
Remarks
as delivered by President William Jefferson Clinton
Georgetown
University
November
7, 2001
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Webcast
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President Clinton's remarks.
PRESIDENT
CLINTON: Thank you very much. Thank you Brian for your remarks. Thank you
President DeGioia for what you said and your leadership at Georgetown.
It is kind of hard for me to get used to a president younger than I am.
Thank you Dean Gallucci for helping me to come here and for the great work
you did in our administration when I was president. And I would also like
to thank the large number of people here who are my classmates, friends,
who served as ambassadors and in other positions in my administration.
All of them are sitting there thinking that it seemed like yesterday when
all of us looked like all of you. So I think I can say for all of them,
we are very grateful for what Georgetown did for us. We loved it when we
were here and we love it still and we are honored to be part of a family
that has given me this opportunity. I would also like to say a special
word of thanks to one of my professors, Fr. Otto Hentz, who is here. He
never abandoned me for all these years, even though he did not succeed
in convincing me to become a Jesuit.
I
am delighted that so many students are here today. I've come here too many
times when I thought there were not enough students in this hall, so I
am very glad to see you all and I thank you for coming and I'm sorry that
some of you had to wait in line awhile for the tickets. When I came here
ten years ago, as your president said, it was a remarkable time, a different
time. It was the end of the Cold War, the beginning of the global information
age-two realities that govern our lives today that we now take for granted
that seemed quite new then.
One
point I made ten years ago still seems to be particularly relevant ten
years later, and I would like to begin with that. Back then I said our
foreign policies are not really foreign at all anymore. In a world growing
ever more interdependent, the lines between foreign and domestic policy
are becoming meaningless, distinctions without a difference. I want to
resume the discussion on that point today, ten years later, with the benefit
or the handicap, depending on your view, of eight years as president, and
in light of the unfolding events since September 11.
First
let me say that anything I say has to be viewed in the context of my present
job-I am just a citizen, and as a citizen I support the efforts of President
Bush, the national security team, and our allies in fighting the current
terrorist threat. I believe we all should. The terrorists who stuck the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon believed they were attacking the two
most important symbols of American materialism and power. I think they
were wrong about that. I live and work in New York, my wife Hillary represents
the people of New York as a United States senator, I was commander-in-chief
of the people who show up and work everyday at the Pentagon. The people
who died represent, in my view, not only the best of America, but the best
of the world that I worked hard for eight years to build. A world of great
freedom and growing opportunity; a world of citizen responsibility, of
growing diversity and sharing community, a world that looks like the student
body here today. Look at you. You are from everywhere. Look at us and you
will see how more diverse America has grown in the last thirty plus years.
The terrorists killed people who came to America not to die, but dream,
from every continent, from dozens of countries, most every religion on
the face of the earth, including in large numbers Islam. They, those that
died in New York, the Pentagon, and Pennsylvania, are part of a very different
world and a very different worldview than those who killed them. Now I
would submit to you that we are now in a struggle with the soul of the
21st century and the world in which you students live and raise your own
children and make your own way. I believe that there are several things
that as Americans we ought to do and I would like to outline them in a
fairly direct fashion.
First,
we have to win the fight we are in and in that I urge you to keep three
things in mind. First of all, terror, the killing of noncombatants for
economic, political, or religious reasons has a very long history as long
as organized combat itself, and yet, it has never succeeded as a military
strategy standing on its own, but it has been around a long time. Those
of us who come from various European lineages are not blameless. Indeed,
in the first Crusade, when the Christian soldiers took Jerusalem, they
first burned a synagogue with 300 Jews in it, and proceeded to kill every
woman and child who was Muslim on the Temple mound. The contemporaneous
descriptions of the event describe soldiers walking on the Temple mound,
a holy place to Christians, with blood running up to their knees. I can
tell you that that story is still being told to today in the Middle East
and we are still paying for it. Here in the United States, we were founded
as a nation that practiced slavery and slaves were, quite frequently, killed
even though they were innocent. This country once looked the other way
when significant numbers of Native Americans were dispossessed and killed
to get their land or their mineral rights or because they were thought
of as less than fully human and we are still paying the price today. Even
in the 20th century in America people were terrorized or killed because
of their race. And even today, though we have continued to walk, sometimes
to stumble, in the right direction, we still have the occasional hate crime
rooted in race, religion, or sexual orientation. So terror has a long history.
