Over the last few years and through this year's contentious campaign season, which was rooted in America's deep divisions, there has been a coarsening in the way people talk to each other. We wanted to explore how some are trying to bridge divides. We asked our reporters across the NPR Network to look for examples of people working through their differences.
We're sharing those stories in our series Seeking Common Ground. PAONIA, Colo. — On a Wednesday night at a spacious, contemporary-looking church on the edge of Paonia, a small town in western Colorado, the 40 or so members of the North Fork Community Choir ran through their regular warmups.
"Really pay attention to that 'E' vowel," said music director Stephanie Helleckson, as she guided the singers through various scales and arpeggios from behind a music stand. "See if you can make that a little bit rounder as a group." Helleckson listened carefully to how the singers' voices blend; the details matter in an art form that's all about achieving harmony.
Helleckson, who comes from a musical family and has spent most of her life in Paonia, said harmony is important — not just musically, but also socially. "Because we're all coming from different backgrounds and different perspectives, and we're coming together to do something together, we have to learn how to not agree with somebody, but still work with them," said the vivacious and businesslike music director. The North Fork is an ideologically diverse community Cooperat.