THIS
IS PERHAPS THE GRIMMEST, and surely the holiest task we have
faced since D-Day. Here before us lie the bodies of comrades
and friends. Men who until yesterday or last week laughed with
us, joked with us, trained with us. Men who were on the same
ships with us, and went over the sides with us, as we prepared
to hit the beaches of this island. Men who fought with us and
feared with us. Somewhere in this plot of ground there may lie
the man who could have discovered the cure for cancer. Under
one of these Christian crosses, or beneath a Jewish Star of
David, there may rest now a man who was destined to be a great
prophet to find the way, perhaps, for all to live in plenty,
with poverty and hardship for none. Now they lie here silently
in this sacred soil, and we gather to consecrate this earth
in their memory.
IT
IS NOT EASY TO DO SO. Some of us have buried our closest friends
here. We saw these men killed before our very eyes. Any one
of us might have died in their places. Indeed, some of us are
alive and breathing at this very moment only because men who
lie here beneath us, had the courage and strength to give their
lives for ours. To speak in memory of such men as these is not
easy. Of them, too, can it be said with utter truth: “The
world will little note nor long remember what we say here. It
can never forget what they did here.”
No,
our poor power of speech can add nothing to what these men and
the other dead of our division who are not here have already
done. All that we can even hope to do is follow their example.
To show the same selfless courage in peace that they did in
war. To swear that, by the grace of God and the stubborn strength
and power of human will, their sons and ours shall never suffer
these pains again. These men have done their job well. They
have paid the ghastly price of freedom. If that freedom be once
again lost, as it was after the last war, the unforgivable blame
will be ours, not theirs. So it be the living who are here to
be dedicated and consecrated.
WE
DEDICATE OURSELVES, first, to live together in peace the way
they fought and are buried in war. Here lie men who loved America
because their ancestors, generations ago helped in her founding,
and other men who loved her with equal passion because they
themselves or their own fathers escaped from oppression to her
blessed shores. Here lie officers and men, Negroes and whites,
rich men and poor…together. Here are Protestants, Catholics,
and Jews…together. Here no man prefers another because
of his faith or despises him because of his color. Here there
are no quotas of how many from each group are admitted or allowed.
Among these men there is no discrimination. No prejudice. No
hatred. Theirs is the highest and purest democracy.
Any
man among us the living who fails to understand that, will thereby
betray those who lie here dead. Whoever of us lifts his hand
in hate against a brother, or thinks himself superior to those
who happen to be in the minority, makes of this ceremony and
of the bloody sacrifice it commemorates, an empty, hollow mockery.
To this, them, as our solemn, sacred duty, do we the living
now dedicate ourselves: to the right Protestants, Catholics,
and Jews, of white men and Negroes alike, to enjoy the democracy
for which all of them have here paid the price.
TO
ONE THING MORE do we consecrate ourselves in memory of those
who sleep beneath these crosses and stars. We shall not foolishly
suppose, as did the last generation of America’s fighting
men, that victory on the battlefield will automatically guarantee
the triumph of democracy at home. This war, with all its frightful
heartache and suffering, is but the beginning of our generation’s
struggle for democracy. When the last battle has been won, there
will be those at home, as there were last time, who will want
us to turn our backs in selfish isolation on the rest of organized
humanity, and thus to sabotage the very peace for which we fight.
We promise you who lie here; we will not do that. We will join
hands with Britain, China, Russia—in peace, even as we
have in war, to build the kind of world for which you died.
WHEN
THE LAST SHOT has been fired, there will still be those eyes
that are turned backward not forward, who will be satisfied
with those wide extremes of poverty and wealth in which the
seeds of another war can breed. We promise you, our departed
comrades: this, too, we will not permit. This war has been fought
by the common man; its fruits of peace must be enjoyed by the
common man. We promise, by all that is sacred and holy, that
your sons, the sons of miners and millers, the sons of farmers
and workers—will inherit from your death the right to
a living that is decent and secure.
WHEN
THE FINAL CROSS has been placed in the last cemetery, once again
there will be those to whom profit is more important than peace,
who will insist with the voice of sweet reasonableness and appeasement
that it is better to trade with the enemies of mankind than,
by crushing them, to lose their profit. To you who sleep here
silently, we give our promise: we will not listen: We will not
forget that some of you were burnt with oil that came from American
wells, that many of you were killed by shells fashioned from
American steel. We promise that when once again men seek profit
at your expense, we shall remember how you looked when we placed
you reverently, lovingly, in the ground.
THIS
DO WE MEMORIALIZE those who, having ceased living with us, now
live within us. Thus do we consecrate ourselves, the living,
to carry on the struggle they began. Too much blood has gone
into this soil for us to let it lie barren. Too much pain and
heartache have fertilized the earth on which we stand. We here
solemnly swear: this shall not be in vain. Out of this, and
from the suffering and sorrow of those who mourn this, will
come—we promise—the birth of a new freedom for the
sons of men everywhere. AMEN