The
second point I want to make is, in that long history, no terrorist campaign
standing on its own has ever won, and conventional military strategies
that have included terrorism with it have won because of conventional military
power, and terrorism has normally been a negative. I will just give you
one example from my childhood. In the Civil War, General Sherman waged
a brilliant military campaign to cut through the South and go to Atlanta.
It was significant and very helpful in bringing the Civil War to a close
in a way to, thank God, save the Union. On the way, General Sherman practiced
a relatively mild form of terrorism-he did not kill civilians, but he burned
all the farms and then he burned Atlanta, trying to break the spirit of
the Confederates. It had nothing whatever to do with winning the Civil
War, but it was a story that was told for a hundred years later, and prevented
America from coming together as we might otherwise have done. When I was
a boy growing up in the segregated South, when we should have been thinking
about how we were going to integrate the schools and give people equal
opportunity, people were making excuses for unconscionable behavior by
talking about what Sherman had done a hundred years ago. So, it is important
to remember that normally terrorism has backfired and never has it succeeded
on its own.
The
third point I want to make is that offense always wins first. Ever since
the first person walked out of a cave with a club and before people figured
out you could put sticks together and stretch an animal skin over it and
make it a shield, the people who take up arms win first, and then sooner
or later, hopefully sooner, decent people get together and figure out how
to defend themselves. When we were born, people thought there would never
be a way to defend against continuing nuclear war and we would exterminate
ourselves and we found the only known defense, which was mutually assured
destruction, but it worked, and no bomb was ever dropped again after Hiroshima
and Nagasaki.
So
this is troubling, this Anthrax business. I know it is, and it scares you.
And it's troubling when 5,000 people die not in some far away battlefield,
but in downtown New York on television. But you have to recognize that
unless this is something different than has ever occurred in human history,
we will figure out how to defend ourselves and civilization will endure.
A lot of good people have been working hard on this for a long time. In
the years that I served, career law enforcement officials working with
our intelligence services and others and people around the world prevented
many, many more terrorist attacks than were successful. Attempts to blow
up the Holland tunnel, the Los Angeles airport, to blow up planes flying
to the Philippines, an attempt on the Pope's life, an attempt to blow up
the biggest hotel in Jordan over the Millennium weekend, to destroy a Christian
site in the Holy Land, to plant bombs in cities in the Northwest and the
Northeast, and many others. They worked hard to strengthen the biological
weapons convention and to pass the chemical weapons convention. They worked
hard to begin to build our stock of vaccines, and antibiotics and to support
an organized civilian preparedness against the kind of problems we face
in the current Anthrax scare. Clearly, we needed to do more. September
the 11th happened. And so we are now about the business of improving our
defenses with regard to air travel and other critical infrastructure, against
attacks from biological weapons and in two other areas that I think are
quite important. We need to strengthen our capacity to chase the money
and get it, and we need some legislation on that, and we also need to continue
to work on cyber-terrorism, which is profoundly important. So far we've
just been laughing about some of these viruses that have invaded our computers
and go all around the country in no time, but a great deal of damage could
be done to our country unless we are prepared. And one area where we are
woefully lacking is the simple use of modern computer technology to track
people who come into this country with information already readily available.
It does not require us to erode people's civil rights or human rights.
But our governmental capacity, notwithstanding the fact that we have tripled
our investment in counter-terrorism in the last few years, to do what is
normally done by mass mailing firms, is not there. And we have to support
this and we have to support the current government and whatever decision
they make to do it, even if they have to contract with private companies
for awhile, but we should be able to find people who come here and stay
around a long time before they organize a big hit. So we will have to support
all these things.
