The Reason You Walk Quotes

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The Reason You Walk The Reason You Walk by Wab Kinew
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The Reason You Walk Quotes Showing 1-15 of 15
“We ought to recognize that our greatest battle is not with one another but with our pain, our problems, and our flaws. To be hurt, yet forgive. To do wrong, but forgive yourself. To depart from this world leaving only love. This is the reason you walk.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“I am the reason you walk. I created you so that you might walk this earth.
I am the reason you walk. I gave you motivation so you would continue to walk even when the path became difficult, even seemingly impossible.
I am the reason you walk. I animated you with that driving force called love, which compelled you to help others who had forgotten they were brothers and sisters to take steps back towards one another.
And now, my son, as that journey comes to an end, I am the reason you walk, for I am calling you home. Walk home with me on that everlasting road.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“We have a choice in life-we can choose how we are going to behave. We can determine whether we reflect the good around us or lose ourselves in the darkness.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“Reconciliation is realized when two people come together and understand that what they share unites them and that what is different about them needs to be respected.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“If a son helps his father when he is sick, then his son will help him when he is old.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“wise women and men have known for millennia: when we are wronged it is better to respond with love, courage, and grace than with anger, bitterness, and rage. We are made whole by living up to the best part of human nature—the part willing to forgive the aggressor, the part that never loses sight of the humanity of those on the other side of the relationship, and the part that embraces the person with whom we have every right to be angry and accepts him or her as a brother or sister.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“when we are wronged it is better to respond with love, courage, and grace than with anger, bitterness, and rage. We are made whole by living up to the best part of human nature—the part willing to forgive the aggressor, the part that never loses sight of the humanity of those on the other side of the relationship, and the part that embraces the person with whom we have every right to be angry and accepts him or her as a brother or sister.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“They are from the perspective of the Creator. The first meaning of "I am the reason you walk" is "I have created you and therefore you walk." The second meaning is "I am your motivation." The third meaning is "I am that spark inside you called love, which animates you and allows you to live by the Anishinaabe values of kiizhewaatiziwin." The fourth and final meaning is "I am the destination at the end of your life that you ware walking toward.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“Whether we are young or old, whether our skin is light or dark, whether we are man or woman, we share a common humanity and are all headed for a common destiny. That should bind us together more strongly than divisions can push us apart. So long as anything other than love governs our relationship with others, we have work to do.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“There were no divisions between the words of different faiths. Each expressed the same truth.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“More than any inheritance, more than any sacred item, more than any title, the legacy he left behind is this: as on that day in the sundance circle when he lifted me from the depths, he taught us that during our time on earth we ought to love one another, and we ought to work hard to make them whole again.

This is at the centre of sacred ceremonies practised by Indigenous people. This is what so many of us seek, no matter where we begin life.

This is the reason you walk.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“Having progressive parents didn't protect me from racism. I saw its ugly face at school, and at the hockey rink.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“Turning the tide of the suicide epidemic will mean fixing everything, not just one individual thing. It will involve bringing meaning and identity to our people through language, culture, work, and a connection to the land. It will also require equal access to education, employment, and mental health services. We also need to have justice for land and resources.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“What role does a traditional Indigenous culture, or any local culture for that matter, have in a globalized, interconnected world?”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk
“The worst things one human being can do to another had been confronted by the very best that the human spirit has to offer. On this day at least, the best part of us had won out.”
Wab Kinew, The Reason You Walk