I knew the late Alaska governor and Secretary of the Interior Walter J. Hickel quite well, having worked with him writing a book. He died Friday.
Some of his qualities are unique and may never be seen again in the same man, especially in a society that no longer is as open to the path to wealth and power he followed. You can’t copy his vision, energy and astonishing intelligence–intelligence of a kind that people with book learning underestimated, often to their disadvantage. He was a brilliant man whose lack of education became an asset, because his ideas were never forced into conventional channels.
But there are other qualities we could emulate, if we had the courage to do so. Boldness. Wally Hickel acted on his beliefs. And honesty. He made it clear what he stood for, and let others judge whether or not they agreed. Sometimes Hickel’s advisors tried, with little success, to shield the world from ideas they thought we weren’t ready for, but he never hid anything he believed in. His letter blasting his boss, President Nixon, over the Viet Nam War was entirely in character.
Hickel pairs up well with former Governor Jay Hammond in that respect. They each had a consistent and complete world view and political philosophy. And in their great struggle of the 1970s for soul of Alaska, everyone knew exactly what they believed and where they wanted the state to go. Voters had the privilege of making a real choice. We didn’t know how lucky we were.
Compare that boldness and honesty to the behavior of our political leaders today. How much better would our system work with the clarity produced by those qualities alone?
Walter Hickel was a man of courage, and courage is something we could use a lot more of right now.