But
the larger point I want to make is that we will do this, and for all of
you who've never lived through anything like this, whose childhood was
never colored by any kind of threat of security: when we were kids a lot
of us used to have to do drills where we would go to fallout shelters where
we would run if anybody ever dropped a nuclear weapon, and you learned
to live with it. And the people that were taking care of us did a good
job, and it never happened. So the first thing I want to say to you is
you cannot be paralyzed by this. No terrorist strategy has ever prevailed,
people who want to damage always win the beginning but people always figure
out defenses. And the ultimate purpose of terrorism is not to win military
victories anyway but to terrorize, to make you afraid to get up in the
morning, afraid of the future, and afraid of each other. I met an Egyptian
the first day I went down to see the people in the crisis center after
September 11th. This big Egyptian fellow with tears in his eyes said, "I'm
an Egyptian Muslim American, and I hate what happened worse than you do
probably, and I'm so afraid my fellow American will never trust me again."
That's what they want. So what I want to say to you first is, we have to
support the war in Afghanistan and the work at home, and it may be frightening
to you, but you have to stay centered, and you have to understand that
you're trying to create something that is really special, a country where
everybody can have a home if they share the same set of values. And you
can't give in to it. It's going to be all right.
Now
the second thing I want to say is, it's not enough to win the fight we're
in. You've probably had some arguments on campus. If not, you've certainly
read them, you've seen on television, there are a lot of people who just
don't see the world the way we do and certainly don't see America in a
very favorable light. And it is quite important that we do more to build
the pool of potential partners in the world, and shrink the pool of potential
terrorists. And that has nothing to do with the fight we're in. That has
to do with what else we do, and that depends upon basically how you analyze
the world. I've been going all over the world and I've been all over America
going through this exercise so I'll take you through it.
Imagine
yourself on September the 10th. Nothing's happened on September 11th. Try
to remember how you viewed the world on September 10th. If I had asked
you on that day, "What is the single most dominant element of the 21st
Century world," what would your answer have been? What would you have said?
Since you're living here and we've been doing reasonable well the last
few years, I can think of one of four answers you might have given if you're
a positive sort of person. You might have said, "Well, the global economy."
The globalization of the economy is the most dominant element because it's
made America 22 and a half million jobs and it's lifted more people out
of poverty in the last thirty years than were ever lifted out in all of
human history. Or you might have said, "No, it's the information technology
revolution because that's what's given us all the productivity that has
driven the economic growth." When I became president in January of '93
there were only fifty sites on the worldwide web. When I left office there
were 350 million. In eight years. Today, before the Anthrax scare, there
were thirty times as many messages transmitted by email as the postal services
every day in America. Or you might have said, "Oh, no, as impressive as
those things are, the most significant thing about the early 21st century
will be the advances in biological sciences." It will rival the significance
of the discovery of DNA. It will rival the significance of Newtonian physics.
We sequenced the human genome; we're developing microscopic testing mechanisms.
Soon we'll be able to identify cancers when they're just a few cells in
size. Soon we'll be able to give young mothers gene cards to take home
with their newborn babies and in countries with good health systems, children
will have life expectancies in excess of ninety years. Or you might have
said, if you're like me and you're into politics and this kind of thing,
you might have said, "No, the most important thing about the modern world
is the growth of democracy and diversity, because that is the environment
within which all the economic growth, all the technological growth, and
all the scientific advances flourish best. I was honored to be president
at the first time in history when more than half the world's people lived
under governments of their own choosing, and when America, as witnessed
by your presence here today, and other advanced countries became far more
diverse racially, ethnically, and religiously than ever before, and the
societies were actually working, and working better, and I might add, a
lot more interesting because of our diversity. So, you could have said
any of that.
