ΑΥΤΟΣ εγώ λοιπόν
και ο κόσμος ο μικρός, ο μέγας!
Με τον στίχο του Οδυσσέα Ελύτη «αυτός ο κόσμος ο μικρός, ο μέγας» από το Άξιον Εστί ξεκίνησε
την ομιλία του στο ίδρυμα Σταύρος Νιάρχος ο αμερικανός πρόεδρος Μπαράκ
Ομπάμα, θέλοντας να εκφράσει την ευγνωμοσύνη του δυτικού κόσμου στην
γενέτειρα των ιδεωδών της δημοκρατίας.
Οι χιλιάδες προσκεκλημένοι που είχαν κατακλύσει την αίθουσα του
ιδρύματος Σταύρος Νιάρχος χειροκρότησαν θερμά τον αμερικανό πρόεδρο
μόλις εμφανίστηκε στο βήμα.
Στην ομιλία του κ. Ομπάμα έδωσε
έμφαση στα θέματα ανθρωπίνων δικαιωμάτων, ατομικών ελευθεριών και συμμετοχικής δημοκρατίας, στέλνοντας μηνύματα από τη γενέτειρα της δημοκρατίες προς όλον τον κόσμο - λαούς και κυβερνήσεις.
Εξήρε ιδιαίτερα τη συμβολή της Ελλάδας στη διαμόρφωση της πολιτικής σκέψης, της φιλοσοφίας και του δυτικού πολιτισμού, με αναφορές σε ιστορικά πρόσωπα και γεγονότα.Αναφέρθηκε επίσης στις σχέσεις φιλίας μεταξύ Αμερικανών και Ελλήνων με αναφορές στην ελληνική φιλοξενία, τη φουστανέλα -λέξεις που είπε στα ελληνικά.
Remarks by President Obama at Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center in Athens, Greece
“In this great, imperfect, but necessary system of self-government, power and progress will always come from the demos — from ‘We, the people.’ ”
PRESIDENT OBAMA:
Thank you so much. (Applause.) Thank you. Thank you very much. Please, please
have a seat. Thank you. (Applause.)
AUDIENCE
MEMBER: Chicago!
PRESIDENT
OBAMA: Chicago — (laughter.)
Hello,
Greece! (Applause.) Yia sas! Kalispera! To the government and the people of
Greece — including Prime Minister Tsipras, who I thank for his partnership and
for being here, along with so many young people, the future of Greece — I want
to thank you for your warm and generous welcome.
As
many of you know, this is my final trip overseas as President of the United
States, and I was determined, on my last trip, to come to Greece — partly
because I’ve heard about the legendary hospitality of the Greek people — your
philoxenia. (Applause.) Partly because I had to see the Acropolis and the
Parthenon. But also because I came here with gratitude for all that
Greece — “this small, great world” — has given to humanity through the ages.
Our
hearts have been moved by the tragedies of Aeschylus and Euripides. Our minds
have been opened by the histories of Herodotus and Thucydides. Our
understanding of the world and our place in it has been expanded by Socrates
and Aristotle.
In
the United States, we’re especially grateful for the friendship of so many
proud Greek Americans. In my hometown of Chicago — (applause) — you can find
them in Greektown, with their foustanellas. (Laughter.) And together, we’ve
celebrated Greek Independence Day at the White House. We’ve had some spanakopita
and some ouzo. (Laughter.) Greek Americans have worn the uniform to keep our
country free. Greek Americans have marched with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to
make us more just. Greek or American, we’re all cheering for Giannis
Antetokounmpo — (applause) — who seems to be getting better each year. And if
anyone seeks an example of our shared spirit, our resilience, they need look no
further than New York City, near Ground Zero, where the Greek Orthodox church
of St. Nicholas, once in ruins, is now rising again.
Most
of all, we’re indebted to Greece for the most precious of gifts — the truth,
the understanding that as individuals of free will, we have the right and the
capacity to govern ourselves. (Applause.) For it was here, 25 centuries ago, in
the rocky hills of this city, that a new idea emerged. Demokratia. (Applause.)
