A Spirit Reborn
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In his article, “A Spirit Reborn,” Safire reminded me of the things that we really should be considering today. We should be thinking of our unfinished work as citizens and students of the world. We should be thinking of the tasks that remain before us if we believe in the freedom our parents and ancestors died to protect.
Now, in the spirit of Abraham Lincoln and the Gettysburg Address, I wish to use this occasion as an opportunity to call attention once again to what our 16th President reminded us almost 140 years ago. William Safire tells us that Lincolns “sermon at Gettysburg reminds us, the living, of our unfinished work and the great tasks remaining before us – to resolve that this generations response to the deaths of thousands of our people leads to a new birth of freedom.”
To you gathered here today, I say that this moment in time is and should be an opportunity for us to reflect on our own unfinished work. This is a time when each of us should look within our selves and ask what more can I do to reduce hate and create greater understanding. For those of us who are students our unfinished business may be to reassess our role as students and ask the question, “what if we were students one hundred years ago? Would it be easier or more difficult to be a student? For those of us who know of the oppression that is the result of racial or ethnic bigotry is it better or worse than one hundred years ago? Or Sixty years ago? If things are better now do we understand that conditions are better because men and women sacrificed to make them better?” When we try to answer questions such as these, we cannot help but begin to understand there is unfinished business and that each of us has yet a small role to play in making the world a better place.
For those of us who work within the walls of the academy, this University, whether as students or faculty we have a responsibility to help tend to the unfinished business of this nation. If we truly want to memorialize the lives loss in World Trade Center and the Pentagon, we will find ways that will lead to a renewed birth of freedom. If we truly want to memorialize those lives lost in a Pennsylvania field we will find ways to insure a renewed birth of freedom. For us in the academy our tasks may be simple, but vital. Our tasks may be to insure that this is a place of learning. We must insure that this is a place where students and faculty, with the surrounding community has an opportunity to reflect on lifes choices and to understand why those choices were made and others were not. Today we must pause and reflect on the responsibility we have as free people. We have a responsibility to value and protect our freedom by reminding ourselves and each other, just how fragile this thing called freedom really is.
So why are we really here today? We are really here today to pay homage the rebirth of the American spirit. We pause here today as a diverse community which has the capacity to put aside our various traditions and come together as one to share and reflect. I want to welcome and thank our special guests today who join us at this time to pause and pay our respect to the men and women whose deaths are