On
the other hand, if you live in a poor country or you are more pessimistic
you might have answered one of four negative things. You could have said,
"No, no, you got it wrong about the economy. Global poverty will dominate
the early 21st century because half the world's people aren't in this global
economy." They live on less than two dollars a day, a billion people live
on less than a dollar a day, a billion and a half people never get a clean
glass of water, and one woman dies every minute in childbirth. And that's
a recipe for explosion, and that will dominate the world. Or you might
have said, "No, before that happens, the environmental crises will consume
us. The shortage of water, the deterioration of the oceans from which we
get our oxygen, and most of all global warming. If the earth warms for
the next 50 years at the rate of the last ten, we'll lose fifty feet of
Manhattan Island. The Florida Everglades I worked so hard to save. Whole
Pacific Island nations will be flooded, and tens of millions of food refugees
will be created, destabilizing governments and causing violence. Or you
could have said, "Well, no, before global warming gets us the epidemics
will. All over the world public health systems are crashing down, and just
to take AIDS as an example, there are now over 36 million AIDS cases, 22
million people have already died. If we don't turn the trend around there
will be 100 million AIDS cases in five years, making it the worst epidemic
since the Plague swept Europe in the 14th century and killed one in four
people. And the fastest growing rates are in the former Soviet Union on
Europe's back door, and the second fastest growing rates are in the Caribbean
on our front door, and the third fastest growing rates are in India, the
biggest democracy in the world. And the Chinese just admitted they had
twice as many cases as they had previously thought, and only four percent
of the adults in our biggest nation know how AIDS is contracted and spread.
So today, two thirds of the cases are in Africa. Tomorrow, it's everybody's
problem, unless we turn it around. Or you might have said even on September
the 10th, if you'd been keeping up with this, "No, no, no, even before
the health crises. We will be consumed by terrorism, by the marriage of
modern weapons of destruction to ancient racial, religious and tribal hatreds."
Now
here's how I think you ought to think about this. What do the positive
things I mentioned, the global economy, the explosion of information technology,
the biological sciences advances, and democracy and diversity, and the
negative things I mentioned, global poverty, the environmental crises,
the health crises, and terror, what do all eight of those things have in
common? They all reflect the absolutely breathtaking increase in global
interdependence, the extent of which the barriers of nation borders don't
count for much anymore, and to which we are all effected by things that
happen a long way from home. Things that used to happen a long way form
home can now happen next door. In other words, I honestly believe it's
very important if you want to understand the world in which you live that
you see September the 11th as the dark side from all the benefits we've
gotten from tearing down the walls, collapsing the distances and spreading
the information that we have across the world. We have not changed human
nature, we have not solved all the problems, and there are a lot of people
that see the world differently than we do. You cannot collapse walls, collapse
differences and spread information without making yourself more vulnerable
to forces of destruction. You cannot claim the benefits of this new world
without becoming more vulnerable at home. Now having said that, I think
it is highly unlikely that the 21st century will claim as many innocent
lives as the 20th century did. Keep in mind, it's scary, it happened in
our country, and if you live in New York, in your town, and on television.
And maybe someone you know died. Most of us who live in New York know somebody
who died. But remember, in World War I nine million people died. Between
the wars 20 million people died from corrupt and bad governments. In World
War II, over 20 million people died. After World War II another 20 million
people died from oppressive governments. More than a million died in Korea.
Somewhere around a million died in Vietnam. Seven hundred thousand people
died in Rwanda in ninety days from people killing each other with machetes.
I think it is unlikely, if we do the right things, in spite of how terrifying
this is, that the 21st century will be anything like the killer that the
20th century was. But we cannot ignore that fact that we have vulnerability
at home because of our interdependence. All the interdependence that's
brought us all these wonderful advances in technology and science and economically
that benefited America so much required us to tear down the walls, collapse
distances and spread information, and it made us more vulnerable.
Now,
if you accept that analysis, I hope the first thing I said is more compelling.
We've got to win the fight we're in. The Al Quaeda network and Mr. Bin
Laden are of an order of magnitude today more able than any other terrorist
network in the world. But it is not enough because there's no way for us
to put the Genie back in the bottle. It's not like we can go take care
of business in Afghanistan and put the walls up and put the distances back
and bring the information back. It's not like we can reverse the world
we live in. And you wouldn't like it if we did. I suspect you like most
of the positive things about this new world. Therefore we have to look
ahead and say, ok, so we'll win the fight we're in but we also have to
create a world where we have more partners and fewer potential terrorists.