Kratos — the power, the right to rule — comes from demos — the people. The
notion that we are citizens — not servants, but stewards of our society. The
concept of citizenship — that we have both rights and responsibilities. The
belief in equality before the law — not just for a few, but for the many; not
just for the majority, but also the minority. These are all concepts that grew
out of this rocky soil.
Of
course, the earliest forms of democracy here in Athens were far from
perfect — just as the early forms of democracy in the United States were far
from perfect. The rights of ancient Athens were not extended to women or to
slaves. But Pericles explained, “our constitution favors the many instead of
the few…this is why it is called a democracy.”
Athenians
also knew that, however noble, ideas alone were not enough. To have meaning,
principles must be enshrined in laws and protected by institutions, and
advanced through civic participation. And so they gathered in a great assembly
to debate and decide affairs of state, each citizen with the right to speak,
casting their vote with a show of hands, or choosing a pebble — white for yes,
black for no. Laws were etched in stone for all to see and abide by. Courts,
with citizen jurors, upheld that rule of law.
Politicians
weren’t always happy because sometimes the stones could be used to ostracize,
banish those who did not behave themselves.
But
across the millennia that followed, different views of power and governance
have often prevailed. Throughout human history, there have been those who argue
that people cannot handle democracy, that they cannot handle
self-determination, they need to be told what to do. A ruler has to maintain
order through violence or coercion or an iron fist. There’s been a different
concept of government that says might makes right, or that unchecked power can
be passed through bloodlines. There’s been the belief that some are superior by
virtue of race or faith or ethnicity, and those beliefs so often have been used
to justify conquest and exploitation and war.
But
through all this history, the flame first lit here in Athens never died. It was
ultimately nurtured by a great Enlightenment. It was fanned by America’s
founders, who declared that “We, the People” shall rule; that all men are
created equal and endowed by our Creator with certain inalienable rights.
Now,
at times, even today, those ideals are challenged. We’ve been told that these
are Western ideals. We’ve been told that some cultures are not equipped for
democratic governance and actually prefer authoritarian rule. And I will say
that after eight years of being President of the United States, having traveled
around the globe, it is absolutely true that every country travels its own
path, every country has its own traditions. But what I also believe, after
eight years, is that the basic longing to live with dignity, the fundamental
desire to have control of our lives and our future, and to want to be a part of
determining the course of our communities and our nations — these yearnings are
universal. They burn in every human heart.
It’s
why a Greek bishop atop a mountain raised the flag of independence. It’s why
peoples from the Americas to Africa to Asia threw off the yoke of colonialism.
It’s why people behind an Iron Curtain marched in Solidarity, and tore down
that wall, and joined you in a great union of democracies. It’s why, today, we
support the right of Ukrainians to choose their own destiny; why we partner with
Tunisians and the people of Myanmar as they make historic transitions to
democracy.
This
has been my foreign policy during my presidency. By necessity, we work with all
countries, and many of them are not democracies. Some of them are democracies
in the sense they have elections, but not democracies in the sense of actually
permitting participation and dissent. But our trajectory as a country has been
to support the efforts of those who believe in self-governance, who believe in
those ideas that began here so many years ago.
And
it is not simply a matter of us being true to our values. It’s not just a
matter of idealism. I believe it is practical for the United States to support
democracies. (Applause.) Because history shows us that countries with democratic
governance tend to be more just, and more stable, and more successful.
Open,
democratic societies can deliver more prosperity — because when people are free
to think for themselves and share ideas and discover and create — the young
people who are here, what they’re able to do through the Internet and
technology, that’s when innovation is unleashed, when economies truly flourish.
That’s when new products, and new services, and new ideas wash through an
economy. In contrast to regimes that rule by coercion, democracies are rooted
in consent of the governed
—
citizens know that there’s a path for peaceful change, including the moral
force of nonviolence. And that brings a stability that so often can facilitate
economic growth.
The
history of the past two centuries indicates that democracies are less likely to
fight wars among themselves. So more democracy is good for the people of the
world, but it’s also good for our national security. Which is why America’s
closest friends are democracies — like Greece. It’s why we stand together in
NATO — an alliance of democracies.
