In Observance of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Birthday on January 15,
2012, We Urge All of Our Readers to Pause, Reflect and Read the Following
Speech Given by President Barack Obama on October 15, 2011at the Dedication of
the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial in Washington, D.C.
“Our work is not done. And so on this day, in which we celebrate a
man and a movement that did so much for this country, let us draw strength from
those earlier struggles. First and foremost, let us remember that change has
never been quick. Change has never been simple, or without controversy. Change
depends on persistence. Change requires determination. It took a full decade
before the moral guidance of Brown v. Board of Education was translated into
the enforcement measures of the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act, but
those 10 long years did not lead Dr. King to give up. He kept on pushing, he
kept on speaking, he kept on marching until change finally came.
And then when, even after the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act
passed, African Americans still found themselves trapped in pockets of poverty
across the country, Dr. King didn’t say those laws were a failure; he didn’t
say this is too hard; he didn’t say, let’s settle for what we got and go home.
Instead he said, let’s take those victories and broaden our mission to achieve
not just civil and political equality but also economic justice; let’s fight
for a living wage and better schools and jobs for all who are willing to work.
In other words, when met with hardship, when confronting disappointment, Dr.
King refused to accept what he called the “isness” of today. He kept pushing
towards the “oughtness” of tomorrow.
And so, as we think about all the work that we must do –- rebuilding an economy
that can compete on a global stage, and fixing our schools so that every child
— not just some, but every child — gets a world-class education, and making
sure that our health care system is affordable and accessible to all, and that
our economic system is one in which everybody gets a fair shake and everybody
does their fair share, let us not be trapped by what is. We can’t be
discouraged by what is. We’ve got to keep pushing for what ought to be, the
America we ought to leave to our children, mindful that the hardships we face
are nothing compared to those Dr. King and his fellow marchers faced 50 years
ago, and that if we maintain our faith, in ourselves and in the possibilities
of this nation, there is no challenge we cannot surmount.
If he were alive today, I believe he would remind us that the unemployed worker
can rightly challenge the excesses of Wall Street without demonizing all who
work there; that the businessman can enter tough negotiations with his
company’s union without vilifying the right to collectively bargain. He would
want us to know we can argue fiercely about the proper size and role of
government without questioning each other’s love for this country — with the
knowledge that in this democracy, government is no distant object but is rather
an expression of our common commitments to one another. He would call on us to
assume the best in each other rather than the worst, and challenge one another
in ways that ultimately heal rather than wound.
He would not give up, no matter how long it took, because in the smallest
hamlets and the darkest slums, he had witnessed the highest reaches of the
human spirit; because in those moments when the struggle seemed most hopeless,
he had seen men and women and children conquer their fear; because he had seen
hills and mountains made low and rough places made plain, and the crooked
places made straight and God make a way out of no way.
And that is why we honor this man –- because he had faith in us. And that is
why he belongs on this Mall -– because he saw what we might become. That is why
Dr. King was so quintessentially American — because for all the hardships we’ve
endured, for all our sometimes tragic history, ours is a story of optimism and
achievement and constant striving that is unique upon this Earth. And that is
why the rest of the world still looks to us to lead. This is a country where
ordinary people find in their hearts the courage to do extraordinary things;
the courage to stand up in the face of the fiercest resistance and despair and
say this is wrong, and this is right; we will not settle for what the cynics
tell us we have to accept and we will reach again and again, no matter the
odds, for what we know is possible.
That is the conviction we must carry now in our hearts. As tough as times may
be, I know we will overcome. I know there are better days ahead. I know this
because of the man towering over us. I know this because all he and his
generation endured — we are here today in a country that dedicated a monument
to that legacy.
And so with our eyes on the horizon and our faith squarely placed in one
another, let us keep striving; let us keep struggling; let us keep climbing
toward that promised land of a nation and a world that is more fair, and more
just, and more equal for every single child of God.”
www.whitehouse.gov