And how are we going to do that? We have to spread the benefits and shrink
the burdens of the 21st century world, number one. Number two, we have
to deal with the fact that most terrorists come from places that aren't
democracies. And number three, we have to deal with the special challenges
presented in the Muslim world, because Islam's our fastest growing religion
in America, and we have to lift up the positive forces there, and encourage
those with enough courage to stand up for them. When I moved to New York,
I was given a book written in 1949 by a wonderful writer named E.B. White,
called Here is New York. He commented on the fact that New Yorkers and
a lot of other people died in Pearl Harbor, and how vulnerable they felt
after the atom bomb dropped in Hiroshima, and the irony that the United
Nations building, the symbol of peace, was being built in New York after
the war in response to the dropping of the atom bomb. Here's what he said
fifty-two years ago. It could have been written or September 11th:
We
now see a race between the destroying planes in the struggling parliament
of man. The city at last perfectly illustrates both the universal dilemma
and the general solution. This riddle in steel and stone is at once the
perfect target and the perfect demonstration of nonviolence and racial
brotherhood. This lofty target scraping the skies and meeting the destroying
planes halfway is the home of all people and all nations, housing the deliberations
by which the planes are to be stayed and their errands forestalled.
Amazing,
isn't it? Fifty-two years ago he foresaw a time when New York would be
attacked from the air as the symbol of all peoples and all places. At the
time he thought it was because the UN was there. Now all New York looks
like the UN, just like you do. I'll say again, this is a struggle to define
the soul of the 21st century. We have to win the fight we're in but we
also have to create more partners and reduce the terrorist pool. So what
do we have to do? First, we have to reduce poverty and create more economic
opportunity. Last year we relieved the debt of the poorest countries. We
ought to do more of it, because we only relieved the debt if they would
put money to education, health care, or economic development, to make sure
the money wouldn't be wasted, and the stories are stunning, what's being
done with this money in these countries. We should do more of that. Last
year we gave two million micro-enterprise loans to poor people in Asia,
Latin American, and Africa. We ought to be giving twenty million a year
or more. They average fifty, sixty dollars apiece. They put a lot of poor
village people in businesses. We should do more, a lot cheaper than going
to war. There's a Peruvian economist named Hernando De Soto who wrote a
book I recommend to all of you called The Mystery of Capital, pointing
out that the poor people of the world control today five trillion dollars
in assets in their homes and their businesses, but they are still shut
out of capitalism because they can't borrow any money on their assets,
because their assets are not recognized within the legal system of their
country. For businesses, because the legal system is so bogged-down and
cumbersome and expensive that people can't get into it at an affordable
price, and for people who live in shanties, they have no way getting addresses
or land titles that can be verified and protected in court, so nobody will
loan them money on their houses. So De Soto says, he's going around the
world working on every continent saying, look, if you could just let poor
people legitimize their assets, then they could get credit and it would
be far better than all the foreign aid and foreign investment put together,
because they have five trillion dollars worth of stuff, it's just useless
to them. We ought to pay to help this guy do this project in every country
in the world. You ought to hear the history of American property rights.
We fought over this for decades. But you think about it, every one of you
that take for granted your family's home mortgage or car loan or business
loan. The reason you can get a car loan is, you can establish title to
the car, and it's an asset worth something so people can loan you money
on it. We ought to fund this around the world. We ought to train people
to do what we take for granted in America. One of my former administration
members is out here in the audience, Melanne Verveer. She and her husband
were my classmates at Georgetown and she was Hilary's chief of staff and
she now is working with Georgetown with a group called Vital Voices, which
Hilary and Melanne helped to establish, women's groups all over the world
working for peace and also empowerment. They've had here women from China,
Vietnam and other places training them to do what we take for granted.
This doesn't cost any money and it wins big benefits. So, these are the
kinds of things that we ought to do economically.
Second
thing we ought to do is get the kids of the world in school. There are
a hundred million children who never go to school. In a poor country, one
year of schooling is worth ten percent to twenty percent increased income
for life, every year. We can do this for not much money. Brazil, a developing
country, has ninety-seven percent of its kids in school. Why? Because they
pay the mothers-not the fathers, the mothers-in the thirty percent of the
poorest families a fixed amount a month if they send their kids to school.
