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Marsalis - Renewal Series Address - 1/16/06
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Thank you Governor Blanco, Lieutenant Governor
Landrieu, and especially President Cowen for
inviting me here tonight.
It’s good to be home. It’s especially
good to be home in a time of crisis because tough times
force us to return to fundamentals. And there is
nothing more fundamental than home. Many of you
are visitors to New Orleans, but it won’t take
four years for the Crescent City to be forever in your
blood. So I feel in a way, that we are all home
tonight.
I also feel a special honor in speaking to you on Martin
Luther King, Jr.’s Day because it was Dr. King’s
tireless activism that fostered our modern way of relating
to one another. Yes, we are here tonight empowered
with the feeling that if we want to we can speak truthfully
to one another.
We can work together. We can rely on one another
because Dr. King’s actions made his dream our reality,
and this rebuilding of New Orleans gives us the perfect
opportunity to see if we’re ready to extend the
legacy of Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement.
Look around this room and realize that the final chapter
of that movement still waits for a generation with the
courage to write it. That’s why I say we
are all home tonight. We are all home because Dr.
King led the charge to victory over regressive, ignorant
traditions that had long gone unchallenged…because
he was unwavering in presenting compelling arguments
to make real the promises of the Constitution…because
he never succumbed to hopelessness and showed us what
one citizen can achieve when armed with an evangelical
zeal for freedom and a first-class education, it is most
fitting to re-open our city’s finest institutions
of higher education on the day we celebrate Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. Though he is almost always reduced to
a dreamer today, Dr. King was an achiever, a most powerful
exemplar of action. His last book is entitled Where
Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community? It is a question
that is most appropriate for us in this moment.
Dr. King worked in the shadow of slavery and discrimination. We
are in the shadow of the worst natural disaster to ever
befall America.
What better way to celebrate him than by rising to a
challenge?
His challenge was to reverse 80 years of legalized
apartheid – a
veritable way of life in our land of freedom. Our
challenge is merely to rebuild a great city in times
of unbelievable political callousness and corruption. Even
in these times there are still neighbors that will turn
their backs on neighbors. Yes, this is Louisiana, and
we are home tonight.
Through a tireless single-minded campaign to expose
lies and sanctioned injustice, Dr. King never lost
faith in the ability of humans to behave better. He didn’t
settle. He succeeded. Certainly his single-mindedness
is what is required of us, at this time, to rebuild New
Orleans. Don’t settle. Succeed.
Catchy slogans aside, when we look around here, we
see destruction, anguish, and uncertainty. Let’s
look deeper into ourselves and find possibility. That’s
why it’s important to mark the reopening of New
Orleans with the triumphant return of Tulane, Xavier,
Loyola and Dillard Universities. Through first-class
education, a generation marches down the long uncertain
road of the future with confidence. After all is
said and done, education’s purpose is to lead students
to who they are, what they can be, and who they want
to be. The best way to be, is to do. And when we pass
on the best of what we do … that is quality education.
If we’re lucky, we only have a good 80 years or
so on this earth, and through education, those 80 are
extended through the generations that follow. Look
around: Paul Tulane put his life into this campus over
120 years ago. It’s still here – inviting
us tonight. I spent many a night as a high school
student in the Tulane Library. It’s here for
us now, and will be here for young people looking for
knowledge to define themselves and their time long after
we’re all gone.
That’s why it’s important to address young
people in the reopening of New Orleans – you have
always been at the forefront of social change. In
rebuilding, let’s revisit the potential of American
democracy and American glory when its citizens are mobilized
to enlightened action. The soldiers in Martin Luther
King’s army were people demanding change - lawyers,
clerks, politicians, housewives, businessmen, maids,
clergymen. The ones on the frontlines were America’s
youth.
Young people, much like you, who felt empowered to
better our nation...who understood that change required
sacrifice…who
were emboldened with a spirit of rightness and were determined
to create change for the betterment of our country.
