If you have 37 minutes, sit down. Put aside whatever you are doing. Listen. Take it in. If you don’t have 37 minutes now, schedule it in later on. Listen.
“We the people, in order to form a more perfect union.”
Two hundred and twenty one years ago, in a hall that still stands across the street, a group of men gathered and, with these simple words, launched America’s improbable experiment in democracy. Farmers and scholars; statesmen and patriots who had traveled across an ocean to escape tyranny and persecution finally made real their declaration of independence at a Philadelphia convention that lasted through the spring of 1787.
The document they produced was eventually signed but ultimately unfinished. It was stained by this nation’s original sin of slavery, a question that divided the colonies and brought the convention to a stalemate until the founders chose to allow the slave trade to continue for at least twenty more years, and to leave any final resolution to future generations.
Of course, the answer to the slavery question was already embedded within our Constitution – a Constitution that had at is very core the ideal of equal citizenship under the law; a Constitution that promised its people liberty, and justice, and a union that could be and should be perfected over time.
March 18, 2008 at 10:49 am
It made me cry, too, Susan, and all I did was read it rather than listen…
March 18, 2008 at 1:51 pm
Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful
March 18, 2008 at 8:39 pm
I’ve read it twice now — and I am BLOWN away! I WILL listen soon. I need to have the space and time to let myself be filled with that kind of hope. This is historic, it feels historic, I HOPE it’s historic… I feel like this man is changing my life. Our lives.
March 19, 2008 at 4:27 pm
Incredible speech and delivered so beautifully.
I HOPE too. . .
March 24, 2008 at 2:25 pm
That was truly, truly moving.