Letters from an American - May 19, 2024
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May 19, 2024. Delivering the commencement address to the graduating seniors at Morehouse College
today, President Joe Biden addressed the nation. After thanking the mothers, fathers, grandmothers,
grandfathers, and all the people who helped the graduates get to the
chairs in front of the stage, Biden recalled Morehouse's history. The school was founded in
1867 by civil rights leader Reverend William Jefferson White, with the help of two other
Baptist ministers, the Reverend Richard C. Coulter and the Reverend Edmund Turney to educate formerly enslaved men. They believed education
would be the great equalizer from slavery to freedom, Biden said, and they created an institution
that would make the term Morehouse Man continue to stand as a symbol of excellence 157 years later.
insolence 157 years later. Then Biden turned to a speech that centered on faith.
Churches talk a lot about Jesus being buried on Friday and rising from the dead on Sunday,
he said. But we don't talk enough about Saturday, when his disciples felt all hope was lost.
In our lives and the lives of the nation, we have those Saturdays to bear witness the day before glory, seeing people's pain and not looking away. But what work is done on Saturday
to move pain to purpose? How can faith get a man, get a nation through what was to come?
It's a truism that anything that happens before we are
born is equidistant from our personal experience, mixing the recent past and the ancient past
together in a similar vaguely imagined before time. Most of today's college graduates were not
born until about 2002 and likely did not pay a great deal of attention
to politics until about five years ago. Biden took the opportunity to explain to them what it meant
to live through the 1960s. He noted that he was the first in his family to graduate from college,
paid for with loans. He fell in love, got a law degree, got married, and took a job at a fancy law firm.
But his world changed when an assassin murdered the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, a Morehouse man,
and the segregated city of Wilmington, Delaware erupted with fires, looting, fights, and occasional gunfire.
For nine months, the National Guard patrolled the city in combat gear,
the longest stretch in any American city since the Civil War, Biden recalled.
Dr. King's legacy had a profound impact on me and my generation, whether you're black or white,
Biden explained. He left the law firm to become first a public defender and then a county councilman, working to change our state's politics to embrace the cause of civil rights.
The Democratic Party had historically championed white supremacy, but that alignment was in the process of changing as Democrats had swung behind civil rights and the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
and the 1965 Voting Rights Act. Biden and his cohort hoped to turn the Delaware Democratic Party toward the new focus on civil rights, he said. In 1972, Biden ran for the Senate and won,
barely. In a state, Republican President Richard Nixon won with 60% of the vote.
Biden recalled how, newly elected and hiring staff in Washington, D.C., he got the call
telling him that his wife and daughter had been killed in a car accident and that his two sons
were gravely injured. The pain of that day hit again 43 years later, he said, when his son Beau
died of cancer after living for a year next to a burn pit in Iraq. And he talked of meeting First Lady Jill
Biden, who healed the family in all the broken places. Our family became my redemption, he said.
His focus on family and community offered a strong contrast to the Republican emphasis
on individualism. On this walk of life, you come to understand that we don't know
where or what fate will bring you or when, Biden said. But we also know we don't walk alone.
When you've been a beneficiary of the compassion of your family, your friends, even strangers,
you know how much the compassion matters, he said. I've learned there is no easy
optimism, but by faith, by faith, we can find redemption. For the graduates, Biden noted,
four years ago felt like one of those Saturdays. The pandemic robbed you of so much. Some of you lost loved ones, mothers, fathers,
brothers, sisters, who aren't able to be here to celebrate with you today.
You missed your high school graduation. You started college just as George Floyd was murdered,
and there was a reckoning on race. It's natural to wonder if democracy you hear about actually works for you.
What is democracy if black men are being killed in the street?
What is democracy if a trail of broken promises still leaves black communities behind?
What is democracy if you have to be ten times better than anyone else to get a fair shot?
And most of all, what does it mean, as we've heard before,
to be a black man who loves his country, even if it doesn't love him back in equal measure?
The crowd applauded. Biden explained that across the Oval Office from his seat behind the Resolute
desk are busts of Dr. King and Senator Robert Kennedy challenging Biden.
