SECRETARY CLINTON:
Thank you. Thank you so very much. Oh, what an evening and what
inspiration I certainly have derived from the stories and the words of
our four honorees. I am deeply grateful for that very kind introduction,
Dick. I thank everyone associated with the Institute, particularly Anne
Roosevelt, who has been a friend for a number of years. I am also
pleased that my successor and friend, Senator Gillibrand is here
somewhere in the ballroom, along with another wonderful friend and
colleague, Representative Jerry Nadler. And it is only fitting that we
would be graced by the presence not only of their Royal Highnesses, but
also of my colleague, the foreign minister, and so many friends and
supporters of the Institute and the work that it has done during this
special week where we celebrate 400 years of our relationship with the
Netherlands.
So this is, by all accounts, an extraordinary
moment, and especially for this event to be held at the end of a long
and emotional day for our city, our state, and our country. But I often
believe that it is moments like this that are not only, as Dick said,
about yesterdays, but about tomorrows. And Franklin and Eleanor
Roosevelt were all about tomorrows. They embodied American leadership at
its best. The exemplified the true partnership that they brought to our
nation’s challenges. They, in effect, demonstrated the real power of
principle being a driving force for change and challenge. They mobilized
the might of our nation at a time when their leadership and
understanding was especially needed. And it is a great honor, and I am
deeply touched to receive this Four Freedoms Medal.
I am an
admirer, I think as we all are, of both of these great Americans. As
some of you might remember, I used to have imaginary conversations with
Eleanor. (Laughter.) And she gave me a lot of really good advice.
(Laughter.) I often remarked about how there was nothing I did as First
Lady that Eleanor had not already done. I would go to a place in New
York or a place in India, and be greeted by some excited person saying,
“Oh, we haven’t had a First Lady here since Eleanor Roosevelt.” I
discovered that she had blazed trails that were not only unique for her
time, but really stood the test of time. But when she visited, it was
not just a simple drop-in. She would listen, she would learn, she would
bring that information back to her husband, and she would continue to
push for the kinds of changes that were absolutely necessary.
And
of course, President Roosevelt and the Four Freedoms speech and the
declaration, the real call to action that what he said still resonates
through the years, shaped much of the work that Eleanor did on her own
as she chaired the drafting committee for the United Nation’s Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, a document that enshrines the Four Freedoms
in its preamble. So when leaders from around the world gather for the
UN’s General Assembly in about ten days, we will do so in part as
inheritors of her work and wisdom.
I think that so much that
President Roosevelt said and did during another challenging time in
American history stands very large today. Looking at what was done with
economic and other difficulties here at home, the rallying of a nation
to continue to believe in itself, the optimism that marked everything he
did, and the vision that he articulated that helped Americans transcend
their personal problems and the troubles of a nation provided a
lodestar for every succeeding generation as to how to move forward in
the face of adversity.
We bear that responsibility today. And
we are called to respond as courageously, as he and his generation did.
We therefore should ask ourselves now, as you’ve heard from our four
honorees, just what the Four Freedoms mean. Times have changed.
Circumstances have certainly altered. But the fundamental truth of the
Four Freedoms stands as a stark reminder of what is expected of us. So
that even though the circumstances may be different, our response and
how we are guided in acting remains the same.
Freedom
of expression, for example, is no longer just defined by whether
citizens can go to the town square, or the town hall, and criticize
their government without fear of retribution. Advances in technology,
from email and blogs to Twitter and text messaging, have opened up new
forums for exercising free speech, and created new targets for those who
would suppress the open exchange of knowledge and ideas.
Often,
as we deal with these problems in the State Department now, we see that
human rights defenders, civil society advocates, bloggers, and
journalists are now being targeted for harassment and prosecution, even
murder.
We see the continuing imprisonment of Aung San Suu Kyi, the recipient in absentia of the
Freedom
from Fear Award in 2006. We see the murders of journalists in Russia
who are trying to expose the truth of criminal activity and governmental
misconduct. We see Iran using arbitrary arrests to detain nearly 4,000
people for voicing or reporting complaints about the conduct of recent
elections. And then we see the consequences of what happens in Venezuela
or China, or elsewhere, when people believe that they are just
exercising the universal right to speak and be heard.
Just
weeks ago, an award-winning journalist and human rights activist was
abducted and shot to death while investigating human rights violations
in Chechnya. And while I welcome Russian President Medvedev's pledge to
foster independent media, actions speak louder than words. Dozens of
journalists have been killed in Russia in the last decade. Most of the
murders are unsolved. Those responsible for such crimes should be
brought to justice. And we in the United States have to stand firmly on
the side of those who speak out. (Applause.)