In
recent years, we’ve made historic investments in NATO, increased America’s
presence in Europe, and today’s NATO — the world’s greatest alliance — is as
strong and as ready as it’s ever been. And I am confident that just as
America’s commitment to the transatlantic alliance has endured for seven
decades — whether it’s been under a Democratic or Republican
administration — that commitment will continue, including our pledge and our
treaty obligation to defend every ally.
Our
democracies show that we’re stronger than terrorists, and fundamentalists, and
absolutists who can’t tolerate difference, can’t tolerate ideas that vary from
their own, who try to change people’s way of life through violence and would
make us betray or shrink from our values. Democracy is stronger than
organizations like ISIL.
Because
our democracies are inclusive, we’re able to welcome people and refugees in
need to our countries. And nowhere have we seen that compassion more evident
than here in Greece. (Applause.) The Greek people’s generosity towards refugees
arriving on your shores has inspired the world. That doesn’t mean that you
should be left on your own — (applause)
—
and only a truly collective response by Europe and the world can ensure that
these desperate people receive the support that they need. Greece cannot be
expected to bear the bulk of the burden alone — but the fact that your
democracy opens your heart to people in need in a way that might not otherwise be
the case.
Just
as democracies are premised on the peaceful resolution of disagreements within
our societies, we also believe that cooperation and dialogue is the best way to
address challenges between nations. And so it is my belief that democracies are
more likely to try to resolve conflicts between nations in a way that does not
result in war. That’s how, with diplomacy, we were able to shut down Iran’s
nuclear weapons program without firing a shot. With diplomacy, the United
States opened relations with Cuba. (Applause.) With diplomacy, we joined Greece
and nearly 200 nations in the most ambitious agreement ever to save our planet
from climate change. (Applause.)
And
speaking of climate change, I would point out that there is a connection
between democracy and science. The premise of science is that we observe and we
test our hypotheses, our ideas. We base decisions on facts, not superstition;
not what our ideology tells us, but rather what we can observe. And at a time
when the globe is shrinking and more and more we’re going to have to take
collective action to deal with problems like climate change, the presence of a
democratic debate allows the science to flourish and to shape our collective
responses.
Now,
democracy, like all human institutions, is imperfect. It can be slow; it can be
frustrating; it can be hard; it can be messy. Politicians tend to be unpopular
in democracies, regardless of party, because, by definition, democracies
require that you don’t get a hundred percent of what you want. It requires
compromise. Winston Churchill famously said that democracy is the worst form of
government — except for all the others. (Laughter.) And in a multiethnic,
multiracial, multicultural society, like the United States, democracy can be
especially complicated. Believe me, I know. (Laughter.)
But
it is better than the alternatives because it allows us to peacefully work
through our differences and move closer to our ideals. It allows us to test new
ideas and it allows us to correct for mistakes. Any action by a President, or
any result of an election, or any legislation that has proven flawed can be
corrected through the process of democracy.
And
throughout our history, it’s how we have come to see that all people are
created equal — even though, when we were founded, that was not the case. We
could work to expand the rights that were established in our founding to
African Americans, and to women, to Americans with disabilities, to Native
Americans; why all Americans now have the freedom to marry the person they
love. (Applause.) It’s why we welcome people of all races and all religions and
all backgrounds, and immigrants who strive to give their children a better life
and who make our country stronger.
And
so here, where democracy was born, we affirm once more the rights and the
ideals and the institutions upon which our way of life endures. Freedom of
speech and assembly — because true legitimacy can only come from the people,
who must never be silenced. A free press to expose injustice and corruption and
hold leaders accountable. Freedom of religion — because we’re all equal in the
eyes of God. Independent judiciaries to uphold rule of law and human rights.
Separation of powers to limit the reach of any one branch of government. Free
and fair elections — because citizens must be able to choose their own leaders,
even if your candidate doesn’t always win. (Laughter.)
We
compete hard in campaigns in America and here in Greece. But after the
election, democracy depends on a peaceful transition of power, especially when
you don’t get the result you want. (Applause.)
