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President Obama Speaks at a Memorial Service for Nelson Mandela

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    (Crowd cheering and clapping hands)
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    Thank you.....
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    (Crowd cheering continues...
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    Thank you....
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    Thank you so much..
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    Thank you..
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    To Graça Machel and the Mandela family..
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    To President Zuma and the members of the government,
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    to heads of states and goverment, past and present,distinguished guests..
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    It is a singular honour to be with you today to celebrate a life like no other.
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    To the people of South Africa [CROWD CHEERING]
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    people of every race and every walk of life, the world thanks you for sharing Nelson Mandela with us.
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    His struggle was your struggle. His triumph was your triumph.
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    Your dignity and your hope found expression in his life and your freedom, your democracy is his cherished legacy.
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    It is hard to eulogize any man, to capture in words not just the facts and the dates that make a life, but the essential truth of a person
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    their private joys and sorrows; the quiet moments and unique qualities that illuminate someone’s soul.
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    How much harder to do so for a giant of history, who moved a nation toward justice,
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    and in the process moved billions around the world.
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    Born during World War I, far from the corridors of power, a boy raised herding cattle and tutored by the elders of his Thembu tribe,
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    Madiba would emerge as the last great liberator of the 20th century, like Gandhi, he would lead a resistance movement,
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    a movement that at its start had little prospect for success.
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    Like Dr King, he would give potent voice to the claims of the oppressed and the moral necessity of racial justice.
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    He would endure a brutal imprisonment that began in the time of Kennedy and Khrushchev, and reached the final days of the Cold War.
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    Emerging from prison, without the force of arms, he would, like Abraham Lincoln, hold his country together when it threatened to break apart.
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    And like America’s Founding Fathers, he would erect a constitutional order to preserve freedom for future generations.
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    A commitment to democracy and rule of law ratified not only by his election, but by his willingness to step down from power after only one term.
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    ( crowd cheeing...)
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    Given the sweep of his life, the scope of his accomplishments, the adoration that he so rightly earned,
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    it’s tempting I think to remember Nelson Mandela as an icon, smiling and serene,
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    detached from the tawdry affairs of lesser men. But Madiba himself strongly resisted such a lifeless portrait.
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    (Crowd cheering.......)
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    Instead, Mandela insisted on sharing with us his doubts and his fears, his miscalculations along with his victories
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    "I am not a saint", he said “unless you think of a saint as a sinner who keeps on trying.”
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    It was precisely because he could admit to imperfection -- because he could be so full of good humor, even mischief,
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    despite the heavy burdens he carried -- that we loved him so.
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    He was not a bust made of marble; he was a man of flesh and blood -- a son and a husband, a father and a friend.
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    And that’s why we learned so much from him, and that’s why we can learn from him still. For nothing he achieved was inevitable.
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    In the arc of his life, we see a man who earned his place in history through struggle and shrewdness, and persistence and faith.
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    He tells us what is possible not just in the pages of history books, but in our own lives as well.
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    Mandela showed us the power of action; of taking risks on behalf of our ideals.
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    Perhaps Madiba was right that he inherited, “a proud rebelliousness, a stubborn sense of fairness” from his father.
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    and we know he shared with millions of black and colored South africans the anger borne of thousands slights,
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    a thousand indignities, a thousand unremembered moments,
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    a desire to fight the system that imprisoned my people, he said.
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    But like other early giants of the ANC -- the Sisulus and Tambos -- ( Crowd cheers.....) Madiba disciplined his anger and channeled his desire to fight into organization,and platforms,
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    and strategies for action, so men and women could stand up for their God-given dignity.
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    Moreover, he accepted the consequences of his actions, knowing that standing up to powerful interests and injustice carries a price.
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    “I have fought against white domination and I have fought against black domination.
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    I’ve cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and equal opportunities.
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    It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve.
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    But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.”
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    (Crowd cheering....)
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    Mandela taught us the power of action, but he also taught us the power of ideas;
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    the importance of reason and arguments; the need to study not only those who you agree with, but also those who you don’t agree with.
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    He understood that ideas cannot be contained by prison walls, or extinguished by a sniper’s bullet.
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    He turned his trial into an indictment of apartheid because of his eloquence and his passion, but also because of his training as an advocate.
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    He used decades in prison to sharpen his arguments, but also to spread his thirst for knowledge to others in the movement.
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    And he learned the language and the customs of his oppressor
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    so that one day he might better convey to them how their own freedom depend upon his.
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    Mandela demonstrated that action and ideas are not enough.
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    No matter how right, they must also be chiseled into law and institutions.
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    He was practical, testing his beliefs against the hard surface of circumstance and history.
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    On core principles he was unyielding, which is why he could rebuff offers of unconditional release,
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    reminding the Apartheid regime that “prisoners cannot enter into contracts.”
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    But as he showed in painstaking negotiations to transfer power and draft new laws,
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    he was not afraid to compromise for the sake of a larger goal.
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    And because he was not only a leader of a movement but a skillful politician, the Constitution that emerged was worthy of this multiracial democracy,
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    true to his vision of laws that protect minority as well as majority rights, and the precious freedoms of every South African.
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    And finally, Mandela understood the ties that bind the human spirit.