We will continue
to form partnerships with those who share our values, like the
Government of the Netherlands. On Monday, the United States will take
its place as a returning member of the UN Human Rights Council. When I
made the decision that we would rejoin the Human Rights Council –
(applause) – there were those who questioned that. How can you be part
of something that is so contrary to the values that we espouse, that we
wish to uphold, not only here at home but around the world? Well, we are
going in to the arena. One of our priorities will be upholding
universal standards for freedom of expression as we combat intolerance
and discrimination everywhere it rears it head. (Applause.)
And
we are reinvigorating the Global Internet Freedom Task Force as a forum
for addressing challenges to internet freedom around the world, and we
are urging United States media companies to take a proactive role in
challenging foreign governments’ demands for censorship and surveillance
of their citizens. (Applause.)
President Obama and I are committed to defending the Freedom of Expression on the new terrain of the 21
st
century so that, someday, people everywhere will have unencumbered
access to the flow of information and the tools of expression – tools
which are more abundant and more powerful today than at any time in
history.
Similarly, we wish to stand firmly on the side of the freedom of religion
.
As President Obama noted in his historic speech in Cairo, faith should
bring us together. That's why we have welcomed international efforts
such as Turkey and Spain's leadership in the Alliance of Civilizations.
It’s one of the reasons that on my first trip as Secretary of State I
visited Indonesia – the world’s most populous Muslim country and a
secular democracy. It’s why we are encouraging people of different
religions to come together not only in dialogue, but in service. In
projects ranging from Malaria prevention in Africa to disaster
assistance in South Asia, we are laying a foundation for good works –
and good relations – among the world’s religious communities.
Learning to respect the faith of our neighbors should be the price of admission into the 21
st
century. Now, in some cases, threats to religious freedom come from
authoritarian regimes. Some Eritreans have been imprisoned in shipping
containers for seeking to practice their non-violent beliefs. In others
cases, bias and discrimination by majorities toward minority faiths or
hateful ideologies can threaten the freedom of belief. So we must speak
out forcefully against these wrongs wherever they exist.
Now,
some claim that the United Nations can best protect the freedom of
religion by adopting what is called an “anti-defamation” policy that
would restrict the freedom of expression and the freedom of religion. I,
obviously, strongly disagree. An individual’s ability to practice their
religion should have no bearing on others individuals’ freedom of
speech. The protection of speech about religion is particularly
important since persons of different faiths will inevitably hold
divergent views on religious questions. And these differences should be
met with tolerance, not suppression of discourse. And the United States
will stand against the idea of defamation of religion in the United
Nations General Assembly and the Human Rights Council. (Applause.)
Even in a century of unprecedented plenty, Roosevelt’s third freedom – the freedom from want
–
is elusive for millions of families in our own country, and tens and
tens of millions around the world. This freedom must be central to our
foreign policy. We advance our own security, prosperity, and values when
we work to improve the material conditions of people everywhere. Our
development efforts provide a platform for collaboration with new
partners, not only with other governments but with the private sector,
the not-for-profit sector, with citizen groups and civil society. And we
have a lot of work to do to address hunger, climate change, and
disease.
President Obama and I are committed to elevating and
integrating development as a core component of our global agenda. We
have to produce results for people. People have to believe that moving
away from extremism, moving toward democracy, moving toward more
openness in their societies, will put food on the table, and will
provide education for their children and healthcare in their time of
need.
Because many people suffer in unspeakable conditions
without the basic necessities of life, the President asked me to lead a
whole-of-government effort to tackle hunger, poverty and under-nutrition
by encouraging agricultural-led growth. We are working toward new
solutions that can improve agricultural productivity, expand markets,
and deliver millions from hunger and undernourishment that stalk the
world’s poor.
Central to this challenge, like so many others,
will be our campaign to achieve equal opportunities for women, who are
the key drivers of economic growth and social stability in every
successful country in the world. Societies where women are accorded
their rights and provided with opportunities for basic services –
education, health, gainful employment – make progress and expand
prosperity. (Applause.) In nations where these rights are denied,
stagnation, decay, and corruption are often the rule.
Now, in
order to address the challenges, we are focusing on women, as you heard
Dick say. It has been, of course, a longstanding passion and commitment
of mine, but it is also the smart approach for our foreign policy. So
we are training women entrepreneurs through an initiative in Latin
America, and we’re supporting micro-credit lending in Africa and Asia,
and we’re helping women gain access to global financial and trade
networks.
Freedom from want has to be a particular commitment
that really engages our citizens. There are so many ways each and every
one of us can make a contribution.
