IMAGINE Magazine Imagine-Fall 2018-JOOMAG | Page 4

first person Keeping peacemaker legacies alive by Steve Simon W e were sitting in a cold lecture hall in Warsaw as a business professor droned on about the geopolitics of Poland and the attendant intricacies of doing business in such a newly democratized state. Around me sat classmates from every corner of the globe. We were participating in a uniquely international Masters in Business Administration program of- fered by a French institution. We had completed our first trimester in Paris and were on a seminar tour of Poland, Russia, and Hungary before continu- ing our second trimester in New York and ultimately finishing with a third trimester in Tokyo and additional seminars in six cities throughout Asia. Having previously worked as a 4 IMAGINE l FALL 2018 mechanical engineer in Germany and management consultant in the United States and Brazil, I had developed an interest in international business. In the wake of the communist collapse, economists, politicians, and multi-na- tional companies in developed coun- tries had succeeded in proliferating the acceptance of “globalization.” To be riding the academic crest of this wave was to my adventuresome mind very exciting. Furthermore, globalization had attractively become vouchsafed in the cause of international peace vis-à-vis economic interdependence. “Economic partners do not wage war against each other,” went the mantra. As we sat in our Warsaw seminar, a man entered the hall and politely but abruptly interrupted the presenter. With a pensive look, he paused momentarily and announced, “The World Trade Center has been bombed!” That day was February 27, 1993, the day terrorists detonated a powerful car bomb in the basement of the North Tower. While this was indeed international news, the inter- ruption was for us particularly war- ranted. In less than three weeks we were to travel to New York to begin our second trimester. Our classrooms were on the 101 st floor of the North Tower. A collective chill ran through the already frigid room. The next few weeks we contin- ued our seminars in Moscow and Budapest. It had only been four years since the Berlin Wall had come down and Eastern Europe convulsed with change. There was a great deal of confusion, speculation, and insecurity created by these tectonic shifts. Most of us felt similarly about the prospect of studying in the World Trade Center. Fortunately, the trimester in New York passed without further terrorist attacks. It was clear, however, major forces were beginning to array them- selves in ways that would profoundly impact our world and the hope for real peace. The growing fervor of