The Servant as Leader
Date
2008-08-28
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Greenleaf Center for Servant Leadership
Abstract
SERVANT AND LEADER. Can these two roles be fused in one real
person, in all levels of status or calling? If so, can that person live and be
productive in the real world of the present? My sense of the present leads
me to say yes to both questions. This paper is an attempt to explain why and
to suggest how.
The idea of The Servant as Leader came out of reading Herman Hesse’s
Journey to the East. In this story we see a band of men on a mythical
journey, probably also Hesse’s own journey. The central figure of the story
is Leo who accompanies the party as the servant who does their menial
chores, but who also sustains them with his spirit and his song. He is a
person of extraordinary presence. All goes well until Leo disappears. Then
the group falls into disarray and the journey is abandoned. They cannot
make it without the servant Leo. The narrator, one of the party, after some
years of wandering finds Leo and is taken into the Order that had sponsored
the journey. There he discovers that Leo, whom he had known first as
servant, was in fact the titular head of the Order, its guiding spirit, a great
and noble leader.