And they get a little card, it looks like a credit card, it says Bolsa-Escola
on it, and if then once a month they get a certificate from school that
their kid was their eighty-five percent of the time. They show up at the
local lottery office and they get their cash. So not surprisingly, they're
all in school. It's not rocket science. Ten years from now, you can remember
this, ten years from now you check how Brazil's doing compared to other
developing countries because they did this today. In my last year as president
we got 300 million dollars, not much in a 1.7 trillion dollar budget, to
feed six million children a good meal every day for a year, if but only
if they come to school. I just got the first report on it from Senator
McGovern and Senator Dole, and Congressman McGovern from Massachusetts
who are handling this program, and it's amazing. Kids are flooding into
schools who didn't go before because they come from families that don't
have the ability to give them a good meal every day. You know, this is
cheap. This is a lot cheaper than going to war, and it makes a big difference.
I should also point out that one of the big problems we're having right
now in the conflict in Afghanistan is the impact of the so-called Madrassas
in religious schools on the mindset of the children. You've probably all
seen stories about it, but it's not true that those kids were sent to those
schools because their mothers and fathers thought Usama Bin Laden was the
greatest thing since sliced bread. Most of them went there because their
regular schools closed when the government couldn't fund them anymore.
And I saw a story about one boy whose brother the parents paid for and
couldn't get a job, so they just didn't pay for this kid to go to a private
school so he ends up in Madrassa being indoctrinated instead of educated.
We ought to pay to send these kids to school. A lot cheaper than going
to war, and builds you a better life.
Same
argument applies to AIDS. Secretary General Kofi Annan's asked for seven
billion dollars a year for a global fund to fight infectious diseases.
I tell you, I've done a lot of work in this area. We can turn this epidemic
around in three years. Brazil cut the death rate in half in three years
with medicine and prevention. Uganda, with no medicine cut the death rate
in half in five years. We do not have to have 100 million AIDS cases in
five years. We do not have to let countries be consumed by this. I promise
you, fledgling democracies will be destroyed by this. They will not be
able to sustain an AIDS caseload of 100 million. And we don't have to have
it happen. We ought to fund this program. It's not very much money.
Same
argument applies to global warming. We could actually make money out of
that, and so could the developing world. There's a trillion dollar untapped
market for alternative energy and energy conservation technologies that
are available right now. All we have to do is to help finance it. We would
actually make money and create jobs at a time when America needs some jobs,
we could use some more jobs now. And so, I think, I want to emphasize to
you, I think this is really important. If we do these things we will create
a more positive interdependent world.
I
further think we must do more about democracy. Ten years ago I said it
ought to matter to us how people govern themselves because democracies
by and large don't go to war with each other, don't sponsor terrorist acts
against each other, and are more likely to be reliable partners, protect
the environment, and abide by the law. Democracy is a stabilizing force.
It provides a nonviolent means for resolving disputes. I believe that.
And it's no accident that most of these terrorists come from non-democratic
countries. If you live in a country where you're never required to take
responsibility for yourself, where you never even have to ask whether there's
something you should be doing to solve your own problems, then people are
kept in a kind of a permanent state of collective immaturity and it becomes
quite east for them to believe that someone else's success is the cause
of their distress. Now I've already told you I think we ought to be doing
more to help, but there's some people you can't help if they don't help
themselves. And I think this is a very, very important point. I have seen
so many instances where peoples simply did not have any reference point
because they were never required to take responsibility for themselves.
If your families had raised you and they were so worried that you were
going to hurt yourself that from the time that you were six 'til the time
it came time for you to go to Georgetown they never let out of house, you
would have still been six emotionally, if you had never been able to leave
the house. That's what it's like if you never get to have a say in your
own life. I also think it's important when countries make a decision to
be democracies that we recognize we ought to help them. I just got back
from Spain where King Juan Carlos and Mikhail Gorbachov sponsored a conference
designed specifically to help countries succeed once they choose democracy.