And
as you may have noticed, the next American president and I could not be more
different. (Applause.) We have very different points of view, but American
democracy is bigger than any one person. (Applause.) That’s why we have a
tradition of the outgoing president welcoming the new one in — as I did last
week. And why, in the coming weeks, my administration will do everything we can
to support the smoothest transition possible — because that’s how democracy has
to work. (Applause.)
And
that’s why, as hard as it can be sometimes, it’s important for young people, in
particular, who are just now becoming involved in the lives of their countries,
to understand that progress follows a winding path — sometimes forward,
sometimes back — but as long as we retain our faith in democracy, as long as we
retain our faith in the people, as long as we don’t waver from those central
principles that ensure a lively, open debate, then our future will be okay, because
it remains the most effective form of government ever devised by man.
It
is true, of course, over the last several years that we’ve seen democracies
faced with serious challenges. And I want to mention two that have an impact
here in Greece, haven an impact in the United States, and are having an impact
around the world.
The
first involves the paradox of a modern, global economy. The same forces of
globalization and technology and integration that have delivered so much
progress, have created so much wealth, have also revealed deep fault lines.
Around the world, integration and closer cooperation, and greater trade and
commerce, and the Internet — all have improved the lives of billions of
people — lifted families from extreme poverty, cured diseases, helped people
live longer, gave them more access to education and opportunity than at any
time in human history.
I’ve
often said to young people in the United States, if you had to choose a moment
in history to be born, and you did not know ahead of time who you would
be — you didn’t know whether you were going to be born into a wealthy family or
a poor family, what country you’d be born, whether you were going to be a man
or a woman — if you had to choose blindly what moment you’d want to be born
you’d choose now. Because the world has never, collectively, been wealthier,
better educated, healthier, less violent than it is today. That’s hard to
imagine, given what we see in the news, but it’s true. And a lot of that has to
do with the developments of a integrated, global economy.
But
trends underway for decades have meant that in many countries and in many
communities there have been enormous disruptions. Technology and automation
mean that goods can be produced with fewer workers. It means jobs and
manufacturing can move across borders where wages are lower or rights are less
protected. And that means that workers and unions oftentimes have less leverage
to bargain for better wages, better benefits, have more difficulty competing in
the global marketplace. Hardworking families worry their kids may not be better
off than they were because of this global competition.
What
we’ve also seen is that this global integration is increasing the tendencies
towards inequality, both between nations and within nations, at an accelerated
pace. And when we see people — global elites, wealthy corporations — seemingly
living by a different set of rules, avoiding taxes, manipulating
loopholes — when the rich and the powerful appear to game the system and
accumulate vast wealth while middle and working-class families struggle to make
ends meet, this feeds a profound sense of injustice and a feeling that our
economies are increasingly unfair.
This
inequality now constitutes one of the greatest challenges to our economies and
to our democracies. An inequality that was once tolerated because people didn’t
know how unequal things were now won’t be tolerated because everybody has a
cellphone and can see how unequal things are. The awareness that people have in
the smallest African village, they can see how people in London or New York are
living. The poorest child in any of our countries now has a sense of what other
people have that they don’t. So not only is there increasing inequality, but
also there is greater awareness of inequality. And that’s a volatile mix for
our democracies.
And
this is why addressing inequality has been one of the key areas of focus for my
economic policy. In our countries, in America and in most advanced market
economies, we want people to be rewarded for their achievement. We think that
people should be rewarded if they come up with a new product or a new service
that is popular and helps a lot of people. But when a CEO of a company now
makes more money in a single day than a typical worker does in an entire year,
when it’s harder for workers to climb their way up the economic ladder, when
they see a factory close that used to support an entire city or town, fuels the
feeling that globalization only benefits those at the top. And the reaction can
drag down a country’s growth and make recessions more likely. It can also lead
to politics that create an unhealthy competition between countries. Rather than
a win-win situation, people perceive that if you’re winning, I’m losing, and
barriers come up and walls come up.
And
in advanced economies, there are at times movements from both the left and the
right to put a stop to integration, and to push back against technology, and to
try to bring back jobs and industries that have been disappearing for decades.
