Renaissance Weekend
This article contains promotional content. (November 2024) |
Renaissance Weekend is the name for a recurring series of invitation-only gatherings founded and hosted by Linda and Philip Lader. The concept was founded in 1981 with the objective of bridging traditional divides of professions, politics, religion, race and age. It substantially increased in prominence when repeat-participant Bill Clinton was elected president in 1992.[1] A few other notable past participants include Hillary Clinton,[2] Supreme Court Justices Harry Blackmun,[2] Ruth Bader Ginsburg[3] and Stephen Breyer,[3] Donald Rumsfeld,[1] Daniel Schorr,[1] Wolf Blitzer[4] Buzz Aldrin,[3] and Mary Chapin Carpenter[4] among many others.
Organized several times throughout the year, each Renaissance Weekend consists of seminars, discussions, informal lectures and performances. Substantive conversations and program contributions by all participants are fostered by a casual, welcoming culture. Civility, non-partisanship, non-commercialism and public-spirited impact are the gatherings’ hallmarks.
History
[edit]Renaissance Weekend was founded, and continues to be hosted, by Linda and Philip Lader as a forum. The largest gathering is still held around New Year's with the smaller weekends throughout the year.
More than 155 Renaissance Weekends have taken place[citation needed].
Among the 60 families who initiated the first Weekend on Hilton Head Island were Marian Wright Edelman, David Gergen, Fred Malek, Governors Richard Riley and Terry Sanford, Stan Smith, Diane Sawyer, and Tim Wirth[citation needed]. Republican and Democratic candidates for US President, and 26 Nobel laureates, have attended. Presidents Gerald Ford and Bill Clinton co-chaired Renaissance Weekend's 25th anniversary[citation needed]. The 40th anniversary Weekend was celebrated by 1,000 participants[citation needed].
Format and Activities
[edit]Attendees design their own schedules from the available activities, talks, and sessions in the event program. The program features a range of topics connected to civic, industry, political and arts interests. Additional activities are available for youths in attendance.
People from a range of professional backgrounds and interests attend the events. Invitees are nominated by past participants. The criteria for invitation are professional innovation and/or distinction, potential contribution to the program's breadth and depth, and likely commitment to Renaissance's off-the-record, civility, non-partisan and non-commercial spirit and traditions.
The gatherings are organized by a non-profit institute. To preserve its independence no corporate sponsorships are sought. Attendees cover the cost of participation.
Specific Renaissance Weekends’ attendance are not disclosed publicly; the gatherings discourage personal screen device usage; and the Renaissance Institute does not seek publicity. Commercial or overtly promotional activity is not permitted at the Weekends.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "RENAISSANCE WEEKEND GIVES REBIRTH TO AN INDUSTRY". Washington Post. 2024-01-07. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2024-06-07.
- ^ a b Jehl, Douglas (1992-12-30). "Clinton, Others Begin 5-Day 'Thinking Party' : Retreat: Renaissance Weekend is casual in tone, intense in discussion from spiritual to political". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2024-06-07.
- ^ a b c "Participants | Renaissance Weekend". www.renaissanceweekend.org. Retrieved 2024-06-07.
- ^ a b Shumake, Liz (2023-01-27). "Remembering Renaissance Weekend - HiltonHead.com". Hilton Head, SC | HiltonHead.com. Retrieved 2024-06-07.