Are we living up to what we say we are as a nation? To end racism and poverty? To deliver
jobs and justice? To restore our leadership in the world? He wears a rosary on his wrist,
made of Beau's rosary, as a reminder that faith asks us to hold on to hope, to move heaven and
earth to make better days. That's my commitment to you, he said, to show you democracy, democracy,
democracy is still the way. Biden pledged to call out the poison of white supremacy, and he noted that he stood up with
George Floyd's family to help create a country where you don't need to have that talk with your
son or grandson as they get pulled over. The administration is investing in black communities
and reconnecting neighborhoods cut apart by highways decades ago. It has reduced black child poverty
to the lowest rate in history. It is removing lead pipes across the nation to provide clean
drinking water to everyone and investing in high-speed internet to bring all households
into the modern era. The administration is creating opportunities, Biden said, bringing
good-paying jobs, capital to start small businesses,
and loans to buy homes, health insurance, prescription drugs, housing that's more affordable
and accessible. Biden reminded the audience that he had joined workers on a picket line.
To applause, he noted that when the Supreme Court blocked his attempt to relieve student debt,
he found two other ways to do it.
He noted the administration's historic investment
in historically black colleges and universities.
We're opening doors so you can walk into a life of generational wealth,
to be providers and leaders for your families and communities.
Today, record numbers of black Americans have jobs,
health insurance, and more wealth than ever. Then Biden directly addressed the student protests
over the Israeli government strikes on Gaza. At Morehouse today, one graduate stood with his back
to Biden and his fist raised during the president's speech, and the class valedictorian, D'Angelo
Jeremiah Fletcher, who spoke before the president, wore a picture of a Palestinian flag on his mortar
board and called for an immediate and permanent ceasefire in Gaza, at which Biden applauded.
In a democracy, we debate and dissent about America's role in the world, Biden said.
I want to say this very clearly.
I support peaceful, nonviolent protest.
Your voices should be heard, and I promise you I hear them.
What's happening in Gaza is heartbreaking, he said,
with innocent Palestinians caught in the middle of a fight between Hamas and Israel.
He reminded them that he has called for an immediate ceasefire
to stop the fighting and bring the hostages home.
His administration has been working for a deal,
as well as to get more aid into Gaza and to rebuild it.
Crucially, he added, there is more at stake than just one ceasefire.
He wants to build a lasting, durable peace. Because the question is, what after? What after
Hamas? What happens then? What happens in Gaza? What rights do the Palestinian people have?
To applause, he said, I'm working to make sure we finally get a two-state solution,
the only solution for two people to live in peace, security, and dignity.
This is one of the hardest, most complicated problems in the world, he said.
I know it angered and frustrates many of you,
including my family.
But most of all, I know it breaks your heart.
It breaks mine as well.
Leadership is about fighting through
the most intractable problems.
It's about channeling anger, frustration,
and heartbreak to find a solution.
It's about doing what you believe is right,
even when it's hard and lonely. You're all
future leaders, every one of you graduating today. You'll face complicated, tough moments.
In these moments, you'll listen to others, but you'll have to decide, guided by knowledge,
conviction, principle, and your own moral compass.
Turning back to the United States, Biden urged the graduates to examine what happens to you and your family when old ghosts in new garments seize power.
Extremists come for the freedoms you thought belonged to you and everyone.
He noted attacks on equality in America and that extremist forces were peddling
a fiction, a caricature of what being a man is about. Tough talk, abusing power, bigotry.
Their idea of being a man is toxic. But that's not you, he continued. It's not us.
You all know and demonstrate what it really means to be a man.
Being a man is about the strength of respect and dignity.
It's about showing up because it's too late if you have to ask.
It's about giving hate no safe harbor and leaving no one behind and defending freedoms.
It's about standing up to the abuse of power, whether physical, economic, or psychological.
To applause, he added, it's about knowing faith without works is dead. The strength and wisdom
of faith endures, Biden said, and I hope, my hope for you is, my challenge to you is that you still keep the faith so long as you can.
Together, we're capable of building a democracy worthy of our dreams.
A bigger, brighter future that proves the American dream is big enough for everyone to succeed.
Class of 2024, four years ago, it probably felt like
Saturday, Biden concluded. Four years later, you made it to Sunday, to commencement, to the beginning.
And with faith and determination, you can push the sun above the horizon once more.
God bless you all, he said. We with music composed by Michael Moss.