So this impulse to pull back from a globalized world is understandable. If
people feel that they’re losing control of their future, they will push back.
We have seen it here in Greece. We’ve seen it across Europe. We’ve seen it in
the United States. We saw it in the vote in Britain to leave the EU.
But
given the nature of technology, it is my assertion that it’s not possible to
cut ourselves off from one another. We now are living in a global supply chain.
Our growth comes through innovation and ideas that are crossing borders all the
time. The jobs of tomorrow will inevitably be different from the jobs of the
past. So we can’t look backwards for answers, we have to look forward.
We
cannot sever the connections that have enabled so much progress and so much
wealth. For when competition for resources is perceived as zero-sum, we put
ourselves on a path to conflict both within countries and between countries. So
I firmly believe that the best hope for human progress remains open markets
combined with democracy and human rights. But I have argued that the current
path of globalization demands a course correction. In the years and decades
ahead, our countries have to make sure that the benefits of an integrated
global economy are more broadly shared by more people, and that the negative
impacts are squarely addressed. (Applause.)
And
we actually know the path to building more inclusive economies. It’s just we
too often don’t have the political will or desire to get it done. We know we
need bold policies that spur growth and support jobs. We know that we need to
give workers more leverage and better wages, and that, in fact, if you give
workers better wages businesses do better, too, because their customers now
have money to spend.
We
know that we have to invest more in our people — the education of our young
people, the skills and training to compete in the global economy. We have to
make sure that it is easy for young people who are eager to learn and eager to
work to get the education that they need, the training that they need, without
taking on huge amounts of debt.
We
know that we have to encourage entrepreneurship so that it’s easier to start a
business and do business. (Applause.) We know that we have to strengthen the
social compact so that the safety net that is available for people, including
quality health care and retirement benefits, are there even if people aren’t
working in the same job for 30 years, or 40 years, or 50 years.
We
have to modernize our infrastructure, which will put people back to work. We
have to commit to the science and research and development that sparks new
industries.
In
our trading relationships, we have to make sure that trade works for us, and
not against us. And that means insisting on high standards in all countries to
support jobs, strong protections for workers, strong protections for the
environment, so that even as we freely trade, people and workers in all
countries see the benefits of trade in their own lives, not just benefits for
the bottom line of large, multinational corporations.
These
are the kinds of policies, this is the work that I’ve pursued throughout my
time as President. Keep in mind I took office in the midst of the worst crisis
since the Great Depression. And we pursued a recovery that has been shared now
by the vast majority of Americans. We put people back to work building bridges
and roads. (Applause.) We passed tax cuts for the middle class. We asked the
wealthiest Americans to pay a little more taxes — their fair share. We
intervened to save our auto industry, but insisted that the auto industry
become more energy efficient, produce better cars that reduce pollution.
We
put in place policies to help students with loans and protect consumers from
fraud. We passed the strongest Wall Street reforms in history so that the excesses
and abuses that triggered the global financial crisis never happen again — or
at least don’t start on Wall Street.
And
today, our businesses have created more than 15 million new jobs. Incomes last
year in America rose faster than any time since 1968. Poverty fell at the
fastest rate since 1968. Inequality is being narrowed. And we’ve also begun to
close the pay gap between men and women.
We
declared that health care in America is a privilege not for the few, but a
right for everybody. Today our uninsured rate is at the lowest levels on
record. And we’ve done all this while doubling our production of clean energy,
lowering our carbon pollution faster than any advanced nation. So we’ve proven
that you can grow the economy and reduce the carbon emissions that cause
climate change at the same time. (Applause.)
Now,
I say all this not because we’ve solved every problem. Our work is far from
complete. There are still too many people in America who are worried about
their futures. Still too many people who are working at wages that don’t get
them above the poverty line. Still too many young people who don’t see
opportunity. But the policies I describe point the direction for where we need
to go in building inclusive economies. And that’s how democracies can deliver
the prosperity and hope that our people need. And when people have opportunity
and they feel confidence the future, they are less likely to turn on each other
and they’re less likely to appeal to some of the darker forces that exist in
all our societies — those that can tear us apart.
