President Obama officially opened the National Museum of
African American History and Culture Saturday, delivering a moving address on
the importance of the newest Smithsonian venue and its role in providing
“context for the debates of our times.”
“This national museum helps to tell a richer and fuller
story of who we are,” the president said on the National Mall, where the museum
was built just blocks away from the White House. Through it, “we better
understand ourselves and each other. It binds us together. It reaffirms that
all of us are America. That African-American history is not somehow separate
from our American story … it is central to the American story.”
“It is a glorious story,” he said, following speeches by
those pivotal to the museum’s opening, including civil rights leader Rep. John
Lewis, D-Georgia, and former President George W. Bush. “The one that’s told
here -- it is complicated and it is messy and it is full of contradictions. As
all stories are.”
With exhibits on slavery, lynching, and the victims of
Jim Crow, the president noted that the museum showcased the uglier parts of
America’s historical treatment of its black citizens alongside African-American
successes.
“Our glory derives not just from our most obvious
triumphs,” Mr. Obama said, “but how we have wrested triumph from tragedy and
how we have been able to remake ourselves again, and again, and again in
accordance with our highest ideas.”
“Yes, a clear-eyed view of history can make us
uncomfortable,” he said, but he expressed hope that it would “shake us out of
our familiar narratives.”
The history told by the museum, he said, “is a story that
needs to to be told now more than ever.”
In his nearly half-hour-long address, the president
alluded to the recent spate of violence against black Americans -- and the
subsequent demonstrations those incidents have sparked.
“This museum provides context for the debates of our
times. It illuminates them and gives us some sense to how they evolved,” he
said. “Perhaps they can help a white visitor understand the pain and anger of
demonstrators like those in Ferguson and Charlotte.”
For black visitors, the president said it could also help
them appreciate “the sincerity of law enforcement officials… who in fits and
starts are struggling to understand and are trying to do the right thing.”
“It reminds us that routine discrimination and Jim Crow
aren’t ancient history,” Mr. Obama said. “It’s just a blink in the eye of
history. It was just yesterday. And so we should not be surprised that not all
the healing is done. We shouldn’t despair that it isn’t all solved.”
“Protest and love of country don’t merely coexist, but
they inform each other,” he added.
Courtesy CBS.
Courtesy CBS.
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