"The
better angels of our nature are just waiting to be summoned"
2004 Democratic National Convention Speech
By Teresa Heinz Kerry
Thank you, Christopher. Your father would be proud of you
and your brothers. I love you and all our family.
My name is Teresa Heinz Kerry. And by now I hope it will
come as no surprise to anyone that I have something to say.
And tonight, as I have done throughout this campaign I would
like to speak to you from my heart. Y a todos los Hispanos,
los Latinos; a tous les Americains, Francais et Canadiens;
a tutti Italiani; a toda a familia Portugesa e Brazileria;
to all my continental African family living in this country,
and to all new Americans: I invite you to join our conversation,
and together with us work towards the noblest purpose of
all: a free, good, and democratic society.
I am grateful for the opportunity to stand before
you and say a few words about my husband, John Kerry, and
why I firmly believe he should be the next president of the
United States.
This is such a powerful moment for me. Like many other Americans,
like many of you, and like even more of your parents and
grandparents, I was not born in this country. As you have
seen, I grew up in East Africa, in Mozambique, in a land
that was then under a dictatorship. My father-a wonderful,
caring man who practiced medicine for 43 years, and taught
me how to understand disease and wellness-only got the right
to vote for the first time when he was 71 years old. That's
what happens in dictatorships.
As a young woman, I attended Witwatersrand University in
Johannesburg, South Africa, which was then not segregated.
But I witnessed the weight of apartheid everywhere around
me. And so, with my fellow students we marched against its
extension into higher education. This was the late 50's,
the dawn of the civil rights marches in America. As history
records, our efforts in South Africa failed and the Higher
Education Apartheid Act was passed. Apartheid tightened its
ugly grip, the Sharpsville riots followed, and a short while
later Nelson Mandela was arrested and sent to Robin Island.
I learned something then, and I believe it still. There
is a value in taking a stand whether or not anyone may be
noticing and whether or not it is a risky thing to do. And
if even those who are in danger can raise their lonely voices,
isn't more required of all of us, in this land where liberty
had her birth?
I have a very personal feeling about how special America
is, and I know how precious freedom is. It is a sacred gift,
sanctified by those who have lived it and those who have
died defending it. My right to speak my mind, to have a voice,
to be what some have called "opinionated," is a right I deeply
and profoundly cherish. My only hope is that, one day soon,
women-who have all earned the right to their opinions-instead
of being labeled opinionated, will be called smart or well-informed,
just as men are.
Tonight I want to remember my mother's warmth, generosity,
wisdom, and hopefulness, and thank her for all the sacrifices
she made on our behalf, like so many other mothers. This
evening, I want to acknowledge and honor the women of this
world, whose wise voices for much too long have been excluded
and discounted. It is time for the world to hear women's
voices, in full and at last.
In the past year, I have been privileged to meet with Americans
all across this land. They voiced many different concerns,
but one they all seemed to share was about America's role
in the world-what we want this great country of ours to stand
for.
To me, one of the best faces America has ever projected
is the face of a Peace Corps volunteer. That face symbolizes
this country: young, curious, brimming with idealism and
hope-and a real honest compassion. Those young people convey
an idea of America that is all about heart and creativity,
generosity and confidence-a practical, can-do sense and a
big, big smile. For many generations of people around the
globe, that is what America has represented. A symbol of
hope, a beacon brightly lit by the optimism of its people-people
coming from all over the world.
Americans believed they could know all there is to know,
build all there is to build, break down any barrier, tear
down any wall. We sent men to the moon, and when that was
not far enough, we sent Galileo to Jupiter, we sent Cassini
to Saturn, and Hubble to touch the very edges of the universe
at the very dawn of time. Americans showed the world what
can happen when people believe in amazing possibilities.
And, that, for me, is the spirit of America-the America
you and I are working for in this election. It is the America
that people all across this nation want to restore-from Iowa
to California, from Florida to Michigan, from Washington
State to my home state of Pennsylvania. It is the America
the world wants to see, shining, hopeful, and bright once
again. And that is the America that my husband John Kerry
wants to lead.
John believes in a bright future. He believes we can, and
we will, invent the technologies, new materials, and conservation
methods of the future. He believes that alternative fuels
will guarantee that not only will no American boy or girl
go to war because of our dependence on foreign oil, but also
that our economy will forever become independent of this
need. We can, and we will, create good, competitive, and
sustainable jobs while still protecting the air we breathe,
the water we drink, and the health of our children, because
good environmental policy is good economics.
John believes that we can, and we will, give every family
and every child access to affordable health care, a good
education, and the tools to become self-reliant. John Kerry
believes we must, and we should, recognize the immense value
of the caregivers in our country-those women and men who
nurture and care for children, for elderly parents, for family
members in need. These are the people who build and support
our most valuable assets-our families. Isn't it time we began
working to give parents more opportunity to be with their
children, and to afford to have a family life?
With John Kerry as president, we can, and we will, protect
our nation's security without sacrificing our civil liberties.
In short, John believes we can, and we must, lead in the
world-as America, unique among nations, always should-by
showing the face, not of our fears, but of our hopes.
John is a fighter. He earned his medals the old-fashioned
way, by putting his life on the line for his country. No
one will defend this nation more vigorously than he will-and
he will always be first in the line of fire.
But he also knows the importance of getting it right. For
him, the names of too many friends inscribed in the cold
stone of the Vietnam Memorial testify to the awful toll exacted
by leaders who mistake stubbornness for strength. That is
why, as president, my husband will not fear disagreement
or dissent. He believes that our voices-yours and mine-must
be the voices of freedom. And if we do not speak, neither
does she.
In America, the true patriots are those who dare speak truth
to power. The truth we must speak now is that America has
responsibilities that it is time for us to accept again.
With John Kerry as president, global climate change and
other threats to the health of our planet will begin to be
reversed. With John Kerry as president, the alliances that
bind the community of nations and that truly make our country
and the world a safer place, will be strengthened once more.
The Americans John and I have met in the course of this
campaign all want America to provide hopeful leadership again.
They want America to return to its moral bearings. It is
not a moralistic America they seek, but a moral nation that
understands and willingly shoulders its obligations; a moral
nation that rejects thoughtless and greedy choices in favor
of thoughtful and generous actions; a moral nation that leads
through the power of its ideas and the power of its example.
We can and we should join together to make the most of this
great gift we have been given, this gift of freedom, this
gift of America.
In his first inaugural, speaking to a nation on the eve
of war, Abraham Lincoln said, "We must not be enemies. Though
passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of
affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every
battlefield and patriot grave, to every living heart and
hearth-stone, all over this broad land, will yet swell the
chorus of the Union when again touched, as surely they will
be, by the better angels of our nature."
Today, the better angels of our nature are just waiting
to be summoned. We only require a leader who is willing to
call on them, a leader willing to draw again on the mystic
chords of our national memory and remind us of all that we,
as a people, everyday leaders, can do; of all that we as
a nation stand for and of all the immense possibility that
still lies ahead.
I think I've found just the guy. I'm married to him.
John Kerry will give us back our faith in America. He will
restore our faith in ourselves and in the sense of limitless
opportunity that has always been America's gift to the world.
Together we will lift everyone up. We have to. It's possible.
And you know what? It's the American thing to do. Goodnight
and God bless.
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