That is why, as I stand before you tonight, I say the
best way to be, is to do. Don’t settle for
style. Succeed in substance. President Cowen
said “don’t come back if helping restore
New Orleans is not in your DNA,” and 91 percent
of you Tulane students have returned. Most of you
have returned at a time when many would have stayed away. And
now that you are here, you have the opportunity to set
a new tone, not only for New Orleans, but for our country. Remember,
many a revolution started with the actions of a few. For
example, only 56 men signed the Declaration of Independence
of which Ben Franklin said, “We must all hang together,
or assuredly we shall all hang separately.” A
few hanging together can lead a nation to change.
You know, we love to patronize young people with slogans
like “the young will lead the way” – when
actually, the young very seldom lead anything in our
country today. It’s been quite some time
since a younger generation pushed an older one to a higher
standard.
My daddy thought – no, he expected – that
my brothers and I and our generation would make the world
a better place. He was correct in his belief because
he had lived in an America of continual social progress. Depression
followed by prosperity, segregation by integration, and
so on.
And though I haven’t quite pinpointed it, somewhere
between my daddy’s youth and mine, generational
aspirations for a richer democracy changed to aspirations
for a richer me - more wealth and more leisure time for
a lower quality of work. Oh, and forget about our
political process.
Voting became too much of a bore - let alone keeping
an eye on how our tax dollars were being squandered or
how our interests were being poorly served by our elected
officials.
When did we begin to lose faith in our ability to effect
change? Perhaps the demoralizing murders of John and
Robert Kennedy, and MLK scared the civic-minded young
people of the 1960s right out of their idealism into
despair and then, to indifference. Perhaps it was
the 1980s when the “opportunity” inherent
in the American Dream was distorted from the land of “we” to
the land of “to hell with anybody else but me.” Maybe
the preoccupation with technological progress has overshadowed
our concern with human progress. In any case, the
result of this social inactivity is that generations
are now named simply for the last letters of the alphabet. And
these alphabet-named people are distinguished by the
ability to manipulate new technology, buy new things
with money they have not earned and be obsessed with
the trivial lives of celebrities.
But
I know you’re more than that.
We have the tendency to make generations unanimous. But
in fact, there really have only ever been a few people
in each generation who step out, are willing to put
themselves on the line, and risk everything for their
beliefs. Only a few act…the rest of us
reap the benefits of their risk.
Yes, I always laugh when people my age complain about
their college-age and teenage kids by talking about
how much better we were. I laugh because I have
absolutely no idea what my generation did to enrich
our democracy. What movement have we been identified
with that forced our elders to keep their promises…that
challenged their failures or built upon their successes? For
me, we dropped the ball after the Civil Rights Movement. We
entered a period of complacency and closed our eyes
to the very public corruption of our democracy.
As we have seen our money squandered and stolen,
our civic rights trampled, and the politics of polarity
become the order of the day, we have held absolutely
no one accountable. From us, you inherit an abiding
helplessness.
If you realize the unfortunate consequences of inaction,
hopefully you will understand even more the importance
of holding both your elders and your peers accountable
when it comes to the rebuilding of New Orleans. Stay
up on the facts.
What, other than injustice, could be the reason that
the displaced citizens of New Orleans cannot be accommodated
by the richest nation in the world? You, along
with the entire world, saw the bureaucratic fumbling
and lack of concern inflicted on those very same citizens
at the Superdome and the Convention Center. Who
is being held accountable now?
Take your example, not from my generation, but from
generations – from those few inspired young people – who
stood on the front lines and fought injustice throughout
the course of our nation’s history.
For example, in the first 20 years of the 1900’s,
youth supported the Progressive Movement to keep farmers
from being shafted by big business, as well as the
movements for women’s suffrage, worker’s
rights, a League of Nations and of course, keeping
alcohol legal. The next 20 years would see the
repeal of Prohibition, and young people pushing for
the establishment of Social Security, and unemployment
insurance. Young people vowed to fight Fascism
with the Lincoln Brigades and also vowed not to fight
old folks’ wars by taking the Oxford Oath. The
1940’s began with young people fighting the “Good
War.” The 50s saw young folks involved
in tearing down the laws that supported segregation,
challenging parental tastes and authority with rock-and-roll,
and questioning conformity with the Beatniks.
