a critical
year in New York, teaching and lecturing and learning at the Union Theological
Seminary. He was back there again in 1939. His friends in Germany had spirited
him off for a year away before he was either called up for conscription,
because the Nazis were making war in 1939, or he was arrested by the Gestapo.
He goes to New York and realizes, “I cannot be here in good conscience. I have
to go back and join my brethren in the struggle to overthrow Nazi Germany.” He
gets on one of the last ships to sail for Germany from America before war
breaks out, a month before World War II begins.
Knowledge@Wharton: You
said there are elements of Douglass’s life that a lot of people don’t really
know or understand. Take us deeper.
Kohn: Let me give you one
example that still stays with me. I use it in my own life to steel my own
muscles of courage. Douglass was a strong, very intelligent, very resourceful
teenager who couldn’t stand being a slave. His owner sends him off to a man
named Edward Covey, who is known as a slave-breaker. These were people whose
job it was to intimidate slaves into more docility and more subservience
through both through physical violence and emotional abuse. Owners often sent
recalcitrant black men to these people.
Douglass is with the slave-breaker and he’s scared. Covey’s been
beating him. He had run away to his owner to seek some kind of redress. His
owner had sent him back to Covey. He’s worried that Covey’s going to attack
him, and Covey comes at him one hot summer Monday morning. Douglass decides in
that moment to step into the fear and confront Covey. They have this huge
physical fight. It goes on for two hours. They’re wrestling. They don’t have
weapons. Covey calls other slaves to come help him, and the black man and woman
he calls refuse to get involved. They watch. And for two hours, these men
wrestle. In the end, it’s a draw. Neither brings the other to the ground
decisively. But a draw for Frederick Douglass is a victory. Covey relents and
never, ever touches Frederick Douglass again.
In his first autobiography, Narrative of a Slave,
Douglass says, “You have seen how a man is made a slave. Now you see how a
slave was made a man.” He recovers his self-confidence. He recovers his sense
of identity. He rips through, cuts through the years of varnish of depression
and loss of agency that slavery, and particularly this man, has imposed on him,
and he is made, he has access to his stronger self. That is such a powerful
lesson for all of us, when we face some of our worst fears and take the first
small step into that fear to discover our truer, braver, stronger self. It’s an
amazing story, and there are many more like it in his life’s journey.
Knowledge@Wharton: He
is considered to be one of the most important African-Americans of the 19th
century.
Koehn: Oh, I think he was.
I think he’s one of the most important leaders in American history. The book
makes the point that these two leaders of the five, Abraham Lincoln and
Frederick Douglass, ended up working for a common purpose to end slavery. They
came to know each other, and they came to respect each other.
I make this point, which is not always made when we talk about
Lincoln as the great emancipator, that Lincoln could never have done what he
did — issue the Emancipation Proclamation, then prosecute the rest of the war
as a war to end slavery and save the union — without all the work on the ground
that Frederick Douglass did as a spokesperson, an activist, a man who was
changing political momentum of northern whites towards slavery, working with
ordinary citizens, working with politicians, working with journalists. You
can’t get to the end result of the Civil War and the restoration of America to
its original promise without slavery if you don’t have both Frederick Douglass
and Abraham Lincoln. This man made a huge, important, positive difference.
Knowledge@Wharton: Let’s
talk about Ernest Shackleton, the polar explorer who is shipwrecked on the ice.
We’ve heard shipwreck stories before, but leadership is at the core of being
able to overcome the worst situations.
Koehn: That’s exactly
right and spot on, and that’s why it’s at the top of the book. It’s there for
two reasons. One, this is such a stark example of what you just said. Against
all odds, when the stakes could not be higher, you can accomplish the nearly
impossible, just as he did. You read the story and keep turning the page, and
you go, “It can’t keep getting worse. This can’t be this hard. He can’t be
facing this roadblock.” And he keeps coming through them. He somehow keeps that
resilience, that commitment to mission, that dedication. You read this and
think, “Shackleton can teach us a lot about what we are capable of if we really
access our core muscles of strength and courage.”
The second reason I put him at the top of the book is because
most of us don’t know this story, and because it’s so gripping. It’s such a
page turner.
Knowledge@Wharton: Give
us more of the story of Rachel Carson.
Koehn: She’s the last
person in the book and the only woman. As much as I fell in love with every one
of these people, I have a very special place in my heart for her. She was born
to poor parents and went to college in the 1920s, when most women didn’t go to
college and most women didn’t complete college. If they did, they certainly
weren’t biologists, as she was. They didn’t seek a living in science, as she
did.
“That is such a
powerful lesson for all of us, when we face some of our worst fears and take
the first small step to discover our truer, braver, stronger self.”
She quickly becomes the only breadwinner for her birth family,
financially supporting and caretaking for her father, her mother, her brother,
her sister, her nieces. At the same time, she’s getting a master’s in zoology
at Johns Hopkins University and beginning a career that will ultimately marry
this incredible poetic grace and beauty she has with language to her deep
commitment to scientific rigor and truth in articles and books that make the
natural world completely accessible to people, without dumbing down the
science.
She pursues and marries these two gifts and nurtures them and
learns all these things about herself while going home at night and putting her
nieces to bed, making dinner, cleaning up and putting laundry in, like lots of
women today. In the early 1950s, she writes a book called The Sea
Around Us, about the majesty and importance and environmental diaspora
of the ocean, in a way that every lay-reader can understand. It’s a bestseller,
which gives her the freedom to leave her job at U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
where she’s been doing all kinds of things for many years, mostly editorial
content tasks and responsibilities.
She searches around for her next project and bumps into the
issue of pesticides that are being used in huge, largely untested ways by
farmers, big chemical companies and for household use. The more she learns as
she puts on her detective cap, the more anxious she gets, the more concerned
she gets about the possible effects of this. A bit like lots of things we’ve
discovered about chemicals and environmental dangers in our own lifetime.
She starts to piece together a very complicated, very serious,
very high-stakes story about the dangers of these. She’s doing her homework
painstakingly; it takes her years to do this. She’s double-, triple-,
quadruple-checking everything. She’s very careful to not release anything
before its time. But as people get wind of it, there are threats against her,
threats against her family, because Dow Chemical and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, and lots of places don’t want this story out there. Yet, she’s
determined. She said, “I could never look myself in the face if I kept silent
on this.” She has stumbled into her life’s work. At the same time, in the
middle of her research and the beginnings of her writing, she is diagnosed with
aggressive, metastasizing cancer.
The second half of the chapter is the story of her race against
the clock and her commitment to do this work right and to get it out there in a
way that will call for citizens to action on behalf of the Earth, not in an
impractical and romantic way, but in a pragmatic and morally responsible way.
It’s an astounding book that still sells many copies. And it’s a page-turner
because she writes so well and she makes it so easy for us to understand, and
she’s so carefu
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