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Relevant American
and South African
Speeches from this Period
American Speeches
(see discussion below)
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| 1. |
President
John F. Kennedy, Speech on Civil Rights,
The White House, June 11th, 1963 audio
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| 2. |
Martin
Luther King, Jr. – I Have A Dream
Lincoln Memorial, Washington DC, August 28th, 1963
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| 3. |
Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. Speech on South Africa
London, December 1964, (en route to Oslo to receive the
Nobel Peace Prize).
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| 4. |
Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr., Let My People Go
Speech on South Africa, Human Rights Day, December
10th, 1965, Hunter College, New York City.
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| 5. |
President
Lyndon B. Johnson, on US Africa Policy,
The White House, May 26th, 1966
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| 6. |
Senator
Edward M. Kennedy, Tribute to Robert F. Kennedy,
Memorial Service, St. Patrick’s Cathedral, New York,
June 8th, 1968.
audio
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South African Speeches
(see discussion below)
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| 1. |
Albert
Luthuli, Africa and Freedom,
Nobel Prize Ceremony, Oslo, December 11th, 1961.
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| 2. |
Nelson
Mandela, at the Rivonia Trial, Pretoria, April 20th, 1964
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| 3. |
President
Nelson Mandela at the Chief Albert Luthuli Celebration,
KwaDukuza, 25 April 1998
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Background to American
and South African
Speeches from this Period
|
Robert Kennedy's 1966 visit
to South Africa should be understood within the context of American-South
African relations in the mid-1960's and the similarities in
the histories of the two countries. To this end, research on
this period has led to a number of important American policy
speeches about South Africa (or of relevance to South Africa)
and important South African speeches.
So as not to roam too far afield, the focus is (with one exception)
only on l960's speeches and mostly speeches that preceded Senator
Kennedy's visit to South Africa. These speeches will help readers
understand America's relationship with South Africa in the 1960's
and the setting of repression and resistance within which Robert
Kennedy's visit to South Africa occurred.
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American
Speeches
(in chronological order):
|
1. |
President
John F. Kennedy, Speech on Civil Rights, the White House,
June 11th, 1963 audio
This was President John F. Kennedy's first major speech on Civil
Rights. It was made as a radio and TV speech from the White
House on the evening of June 11th, 1963, the day that the President
sent the Alabama National Guard to help enforce integration
laws at the University of Alabama.
It is the speech that Senator and Mrs. Kennedy listened to on
a record player with Chief Albert Luthuli in his house on the
morning of June 8th, 1966.
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| 2. |
Martin
Luther King, Jr. – I Have A Dream
Lincoln Memorial,Washington D.C., August 28, 1963
Recordings of Dr. King’s famous speech, were smuggled
into South Africa and passed around among white and black anti-apartheid
circles. It was also reported in the South African English language
press. Although its references were American, the universal
application of its basic principles were felt in Apartheid South
Africa.
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| 3. |
Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. Speech on South Africa
London, December 1964
This speech was delivered en route to Oslo to receive the Nobel
Peace Prize.
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| 4. |
Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr., Let My People Go
Human Rights Day, December 10th,1965, Hunter College (CUNY),
New York
Dr. King was the first American leader to speak publicly on
American policy towards South Africa. This speech took place
less than six months before Senator Kennedy's visit to South
Africa. Senator Kennedy was aware of the fact that Dr. King
had been invited by NUSAS the previous year (1965) but had been
denied a visa by the South African Government. Senator Kennedy's
staff carried a letter to Chief Luthuli from Dr. King.
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| 5. |
President
Lyndon B. Johnson, on US Africa Policy,
The White House, May 26th, 1966
This was President Lyndon Johnson's first major speech on United
States African policy. Although a policy speech on Africa from
President Johnson was due anyway, the timing of this speech
seems to have been effected by Senator Kennedy's imminent visit
to South Africa. There was some nervousness in the State Department
that Senator Kennedy would get out ahead of official US policy
towards South Africa and create a new set of problems for the
administration.
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| 6. |
Senator
Edward M. Kennedy, Tribute to Robert F. Kennedy,
Memorial Service, St. Patrick’s Cathedral, New York, June
8th, 1968.
audio
To complete the historical record, this eloquent eulogy by Senator
Edward M. Kennedy at the memorial service for his brother after
his assassination should be included. In the eulogy Edward Kennedy
quoted quite extensively from Robert Kennedy's Cape Town, NUSAS
Day of Affirmation speech.
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South African Speeches
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| 1. |
Albert
Luthuli, Africa and Freedom,
Nobel Prize Ceremony, Oslo, December 11th, 1961.
This is the speech that Chief Lutuli gave when he became the
first African to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 1960. At the time
of the ceremony, Chief Lutuli was banned by the South African
Government under the Suppression of Communism Act, and banished
into internal exile to his modest home in Groutville, Natal.
He was given special permission to leave the country to attend
the Nobel Prize Award Ceremony, but as a banned person, the
speech could not be printed in South Africa.
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| 2. |
Nelson Mandela, at the Rivonia Trial,
Pretoria, April 20th, 1964
This speech is probably Nelson Mandela's most famous speech.
At the time of the Rivonia Trial, there was a real possibility
that Mandela and his colleagues would be hung. (See the New
Republic article in the Magazines Section.) This speech by Mandela,
the Rivonia Trial in general, and Mandela and his ANC colleagues'
imprisonment on Robben Island, were well known to Senator Kennedy
and his aides.
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| 3. |
Speech by President Nelson Mandela at the Chief Albert Luthuli
Centenary Celebration, KwaDukuza, 25 April 1998
Although this speech was made in 1998, I have decided to include
it. Tragically Mandela’s imprisonment on Robben Island
in 1963 and Luthuli’s banning to Groutville, prevented
these two great leaders of their generations from ever seeing
each other again let alone working together politically. Chief
Luthuli was killed in mysterious circumstances in 1967. Because
Luthuli was the last Zulu President of the ANC, Mandela’s
speech in Groutville, Kwazulu/Natal in 1998 after the low level
Zulu Civil War in the 1980’s and early 1990’s between
the ANC and the Inkatha Freedom Party, was particularly poignant.
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