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Commencement 2007
Suzanne
Buchele, Acting Dean of Academic Affairs - Opening Reading
Martin Luther King,
Jr., the great civil rights leader from the United States, was in Ghana on March
6, 1957, to witness the extraordinary events that we have celebrated here all
year. Exactly one month from that date he gave his famous sermon, Birth of a New
Nation. Up until this year, I didn’t realize that the New Nation the speech was
about was actually Ghana. In the speech he says:
“You can interpret Ghana
any kind of way you want to, but Ghana tells me that the forces of the universe
are on the side of justice. That night when I saw that old flag coming down and
the new flag coming up, I saw something else. That wasn’t just an ephemeral,
evanescent event appearing on the stage of history, but it was an event with
eternal meaning, for it symbolizes something. That thing symbolized to me that
an old order is passing away and a new order is coming into being. An old order
of colonialism, of segregation, of discrimination is passing away now, and a new
order of justice and freedom and goodwill is being born. That’s what it said:
that somehow the forces of justice stand on the side of the universe, and that
you can’t ultimately trample over God’s children and profit by it.”
And from a speech
“Where do we go
from here?” written ten years later:
“I
must confess, my friends, the road ahead will not always be smooth. There will
still be rocky places of frustration and meandering points of bewilderment.
There will be inevitable setbacks here and there. ... When our days become
dreary with low-hovering clouds of despair, and when our nights become darker
than a thousand midnights, let us remember that there is a creative force in
this universe, working to pull down the gigantic mountains of evil, a power that
is able to make a way out of no way and transform dark yesterdays into bright
tomorrows. Let us realize the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends
toward justice.”
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