Here
in Greece, you’re undergoing similar transformations. The first step has been
to build a foundation that allows you to return to robust economic growth. And
we don’t need to recount all the causes of the economic crisis here in Greece.
If we’re honest, we can acknowledge that it was a mix of both internal and
external forces. The Greek economy and the level of debt had become
unsustainable. And in this global economy, investment and jobs flow to
countries where governments are efficient, not bloated, where the rules are
clear. To stay competitive, to attract investment that creates jobs, Greece had
to start a reform process.
Of
course, the world, I don’t think, fully appreciates the extraordinary pain
these reforms have involved, or the tremendous sacrifices that you, the Greek
people, have made. I’ve been aware of it, and I’ve been proud of all that my
administration has done to try to support Greece in these efforts. (Applause.)
And part of the purpose of my visit is to highlight for the world the important
steps that have been taken here in Greece.
Today,
the budget is back in surplus. Parliament passed reforms to make the economy
more competitive. Yes, there is still much more work to do. I want to commend
Prime Minister Tsipras for the very difficult reforms his government is
pursuing to put the economy on a firmer footing. Now, as Greece works to
attract more investment, and to prevent old imbalances from re-emerging, and to
put your economy on a stronger foundation, you’ll continue to have the full
support of the United States.
At
the same time, I will continue to urge creditors to take the steps needed to
put Greece on a path towards sustained economic recovery. (Applause.) As Greece
continues to implement reforms, the IMF has said that debt relief will be
crucial to get Greece back to growth. They are right. It is important because
if reforms here are going to be sustained, people need to see hope, and they
need to see progress. And the young people who are in attendance here today and
all across the country need to know there is a future — there is an education
and jobs that are worthy of your incredible potential. You don’t have to travel
overseas, you can put roots right here in your home, in Greece, and succeed.
(Applause.)
And
I’m confident that if you stay the course, as hard as it has been, Greece will
see brighter days. Because, in this magnificent hall and center — this symbol
of the Greek culture and resilience — we’re reminded that just as your strength
and resolve have allowed you to overcome great odds throughout your history,
nothing can break the spirit of the Greek people. You will overcome this period
of challenge just as you have other challenges in the past.
So
economics is something that will be central to preserving our democracies. When
our economies don’t work, our democracies become distorted and, in some cases,
break down. But this brings me to another pressing challenge that our
democracies face — how do we ensure that our diverse, multicultural,
multiracial, multi-religious world and our diverse nations uphold both the
rights of individuals and a fundamental civic adherence to a common creed that
binds us together.
Democracy
is simplest where everybody thinks alike, looks alike, eats the same food,
worships the same God. Democracy becomes more difficult when there are people
coming from a variety of backgrounds and trying to live together. In our
globalized world, with the migration of people and the rapid movement of ideas
and cultures and traditions, we see increasingly this blend of forces mixing
together in ways that often enrich our societies but also cause tensions.
In
the Information Age, the unprecedented exchange of information can always
accentuate differences, or seem to threaten cherished ways of life. It used to
be that you might not know how people in another part of your country, or in
the cities versus the countryside, were living. Now everybody knows how everybody
is living, and everybody can feel threatened sometimes if people don’t do
things exactly the way they do things. And they start asking themselves
questions about their own identity. And it can create a volatile politics.
Faced
with this new reality where cultures clash, it’s inevitable that some will seek
a comfort in nationalism or tribe or ethnicity or sect. In countries that are
held together by borders that were drawn by colonial powers, including many
countries in the Middle East and in Africa, it can be tempting to fall back on
perceived safety of enclaves and tribal divisions.
In
a world of widening inequality, there’s a growing suspicion — or even
disdain — for elites and institutions that seem remote from the daily lives of
ordinary people. What an irony it is, at a time when we can reach out to people
in the most remote corners of the planet, so many citizens feel disconnected
from their own governments.
