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Hope, Despair, Memory 1891 Views
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Description:
This was Barack Obama’s original campaign slogan, but it didn’t test all that well with the voters.
Transcript
- 00:04
Hope, Despair and Misery, a la Shmoop. And you thought that guy who won the Best
- 00:07
Actor Oscar last year gave a great acceptance speech.
- 00:09
Pshaw. In 1986, Elie Wiesel <<Ee-lee why-zuhl>> was
- 00:10
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
- 00:12
However, the speech he gave when he accepted the award was so brilliant and moving…
Full Transcript
- 00:17
…that they nearly also awarded him the Nobel Prize for Literature on the spot.
- 00:22
All right, we may be exaggerating a tad. But it was good. Real good.
- 00:23
In his speech, Wiesel argued for the importance of peace.
- 00:26
He begged the world to face history and learn from it, because “it is memory that will
- 00:33
save humanity.”
- 00:35
He said that, “…there may be times when we are powerless to prevent injustice, but
- 00:41
there must never be a time when we fail to protest.”
- 00:43
It was powerful, stirring, rich with horrifying anecdotes from Wiesel’s own life…
- 00:50
…and was enough to make a pacifist out of just about anyone.
- 00:55
And yet… there are still religious wars being waged every day.
- 00:58
Minorities are still persecuted, senseless acts of violence and cruelty run rampant.
- 00:59
Does this mean that Wiesel’s speech… really didn’t do much?
- 01:02
To be fair… it was just a speech.
- 01:04
A half hour or so of words.
- 01:07
Impactful and rousing words, granted… but words, and nothing more.
- 01:11
No weapons had been taken out of the hands of the hateful…
- 01:14
…no religious conversions had been performed. His speech might have changed minds…
- 01:18
…but in the scheme of things, he really didn’t reach that wide of an audience.
- 01:21
It wasn’t like the Nobel Committee could stream it online.
- 01:22
It would be asking a lot of Elie Wiesel to craft a speech that would actually inspire
- 01:27
peace on earth and good will toward men.
- 01:29
He was a great man with a great mind, but he was no miracle worker.
- 01:33
But just because there was no sudden, sweeping change in humankind’s treatment of one another…
- 01:38
…did that mean his speech was a failure? Obviously, if everyone in this world gave
- 01:42
up, we’d be in rough shape.
- 01:43
There would be acts of uninhibited racism committed every minute.
- 01:44
A misguided sense of ethnic superiority would reign supreme.
- 01:48
Although he was only one small soldier on a sprawling battlefield…
- 01:52
…didn’t Wiesel do his part to help the rest of us… keep fighting?
- 01:56
Or, perhaps more appropriately… to stop fighting?
- 01:59
It is these rare, inspirational voices that gradually move the slow ticking needle of
- 02:04
human progress forward.
- 02:06
Although the effect of this one speech on its own may be negligible…
- 02:09
…it is this practice of broadcasting a message promoting love and acceptance that reminds
- 02:15
each of us of our humanity.
- 02:17
It’s just a shame that we can’t flip on the TV and hear more of it, more often.
- 02:21
Instead of being inspired by some hot new actress to purchase her latest fragrance.
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