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    There is a word in South Africa -- Ubuntu --
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    (Crowd cheers....)
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    a word that captures Mandela’s greatest gift:
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    his recognition that we are all bound together in ways that are invisible to the eye;
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    that there is a oneness to humanity; that we achieve ourselves by sharing ourselves with others, and caring for those around us.
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    We can never know how much of this sense was innate in him, or how much was shaped in a dark and solitary cell.
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    But we remember the gestures, large and small -- introducing his jailers as honored guests at his inauguration;
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    taking a pitch in a Springbok uniform; turning his family’s heartbreak into a call to confront HIV/AIDS --
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    that revealed the depth of his empathy and his understanding.
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    He not only embodied Ubuntu, he taught millions to find that truth within themselves.
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    It took a man like Madiba to free not just the prisoner,
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    but the jailer as well to show that you must trust others so that they may trust you;
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    to teach that reconciliation is not a matter of ignoring a cruel past,
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    but a means of confronting it with inclusion and generosity and truth.
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    He changed laws, but he also changed hearts.
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    For the people of South Africa, for those he inspired around the globe,
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    Madiba’s passing is rightly a time of mourning, and a time to celebrate a heroic life.
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    But I believe it should also prompt in each of us a time for self-reflection.
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    With honesty, regardless of our station or our circumstance, we must ask:
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    How well have I applied his lessons in my own life?
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    It’s a question I ask myself, as a man and as a President.
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    We know that, like South Africa, the United States had to overcome centuries of racial subjugation.
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    As was true here, it took sacrifice -- the sacrifice of countless people, known and unknown, to see the dawn of a new day.
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    Michelle and I are beneficiaries of that struggle.
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    But in America, and in South Africa, and in countries all around the globe,
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    we cannot allow our progress to cloud the fact that our work is not yet done.
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    The struggles that follow the victory of formal equality or universal franchise
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    may not be as filled with drama and moral clarity as those that came before, but they are no less important.
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    For around the world today, we still see children suffering from hunger and disease.
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    We still see run-down schools.
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    We still see young people without prospects for the future.
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    Around the world today, men and women are still imprisoned for their political beliefs,
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    and are still persecuted for what they look like, and how they worship, and who they love.
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    That is happening today.
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    And so we, too, must act on behalf of justice.
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    We, too, must act on behalf of peace.
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    There are too many people who happily embrace Madiba’s legacy of racial reconciliation,
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    but passionately resist even modest reforms that would challenge chronic poverty and growing inequality.
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    There are too many leaders who claim solidarity with Madiba’s struggle for freedom,
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    but do not tolerate dissent from their own people.
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    And there are too many of us.. too many of us on the sidelines,
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    comfortable in complacency or cynicism when our voices must be heard.
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    The questions we face today -- how to promote equality and justice;
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    how to uphold freedom and human rights;
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    how to end conflict and sectarian war -- these things do not have easy answers.
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    But there were no easy answers in front of that child born in World War I.
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    Nelson Mandela reminds us that it always seems impossible until it is done.
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    South Africa shows that is true.
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    South Africa shows we can change, that we can choose a world defined not by our differences, but by our common hopes.
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    We can choose a world defined not by conflict, but by peace and justice and opportunity.
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    We will never see the likes of Nelson Mandela again.
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    But let me say to the young people of Africa and the young people around the world -- you, too, can make his life’s work your own.
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    Over 30 years ago, while still a student, I learned of Nelson Mandela
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    and the struggles taking place in this beautiful land, and it stirred something in me.
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    It woke me up to my responsibilities to others and to myself,
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    and it set me on an improbable journey that finds me here today.
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    And while I will always fall short of Madiba’s example, he makes me want to be a better man.
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    He speaks to what’s best inside us.
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    After this great liberator is laid to rest, and
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    when we have returned to our cities and villages and rejoined our daily routines, let us search for his strength.
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    Let us search for his largeness of spirit somewhere inside of ourselves.
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    And when the night grows dark, when injustice weighs heavy on our hearts, when our best-laid plans seem beyond our reach,
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    let us think of Madiba and the words that brought him comfort within the four walls of his cell:
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    “It matters not how strait the gate, how charged with punishments the scroll,
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    I am the master of my fate: I am the captain of my soul.”
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    What a magnificent soul it was.
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    We will miss him deeply.
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    May God bless the memory of Nelson Mandela.
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    May God bless the people of South Africa.
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    (Crowd cheering...)
Title:
President Obama Speaks at a Memorial Service for Nelson Mandela
Description:

President Obama delivers remarks at a national memorial service for former South African President Nelson Mandela. December 10, 2013.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Volunteer
Duration:
19:15
  • There are a lot of mistakes and ommisions in the original transcrip, for example:

    "during world war one fired from court orders of power" :-)

    should be:

    "Born during World War I, far from the corridors of power"

    I hope it hasn't been translated to other languages from this version of original transcript.

    Please, take a look at this transcript:

    http://edition.cnn.com/2013/12/10/politics/mandela-obama-remarks/

    The speech can't be translated to other languages, unless it is revised and corrected.

    Regards,
    Darek

English subtitles

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