Extract of a Robert Kennedy's speech, making appear as if it was directed to the world. |
War does not determine who is right - only who is left. Bertrand Russell The words of the prophets Are wrote in the walls of the subway Violence is again taking its toll Victims of the violence Are black and white Rich and poor Young and old Famous and unknown They are most important of all, Human beings Whom other human beings Loved and needed No one, no matter where he lives Or what he does Can be certain who next will suffer From some senseless act of bloodshed And yet it goes on and on and on In this world of ours Why? Why? Why? What has violence ever accomplished? What has it ever created? Power is built in weakness In withstanding the attacks of the envious! Our enemies want to divide us Forgetting compassion and forgiveness Violence is a mindless menace Which again stains our land And every one of our lives It is not the concern of any one race Whenever any American's life Is taken by another American unnecesarily... Whether it is done in the name of the law Or in defiance of the law, By one man or by a gang, In cold blood or in passion In an attack of violence Or in response to violence, Whenever we tear at the fabric of our lives, Which another man has painfully and clumsily Woven for himself And his children, Whenever we do this, Then the whole world is degraded. Yet we seemingly tolerate A rising level of violence That ignores our common humanity And our claims to civilization alike. Too often, we honor swagger And bluster and the wielders of force. Too often, we excuse those Who are willing to build their own lives On the shattered dreams of other human beings. But this much is clear: Fear breeds violence, Violence breeds violence, Repression breeds retaliation, And only a cleansing of our whole society Can remove this sickness from our souls. For when you teach a man to hate And to fear his brother, When you teach that he is a lesser man Because of his color or his beliefs Or the policies that he pursues.... When you teach that those who differ from you Threaten your freedom or your job Or your home or your family, Then you also learn to confront others, Not as fellow citizens, But as enemies. To be met not with cooperation, But with conquest. To be subjugated and to be mastered. We learn, at the last, To look at our brothers as aliens. Alien men with whom we share a city, But not a community. Men bound to us in common dwelling, But not in common effort. We learn to share only a common fear, Only a common desire to retreat from each other. Only a common impulse to meet disagreement With force. Our lives on this planet Are too short. The work to be done Is to great to let this spirit flourish Any longer in this planet of ours. Of course, we cannot banish it with a program Nor with a resolution.... But we can perhaps remember, If only for a time, That those who live with us are our brothers, That they share with us The same short moment of life, TThat they seek, as do we, Nothing but the chance to live out their lives In purpose and in happiness, Winning what satisfaction and Fulfillment that they can. Surely, this bond of common fate, Surely, this bond of common goals Can begin to teach us something. Surely, we can learn, at the least, To look around at those of us, Of our fellow men, And surely, we can begin to work a little harder To bind up the wounds among us and to become, In our hearts, Brothers and countrymen once again. |