And finally, freedom from
fear, which was the most immediate concern to President Roosevelt’s
audience in 1941. As the war ravaging Europe edged closer to the United
States, fear returned as a tangible feature and led to such regrettable
decisions as the internment of Japanese in our country.
Today,
of all days, we are reminded that our citizenship and residence on this
continent do not grant us immunity from the vagaries of history. But
rather than becoming prisoners of fear, we know that we can rise to the
challenge if we stay true to ourselves. We can think about how President
Roosevelt would have summoned us to really follow our better selves as
we took on an enemy that showed no respect, no conscience, no humanity.
Even
as FDR exhorted the American people in his time to escalate weapons
production, he envisioned a post-war world of greatly reduced armaments
where international peace would rest on a foundation of freedom. And
President Obama shares that vision. We are committed to working with
concerned nations throughout the international community to reverse the
spread of nuclear weapons and to do much more to prevent their use.
(Applause.) We are acting in concert with countries to isolate and
defeat violent extremists. And we are working within the international
community for the resolution of deadly conflicts that hold millions in
fear and misery. And I want especially to thank the Government of the
Netherlands for their stalwart partnership and for their alliance with
us in Afghanistan, where American and Dutch soldiers fight side-by-side
and even die side-by-side.
Violence and conflicts often exact a
disproportionate toll on women and children. I saw that recently in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. I’ve seen it in my travels across the
world. But meeting with survivors of rape, which is now used
increasingly as a tool of war, was shattering. The atrocities described
to me distill evil to its basest form. And the United States and our
partners throughout the world will not just condemn these attacks and
all those who commit them and abet them, but work harder to try to find
ways to prevent them. It’s why I thank the foreign minister and the
Government of the Netherlands for coming up with the idea of having a
forum about how to prevent violence against girls and women that we will
be co-sponsoring during the UN General Assembly. (Applause.)
These
are crimes against humanity. They don’t just harm a single individual,
or a single family, or village or group. They shred the fabric that
weaves us together as human beings. This criminal outrage against women
must be stopped. And we are going to – your government is going to be
providing more funding for medical care and counseling and security and
legal support to prevent and respond to the Congo’s epidemic of
gender-based violence. (Applause.)
But we also must condemn
violence based on sexual orientation and gender identity. (Applause.) In
country after country after country, young men and women are
persecuted, are singled out, even murdered in cold blood, because of who
they love or just based on claims that they are gay. We are starting to
track violence against the LGBT community, because where it happens
anywhere in the world, the United States must speak out against it and
work for its end. (Applause.) Through our annual human rights report, we
are documenting human rights abuses against LGBT communities worldwide.
And we are seeking out partners at the United Nations such as Brazil,
France, Sweden and the Netherlands to help us address these human rights
abuses.
We will be pushing for passage of a Security Council
resolution on sexual and gender violence at the UN General Assembly,
and we hoping many other nations will join this cause.
So
these four freedoms are not just a celebration of the past. They are a
reminder and a challenge of what is expected of us. Now, after President
Roosevelt’s speech, another son of New York, Norman Rockwell, created
those four iconic paintings that you have seen on the screen. It took
seven months of non-stop work during which he lost 15 pounds. If I had
any artistic talent, I would try to follow that model. (Laughter.) And
when Rockwell was finished, the Treasury Department sent his paintings
on a tour around the country in a successful effort to encourage the
purchase of war bonds. And the paintings were accompanied by essays on
each of the four freedoms. And one of them sought to remind Americans
what they were fighting for. And here’s what it said:
“When we
yield our sons,” and we would add today ‘and daughters’ “to war, it is
in the trust that their sacrifice will bring to us and our allies no
inch of alien soil, no selfish monopoly of the world’s resources or
trade, but only the privilege of winning for all peoples the most
precious gifts in the orbit of life—freedom of body and soul, of
movement and enterprise, of thought and utterance, of faith and worship,
of hope and charity, of a humane fellowship with all [humankind].”
Our
adversaries and our battles today may be different, but our objectives
have not changed. These rights are no less relevant and these freedoms
are no less precious. The principles put forward by President Roosevelt
are no less deserving of our defense.
In response to
President Roosevelt’s call to action, the citizens of the United States
went to work. In response to the attacks of 9/11, the citizens of the
United States went to serve.
In the future, we will be called
to make sacrifices of our own. We may not be able now to foresee what
they will be. But let us resolve to summon up that vision that Franklin
and Eleanor Roosevelt provided for their times which still is as
important to our times. Let us forge again our commitment to carry on in
service of these four universal and uniquely American freedoms.
Thank you very much.