The
60s and 70s saw youth challenging Vietnam,
the role of women, rituals of courtship, race
relations, and the political process itself. Today, we still
reap the benefits of these generations’ successes
and suffer losses from their failures.
The rebuilding of New Orleans is an important point
in the history of the United States. Should my
generation expect yours to be the watchdogs of this
effort? Should we expect you to monitor how our
leaders handle this responsibility to restore our city? Well,
my generation might not – because we have not
been very good watchdogs ourselves. But I do. I
expect you to be different than the example we’ve
set for you.
Don’t wish for someone else to do later what
you can do now. When you perceive a problem, instead
of speaking about it in dorm rooms or in hushed corners
of bars or loudly in bars. Put together a group
of friends and be loud and public in your dissent.
When you notice inconsistencies between what is
said by government officials and what is done,
exercise your individual and collective power to
take steps to remove them. Our form of democracy allows
you to do that. Remember, the best way to be,
is to do.
What are you going to do?
Well, when it comes to the rebuilding of New Orleans,
start with the President. He stood in Jackson
Square and told the nation that he would rebuild New
Orleans and fix the levees. When public outrage
was at its highest and his popularity was nearing its
lowest, let’s remember that he put Karl Rove
in charge of the reconstruction effort. That
was in September. Has anyone seen or heard from
Karl Rove? Hmmm…
In the opening days of this New Year, the President
reiterated that the levees will be fixed. Yes,
money has been appropriated.
But is it enough? The task has been assigned. People
have been put in charge. But are they going to
take care of it? Are they waiting for people – like
you – to stop paying attention?
Now is the time for your generation to reclaim the
energy, optimism, and fire that is the real American
spirit. I am confident that you students can,
and will, make an incalculable contribution to the
intelligent and compassionate rebuilding of our city
and protection of our dispersed populace. In
doing so, you will be using your collective power to
redefine the soul of our nation.
You know, democracy is a can-do form. We always
hear about the rights of democracy, but the major responsibility
of it is participation. Throughout American history,
we have seen causes for the betterment of democracy
invigorated by young people unafraid to fight for the
general welfare of all, even if it meant alienation
from their own families.
Don’t be disheartened by the destruction of the
hurricane or by political ineptitude or even by the
apathy of others. Remember, we are all home. That
is why I urge you not to let this moment pass without
sending a clear message to your peers and elders around
the world, “New Orleans will be rebuilt, and
it will be rebuilt with an intensity, with an intelligence,
with an impatience and with a freshness that only serious
minded young people can bring.” One of
the great lessons of the Civil Rights Movement – when
the minds and hearts of enough citizens are focused
on change America changes very quickly.
I know that the challenge of rebuilding may seem
insurmountable. But
we have a roadmap to success - the path of Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. Because he didn’t settle
for “that’s just the way things are,” we
don’t have to. Because he led an intelligent
assault on all sorts of sanctioned corruption, we too
can use our intelligence to protect and project integrity.
Because he understood that all human beings are of
one race long before the discovery of the DNA strain,
we can now live that reality. Because Dr. King
was always about the business of making real the human
grandeur outlined in the United States Constitution
and Bill of Rights, we can still believe that our government
can be of the people, by the people, and for the people. Let’s
concentrate our energies to that end.
You will hear that the most immediate concerns for
New Orleans are the wetlands, the levees and the homes. But
I’m here to tell you that the most immediate
concern for New Orleans is the well-being of our displaced
neighbors spread out in a Diaspora all over the United
States.
Look around the room…and I want you all to understand
that there are forces all around you who wish to exploit
division, rob you of your freedom, and tell you what
to think. They are afraid of change…some
of these forces are even within you. But I’m
here to tell you, when young folks are motivated to
action, when they act with insight, soul and fire,
they can rekindle the weary spirit of a slumbering
nation. It’s time somebody woke us up. |