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Remarks of Senator John Kerry at Bedford High School Commencement Address June 06, 2004Toledo, OH I can't tell you how privileged I am to share this special moment in
your lives. And by chance it falls on a day that commemorates a moment
that will always live in American history. As we know all too sadly, this
weekend also marks the passing of a modern giant. I want to focus on your
future, but in the past we are all so conscious of now, there is strength
and inspiration for your lives. First, let me tell you how honored I am
to be part of the class of 2004. I know it's out of the ordinary to have
a graduation speaker who hasn't passed Mr. Harley's math class, but I'm
here because of a letter I received from an extra-ordinary young man.
A few months ago, your classmate Brandon Spader wrote to me that you
could all use, "a strong flame to brighten the future of [your] lives." Brandon is right. I wish, just as I wished for my own daughters on their
graduation day and just as your parents wish for you today, that we could
send you out into a world of peace, a world of justice, a world that is
fair and free for every person on this Earth. Yet we know this is not our world. Your generation will face great challenges,
and you will find, as you already have, that life brings setbacks as well
as success, hardship as well as hope. And when it gets dark, you'll need
that strong flame to light your way. Sixty years ago today, an earlier generation faced down darkness and
lit their way with a courage that saved freedom in the world. On June
6th, 1944, more than 73,000 young men were on landing crafts steaming
toward the Normandy shore. Many were not a day older than any of you.
They left their homes, their families, their friends and yes their high
schools to wage and win the decisive battle. They did not know if they
would ever see America again. But eighteen- and nineteen-year-olds on the hundreds of landing crafts
approaching that beach held their rifles over their heads, jumped into
the shallow waters and fought their way ashore. Because at the end of
the beach, beyond the cliff was the horizon of a better world. That is
what Americans do. We face a challenge - no matter how great - because
we know that on the other side there is always hope. Today, as we mark your graduation, we also celebrate the greatest generation.
And that coincidence tells a powerful truth: Now it is your generation's
turn to find the greatness that's in you. Look around you. Look at all the proud parents and teachers. Look at
the smiles on their faces and the tears in their eyes. They believe in you. America believes in you. And the best way to show
how much you believe in America is to give something of yourselves to
your country as well as your future careers. I know that Brandon is going off to the Air Force Academy, many of you
are enlisting in the military, and others will go on to higher education
to become tomorrow's teachers, business leaders, ministers, and public
servants. But no matter what work you do, there is other work to be done. There are senior citizens who need a friend, there are children who need
mentors, and there are communities that need help and healing. And across
the oceans, there are not only enemies to be faced, but people everywhere
ready to open their hearts to Peace Corps volunteers who show the world
the generosity of the American spirit. If you're willing to get involved, to lend your voices, your energy and
your time, in the years of your youth, you can surprise those who underestimate
the idealism and commitment of the young. You can prove in your own lives
the truth of something that was written about this nation when it was
young: "America is great because America is good." My own father served in the Army Air Corps during World War II. He volunteered
well before the war even began. And while he was on duty, and my mother
was volunteering, she sent him a letter. "You have no idea of the
ways in which one can be useful right now," she wrote. "There's
something for everyone to do." Half a century later, in a very different but equally fateful time, there
is something for all of us to do, a place for all to serve, no room on
the sidelines, and no challenge too daunting. We're a nation of optimists. We're the can-do people. And we just have
to believe in ourselves. He was the voice of America in good times and in grief. On another D-Day
twenty years ago, he stood on that windswept cliff at Normandy and paid
an imperishable tribute to the glorious boys of Point du Hoc. Many who
had survived were there with him that day, and he spoke the nation's heart.
When he stood at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, he said, "Mr. Gorbechev,
tear down this wall." He spoke for our country, for the eternal cause
of liberty, and most of all for the millions imprisoned behind that wall
who would soon after tear it down. Free men and women everywhere will
forever remember and honor President Reagan's role in ending the Cold
War. He really did believe that communism could be ended in his lifetime,
and he helped to make it happen. Perhaps President Reagan's greatest monument
isn't any building or any structure that bears his name, but the absence
of the Berlin Wall. When we lost the brave astronauts in the Challenger tragedy, he reminded
us that, "Nothing ends here; our hopes and our journeys continue."
Yesterday, his own journey ended a long and storied trip that spanned
most of the American century-and shaped one of the greatest victories
of freedom. He was our oldest president, but he made America young again. We pause for a moment to pray for his family, and the wife he loved in
a way all the world could see. And to the end, she loved him with courage
and complete devotion. The American spirit wears no political label. In service to others and
yes, in sacrifice for our country, there are no Republicans; there are
no Democrats; there are only Americans. When Brandon wrote to me, he asked about "ideas and values"
that could lift us up and "make our country greater than it has ever
been." When I look for the answer, I look at you: your commitment to a cause
bigger than yourselves. You are the ones who will lift up this land up
with your ideas and your values, with your faith and your love of family
and country. You are the ones who will always stand up for what is just and what is
right in America. That is what has always made the difference. You are what Robert Kennedy had in mind when he warned against a sense
of futility. He said "each time a man stands up for an ideal, or
acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he
sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million
different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current
that can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance." I know your idealism is not something you wear on your sleeves. Sometimes
it is tested by events and disappointments. But above all today, I ask
you to keep it. In it, you can find a lifetime of strength and service.
And America needs it: your idealism is our hope. Now you are ready, as the words at the doors of Bedford High tell you,
to depart and serve. Back to Official Viewpoints Page
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