Speaks
at Goree Island in Senegal
Goree Island, Senegal
July 8, 2003
11:47 A.M. (Local)
Mr. President and Madam First Lady, distinguished guests and residents of
Goree Island, citizens of Senegal, I'm honored to begin my visit to Africa
in your beautiful country.
For hundreds of years on this island peoples of different continents met
in fear and cruelty. Today we gather in respect and friendship, mindful of
past wrongs and dedicated to the advance of human liberty.
At this place, liberty and life were stolen and sold. Human beings were
delivered and sorted, and weighed, and branded with the marks of commercial
enterprises, and loaded as cargo on a voyage without return. One of the largest
migrations of history was also one of the greatest crimes of history.
Below the decks, the middle passage was a hot, narrow, sunless nightmare;
weeks and months of confinement and abuse and confusion on a strange and
lonely sea. Some refused to eat, preferring death to any future their captors
might prepare for them. Some who were sick were thrown over the side. Some
rose up in violent rebellion, delivering the closest thing to justice on
a slave ship. Many acts of defiance and bravery are recorded. Countless others,
we will never know.
Those who lived to see land again were displayed, examined, and sold at
auctions across nations in the Western Hemisphere. They entered societies
indifferent to their anguish and made prosperous by their unpaid labor. There
was a time in my country's history when one in every seven human beings was
the property of another. In law, they were regarded only as articles of commerce,
having no right to travel, or to marry, or to own possessions. Because families
were often separated, many denied even the comfort of suffering together.
For 250 years the captives endured an assault on their culture and their
dignity. The spirit of Africans in America did not break. Yet the spirit
of their captors was corrupted. Small men took on the powers and airs of
tyrants and masters. Years of unpunished brutality and bullying and rape
produced a dullness and hardness of conscience. Christian men and women became
blind to the clearest commands of their faith and added hypocrisy to injustice.
A republic founded on equality for all became a prison for millions. And
yet in the words of the African proverb, "no fist is big enough to hide
the sky." All the generations of oppression under the laws of man could
not crush the hope of freedom and defeat the purposes of God.
In America, enslaved Africans learned the story of the exodus from Egypt
and set their own hearts on a promised land of freedom. Enslaved Africans
discovered a suffering Savior and found he was more like themselves than
their masters. Enslaved Africans heard the ringing promises of the Declaration
of Independence and asked the self-evident question, then why not me?
In the year of America's founding, a man named Olaudah Equiano was taken
in bondage to the New World. He witnessed all of slavery's cruelties, the
ruthless and the petty. He also saw beyond the slave-holding piety of the
time to a higher standard of humanity. "God tells us," wrote Equiano, "that
the oppressor and the oppressed are both in His hands. And if these are not
the poor, the broken-hearted, the blind, the captive, the bruised which our
Savior speaks of, who are they?"
Down through the years, African Americans have upheld the ideals of America
by exposing laws and habits contradicting those ideals. The rights of African
Americans were not the gift of those in authority. Those rights were granted
by the Author of Life, and regained by the persistence and courage of African
Americans, themselves.
Among those Americans was Phyllis Wheatley, who was dragged from her home
here in West Africa in 1761, at the age of seven. In my country, she became
a poet, and the first noted black author in our nation's history. Phyllis
Wheatley said, "In every human breast, God has implanted a principle
which we call love of freedom. It is impatient of oppression and pants for
deliverance."
That deliverance was demanded by escaped slaves named Frederick Douglas
and Sojourner Truth, educators named Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois,
and ministers of the Gospel named Leon Sullivan and Martin Luther King, Jr.
At every turn, the struggle for equality was resisted by many of the powerful.
And some have said we should not judge their failures by the standards of
a later time. Yet, in every time, there were men and women who clearly saw
this sin and called it by name.
We can fairly judge the past by the standards of President John Adams, who
called slavery "an evil of callosal magnitude." We can discern
eternal standards in the deeds of William Wilberforce and John Quincy Adams,
and Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Abraham Lincoln. These men and women, black
and white, burned with a zeal for freedom, and they left behind a different
and better nation. Their moral vision caused Americans to examine our hearts,
to correct our Constitution, and to teach our children the dignity and equality
of every person of every race. By a plan known only to Providence, the stolen
sons and daughters of Africa helped to awaken the conscience of America.
The very people traded into slavery helped to set America free.
My nation's journey toward justice has not been easy and it is not over.
The racial bigotry fed by slavery did not end with slavery or with segregation.
And many of the issues that still trouble America have roots in the bitter
experience of other times. But however long the journey, our destination
is set: liberty and justice for all.
In the struggle of the centuries, America learned that freedom is not the
possession of one race. We know with equal certainty that freedom is not
the possession of one nation. This belief in the natural rights of man, this
conviction that justice should reach wherever the sun passes leads America
into the world.
With the power and resources given to us, the United States seeks to bring
peace where there is conflict, hope where there is suffering, and liberty
where there is tyranny. And these commitments bring me and other distinguished
leaders of my government across the Atlantic to Africa.
African peoples are now writing your own story of liberty. Africans have
overcome the arrogance of colonial powers, overturned the cruelties of apartheid,
and made it clear that dictatorship is not the future of any nation on this
continent. In the process, Africa has produced heroes of liberation -- leaders
like Mandela, Senghor, Nkrumah, Kenyatta, Selassie and Sadat. And many visionary
African leaders, such as my friend, have grasped the power of economic and
political freedom to lift whole nations and put forth bold plans for Africa's
development.
Because Africans and Americans share a belief in the values of liberty and
dignity, we must share in the labor of advancing those values. In a time
of growing commerce across the globe, we will ensure that the nations of
Africa are full partners in the trade and prosperity of the world. Against
the waste and violence of civil war, we will stand together for peace. Against
the merciless terrorists who threaten every nation, we will wage an unrelenting
campaign of justice. Confronted with desperate hunger, we will answer with
human compassion and the tools of human technology. In the face of spreading
disease, we will join with you in turning the tide against AIDS in Africa.
We know that these challenges can be overcome, because history moves in
the direction of justice. The evils of slavery were accepted and unchanged
for centuries. Yet, eventually, the human heart would not abide them. There
is a voice of conscience and hope in every man and woman that will not be
silenced -- what Martin Luther King called a certain kind of fire that no
water could put out. That flame could not be extinguished at the Birmingham
jail. It could not be stamped out at Robben Island Prison. It was seen in
the darkness here at Goree Island, where no chain could bind the soul. This
untamed fire of justice continues to burn in the affairs of man, and it lights
the way before us.