You've got to deliver economic growth and honest government, and it's not
as easy as it sounds.
Last
point I want to make is this. We have to recognize that special challenges
are presented by the Muslim world. I think I've earned a right to say this,
I was the first president ever to recognize the feast of Eid-al-Fitr at
the end of Ramadan every year. To bring large numbers of Muslims into the
White House and to consult in every way. The last time we used military
power was to protect the lives of poor Muslims, in Bosnia and Kosovo. And
I tried to create a peace in the Middle East that would give the West Bank
to the Palestinians and protect their equities in Jerusalem and a Palestinian
state.
I
think I have earned the right to say that this is partly a Muslim issue
because there is a war raging within Islam about what they should think
about the United States in particular and the west in general. And the
war can be found in America. I was in Buffalo the other day and on the
front page of the newspaper, a part-time chaplain at the state prison up
there was suspended from her job for bragging on Bin Laden and basically
expressing sympathy with the terrorists. The New Republic has a story saying
a prominent activist is now in trouble with the White House because he
kept bringing Muslims into the White House who actually supported terrorist
networks. This debate is going on all over America and all over the world.
We've got to flesh this out. We've got to quit pretending like this is
not going on.
One
problem is that in the Middle East most governments are characterized either
as theocracies, that is, there is no separation between faith and state,
or they're secular governments but they're either very weak democracies
or they're not real democracies. And underneath there are fundamentalist
movements that essentially say the west is the source of all evil, and
all truth was revealed and knowable once the Koran was given to Mohammad,
and the practices of the Prophet were codified in the ensuing 300 years
after his death. So it's all backward looking. No open questions, nothing
debatable. And in the complex combustible mixture of a lot of these countries,
a lot of the governments allow people to go into the Mosques and demonize
us and demonize the West and demonize Christianity and demonize Jews because
as long as they do that they think they're shifting the heat of popular
distress off of the governments. And a lot of these folks have been our
friends, America's friends and my friends. But we have created a discordant
world in which it's hard to sort out who's where here. And we've now reached
a point with all these people lying dead and these terrorist threats, with
the Anthrax and everything where people need to actually say what it is
they believe. What do you believe is right and wrong?
And
we need to a better job of getting the facts out. Most Muslims in the Middle
East I'll guarantee you don't know the last time we used our military power
was to protect poor Muslims in Bosnia and Kosovo. I had a Kosovar family
in my office yesterday in Harlem, bringing their kids to see me because
they were so grateful that America had given them a chance to build their
lives. Most people in the Middle East have forgotten, if they did know,
that it was America that advocating the establishment of a Palestinian
state and a reconciliation with Israel, which would protect both sides'
equities in Jerusalem. Now, we're not for running Israel out of the Middle
East. If that's what they want, they ought to say that, but don't pretend
that America has not been sensitive to the legitimate aspirations of the
Palestinians. It's not true. And I think in America we need to do more
to give courage and voice and pictures to our vibrant Muslim community
of people that are anti-terror. We ought to get out all over the world
how many Muslims died in the World Trade Center and what countries they
claimed as home. Everywhere I go in New York, yesterday I was down in a
park and these young people came up to me and said they were proud to be
Muslims and proud to be living in America. One was Egyptian, one was Pakistani,
and they just hated all this terrorism. They ought to be given courage
and identified and given support to stand against this.
And
we need to do something, I will say again, about the schools. I saw a story
the other day about a kid in a school in one of these Madrassas who was
taught everything about the Koran and he was a very admirable young man,
the kind of person you'd like to have in your family. He got up at four
o'clock every morning to pray, he could answer any conceivable question
about the Koran. He had good character, but a poisoned mind. He was taught
that no man every walked on the moon but that dinosaurs existed because
Americans and Jews re-created them to devour Muslims. But he was a good
kid. He didn't teach himself that.
