 The President's remarks in a ceremony commemorating Lincoln's birthday at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. the 12th of February 1967 General Herrick Ladies and gentlemen, there is a singular quality about Abraham Lincoln Which sets him apart from all of our other presidents One cannot help but sense it Here at this magnificent memorial The moving statue by Daniel Chester French Provides three dimensions of Lincoln But there is something else a fourth dimension of Brooding compassion of love for humanity a Love which was if anything strengthened and deepened By the agony that drove lesser men to the protective shelter of callous indifference The Lincoln papers show his total dedication to hard responsibility During the war his orders to his generals Constantly dealt with soldiers convicted of desertion and sentenced to death The president could have simply endorsed the recommendation of the Secretary of War He might have treated the execution of deserters as only a routine affair in wartime But he rejected this easy bureaucratic solution Time and time again the order went out Suspend the sentence of execution until a judge advocate general shall have reported to the president and Rarely was the penalty ever reinstated Lincoln did not come to the presidency with any set of full-blown theories But rather with a mystical dedication to this union and an unyielding determination To always preserve the integrity of the Republic He was the least arrogant of men Endowed with a humility which led him to write in 1864 I claim not to have controlled events But I confess plainly that events have controlled me And now at the end of three years of struggle The nation's condition is not what either party or any man devised are expected Lincoln was often wracked by doubts in the conduct of grave human affairs Dogmatic certainty is often the handmaiden of catastrophe But doubt can lead to disaster too paralyzing the will When the times cry out for action the true quality of Lincoln emerges I think from the fact that for four long brutal years He never permitted his anguish and doubt To ever deter him from acting He recognized that the evidence he had to go on often was very incomplete Yet he made a commitment to action And this commitment while always total was never fanatical Lincoln's mind was always open He was searching for a new light He was looking for a better policy His intelligence never rested The consequence was that as he forced himself to confront changing reality He never ceased to grow Nothing illustrates this spiritual growth more vividly Than the development of Lincoln's views on the race question At the onset of the civil war his position was one of personal abhorrence toward slavery But really his main political objective was to maintain the union And not to eliminate slavery Gradually he became convinced That to restore the union It was necessary to destroy slavery And once this was settled in his mind He turned to action In his annual message to the congress in December 1862 He stated his case quite precisely In giving freedom to the slave We assure freedom to the free Honorable alike in what we give And what we preserve We shall nobly save or meanly lose The last best hope on earth As soon as he had committed himself to the elimination of slavery Lincoln was brought face to face with the ultimate logical question What status would the freed slaves Have in the American community? Would they be free and equal? Or would they like the free Negroes of that time? Live in limbo Technically free but in fact unequal And discriminated against Initially Lincoln had avoided This ominous issue The issue that was really to haunt American politics For a century after his martyrdom Earlier he had accepted the received wisdom of his time He had advocated separate ways for the black and the white races In practice this meant support For the colonization of free Negroes abroad In Africa and in Central America But Abraham Lincoln's remorseless realism Made it impossible for him to hold this view very long Leading Negro spokesman of that era Demanded their full rights as Americans Americans here in this land This land that they had helped to build And the idea of organizing an exodus of over four million Negroes Even if they were willing to leave Was much too fearful to contemplate So Lincoln began his troubled journey Towards a new concept Which would go beyond theories of black power or white power Beyond the ancient blinders of racism to the establishment of a multiracial community In which a man's pride in his racial origins Would be wholly consistent With his commitment to the common endeavor He died Before he had the opportunity To give voice to this vision We can never know what course history would have taken Had Booth's bullet not brought down this towering political scene And stoked the fires of vengeance We do know that it has taken more than a century for us as a nation To assert the ideal That Lincoln had barely formulated It has required the hard lessons of a hundred years To make us realize as he realized That emancipating the Negro Was an act of liberation for the whites Abraham Lincoln was the great emancipator Of black and white alike In a world long troubled by the curse of racism There is a commanding clarity In Lincoln's belief That no man can truly live in creative equality When society imposes the irrational spiritual poverty Of discrimination on any man For untold centuries Man of different colors and religions and castes And ethnic backgrounds Have despised each other Have fought each other Have enslaved and have killed each other In the name of these false idols And at what a terrible cost In crippled souls In human creativity wasted on hate In lost opportunities for growth and learning And common prosperity And today Racial suspicions and racial hatreds and racial violence Plagued men in almost every part of the earth In Asia and Africa and Europe and Latin America In the United States It is man's ancient curse And man's present shame The true liberators of mankind have always Been those who showed men another way to live Than by hating their brothers In what he did to lift the baleful burden Of racism from the American soul Abraham Lincoln stands as a teacher Not just to his people Black and white alike But to all humanity