So,
just as we have to have an inclusive economic strategy, we have to have an
exclusive political and cultural strategy. In all of our capitals, we have to
keep making government more efficient, more effective in responding to the
daily needs to citizens. Governing institutions, whether in Athens, Brussels,
London, Washington, have to be responsive to the concerns of citizens. People
have to know that they’re being heard.
Here
in Europe, even with today’s challenges, I believe that by virtue of the
progress it has delivered over the decades — the stability it has provided, the
security it’s reinforced
—
that European integration and the European Union remains one of the great
political and economic achievements of human history. (Applause.) And today
more than ever, the world needs a Europe that is strong and prosperous and
democratic.
But
I think all institutions in Europe have to ask themselves: How can we make sure
that people within individual countries feel as if their voices are still being
heard, that their identities are being affirmed, that the decisions that are
being made that will have a critical impact on their lives are not so remote
that they have no ability to impact them?
We
have to make clear that governments exist to serve the interest of citizens,
and not the other way around. And so this is why, as President of the United
States, I’ve pursued initiatives like the Open Government Partnership that
promotes transparency and accountability so that ordinary people know more
about the decisions that affect their lives. That’s why both at home and around
the world, we have taken steps to fight corruption that can rot a society from
within.
As
authoritarian governments work to close space that citizens depend upon to
organize and have their voices heard, we’ve begun the work of empowering civil
society to defend democratic values and promote solutions to the problems
within our communities. And as so many people around the world sometimes are
tempted by cynicism and not being involved because they think that politicians
and government don’t care about them, we’ve created networks for young leaders
and invested in young entrepreneurs, because we believe that the hope and
renewal of our societies begins with the voices of youth. (Applause.)
In
closing, our globalized world is passing through a time of profound change.
Yes, there is uncertainty and there is unease, and none of us can know the
future. History does not move in a straight line. Civil rights in America did
not move in a straight line. Democracy in Greece did not move in a straight
line. The evolution of a unified Europe certainly has not moved in a straight
line. And progress is never a guarantee. Progress has to be earned by every
generation. But I believe history gives us hope.
Twenty-five
centuries after Athens first pointed the way, 250 years after the beginning of
the great American journey, my faith and my confidence, my certainty in our
democratic ideals and universal values remain undiminished. I believe more
strongly than ever that Dr. King was right when he said that, “The arc of the
moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.” (Applause.) But it bends
towards justice not because it is inevitable, but because we bend it towards
justice; not because there are not going to be barriers to achieving justice,
but because there will be people, generation after generation, who have the
vision and the courage and the will to bend the arc of our lives in the
direction of a better future.
In
the United States, and in every place I have visited these last eight years, I
have met citizens, especially young people, who have chosen hope over fear, who
believe that they can shape their own destiny, who refuse to accept the world
as it is and are determined to remake it as it should be. They have inspired
me.
In
every corner of the world, I have met people who, in their daily lives, demonstrate
that despite differences of race or religion or creed or color, we have the
capacity to see each other in ourselves. Like the woman here in Greece who said
of the refugees arriving on these shores, “We live under the same sun. We fall
in love under the same moon. We are all human — we have to help these people.”
Women like that give me hope. (Applause.)
In
all of our communities, in all of our countries, I still believe there’s more
of what Greeks call philotimo — (applause) — love and respect and kindness for
family and community and country, and a sense that we’re all in this together,
with obligations to each other. Philotimo — I see it every day — and that gives
me hope. (Applause.)
Because
in the end, it is up to us. It’s not somebody else’s job, it’s not somebody
else’s responsibility, but it’s the citizens of our countries and citizens of
the world to bend that arc of history towards justice.
And
that’s what democracy allows us to do. That’s why the most important office in
any country is not president or prime minister. The most important title is
“citizen.” (Applause.) And in all of our nations, it will always be our
citizens who decide the kind of countries we will be, the ideals that we will
reach for, and the values that will define us. In this great, imperfect, but
necessary system of self-government, power and progress will always come from
the demos — from “We, the people.” And I’m confident that as long as we are
true to that system of self-government, that our futures will be bright.
Thank
you very much. (Applause.) Zito I ellas. (Applause.)
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