So,
we have to reach out and engage the Muslim world in a debate. You have,
you know, Mr. Esposito here at Georgetown whose book is probably the most
well thought of text about the history of Islam. But you ought to understand
what have been the theological battles between the conservatives, the fundamentalists,
and the moderates in Islam. Why has it been 1,000 years since there was
a serious challenge mounted from reformist moderates? Except for Attaturk
in Turkey, what Sadat wished to do and didn't live to do in Egypt, and
what King Hussein did in Jordan. In 1991 he got everybody together and
he said, "I'll give up some powers. I'll let you have a parliament, everybody
can run, the fundamentalists can run, but here are the boundaries beyond
which you can't step, because we're going to hold this country together."
It is no accident that in the inner Middle East it is the most stable country
now, because there is some popular expression of opinion and people have
to take some responsibility for themselves. And that's the last thing I
want to say to all of you here.
This
battle fundamentally is about what you think of the nature of truth, the
value of life, and the content of community. You're at a university which
basically believes that no one ever has the whole truth, ever, because
you're human. It's part of being a human being. It's part of the limitation
imposed on us by God. We are incapable of ever having the whole truth.
They believe they got it. Because we don't believe you can have the whole
truth, we think everybody counts and life is a journey. Hopefully we get
wiser as we make this journey, and we learn from each other, and we think
everybody ought to be entitled to make the journey. They believe that because
they have the truth you either share their truths or you don't. If you're
not a Muslim, you're an infidel. If you are and you don't agree with them,
you're a heretic, and you're a legitimate target. Even a six-year old girl
who went to work with her mother at the World Trade Center on September
11th. We believe that a community is you. Doesn't matter where you come
from, doesn't matter what your religious faith is, you just got to accept
certain rules of the game: everybody counts, everybody has a role to play,
we all do better when we help each other, and we ought to argue like crazy
because nobody's got the truth and we're trying to get closer. They believe
communities of people are those who look alike, act alike, dress alike,
and just to make sure they enforce the rules. That's why you see all those
sanctimonious guys beating those women with sticks in the Taliban in the
movies on television. They paint the women's windows black, so God forbid,
they won't be able to see outside and might be polluted, and in some cases
even shoot people when they go outside where they shouldn't go.
This
is not a perfect society, but it is one that is stumbling in the right
direction. When you strip everything I said today down to one sentence,
it basically comes down to this. Ever since civilizations began, people
have fought with their own inner demons over whether what we have in common
is the most important thing about life, or whether our differences are
the most important thing about life. That's what all this comes down to.
I'm glad America is a lot more different than it was when I was your age.
This is a much, much more interesting country. But what gives us the freedom
to celebrate our differences is the certainty of our common humanity. Otherwise
we'd have to fight each other over our differences. But this is very hard
to do. Remember this is a country that was born in slavery. In my lifetime
Martin Luther King was killed just before, a couple of months before I
graduated from Georgetown, trying to preach this message. Bobby Kennedy
killed two days before our college graduation, trying to preach this message.
The greatest spirit of the age, Ghandi, killed not by a mad Muslim but
by a Hindu who thought he was a traitor because he thought India could
be a home for the Muslims and the Sikhs and the Jains and everybody. Sadat
killed not by an Israeli commando, but by the predecessor of the number
two guy in Al Quaeda twenty years ago, angry at him, not a good Egyptian
because he was not a faithful Muslim believing as he did in secular government
and peace with Israel. And my great friend, Yitzhak Rabin killed not by
a Palestinian terrorist but by an Israeli who thought he was not a good
Jew or a patriotic Israeli because he wanted peace and a homeland for the
Palestinians as the surest means of security for the Israelis.
This
is not easy to do, but I'm telling you, no terrorist campaign has ever
succeeded, and this one won't if you don't give it permission. You can
have the most exciting time in human history, but we have to defeat people
who think they can find their redemption in our destruction. Then we have
to be smart enough to get rid of our arrogant self-righteousness so that
we don't claim for ourselves things that we deny for others. Then in the
end, we've got to be able to stand up and say, we are not against Islam,
but we want to have a clear understanding about what we think is the nature
of truth, the value of life, and the content of community. If we do that,
you will still live in the best time the world has ever known.
Thank
you very much.
