Thursday, April 23, 2015

Break The Silence

Gabrielle Kissi
Professor Young
ENGL 1101   
22 March 2015          
Break The Silence
            We must speak with all the humility that is appropriate to our limited vision, but we must speak” (King 1). Martin Luther King Jr. is encouraging people of America to speak about their feelings about the Vietnam War, a war that was causing controversy. In the two readings “The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro” and in “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence,” the effect of war upon society is discussed. “The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro” is a speech by Frederick Douglass, who discusses why the Negro nation does not feel the need to celebrate the Fourth of July since this celebration of having won the Revolutionary War was meant for soldiers and their families but not the not for the black community. In the Martin Luther King Jr. speech, “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence,” King expresses seven reasons why the Vietnam War is not an ethical idea and how it is hurting America. He also discusses solutions that can end the war. These two speeches symbolize an appropriate time to break the silence because the institutions of family and religion were being broken, and Americans were not pleased or felt comfortable with their life and environment.



            During the Vietnam War Vietnamese families were being massacred, and King decided to get involved and break the silence about this immorality. King was a Civil Rights leader who was extremely influential in the implementation of political freedom and the growth of personal civil liberties and rights. He demonstrated peacefully and through nonviolent movements and felt it was his responsibility to speak out against the war. King broke the silence with his speech by discussing the issues concerning the war. King commented, “I have moved to break the betrayal of my own silences and to speak from the burnings of my own heart, as I have called for radical departures from the destruction of Vietnam.” Because of his position in leadership, he had to stand by his commitment to changing the world into a better, peaceful, and nonviolent place. As a Civil Rights leader, King had the urge as well as the power to speak out on the wrongfulness of America entering into a war that brought destruction to Vietnam and America alike.

            Hence, it is time to break the silence when not only a country but also its religion is being crushed and destroyed. In the speech, King mentions the role of the Americans when saying, “We have cooperated in the crushing -- in the crushing of the nation's only non-Communist revolutionary political force, the unified Buddhist Church” (King 1). Silence had to be broken because pain and violence was not what King believed in. The crushing of a religion is not the morally right and should not be done to one’s nation. Civilized humans know what is morally wrong and what is right and destroying a religion in the name of war does not make it morally right.
            Not only is it important to speak out against immorality but also against inequality, which is what Douglass addressed in his speech. African Americans were not content within their American community since they felt excluded from their own country. Douglass became a representative on behalf of the colored community and in his speech he states, “The sunlight that brought light and healing to you, has brought stripes and death to me” (Douglass 1). The colored mourned while the whites rejoiced and celebrated the Fourth of July. Yet, blacks did not have the chance to be happy and gain pride for America because they were still treated unequally and enslaved by their white countrymen. Blacks also mourned for all the men that died fighting alongside white Americans for independence yet didn’t gain any respect from their country.
Since so many African Americans had not gained their country’s respect but were enslaved, anger arose and sparked Douglass to break his silence. Although it is not best for an individual to speak their mind when they are angry, it is best to get one’s thoughts and feelings written down, so that when one is ready to speak he or she will at the appropriate time. Douglass’s speech was extremely dark and enraged at America and how it has treated African-Americans during slavery, “It is wrong to make men brutes, to rob them of their liberty, to work them without wages, to keep them ignorant of their relations to their fellow men, to beat them with sticks, to flay their flesh with the lash, to load their limbs with irons” (Douglass 3). As a representative of colored people and as their key to justice and liberty, Douglass believes that enough is enough. Today, African-Americans are still treated unfairly. For instance, in Orlando a police officer, William Escobar, illegally arrested and beat down an African- American military veteran. The veteran could not defend himself because he was handcuffed and down on the ground. Just like the veteran, slaves were also defenseless and could not resist the treatment they were being faced with.
            Ultimately, silence should be broken when people do not feel accepted and comfortable in their own country. Due to Frederick Douglass’ beliefs, America is a world filled with hypocrisy, impiety and deception. The independence that soldiers of America fought for were, in actuality, not for all men because all men where not treated equally after the Revolutionary War. Whites still treated American Americans harshly. America is not better than any other nation yet we have millions of guilty and shameful moments especially during war. The American slave could not find him-/herself boasting up a country whereby he/she was treated horrible by, “The gross of injustice and cruelty to which he is the constant victim. To him, your celebration is a sham; your boasted liberty; your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless” (Douglass 4). To the American slave the Fourth of July is a “mere bombast and fraud”(Douglass 4). The festival for the American people is a false image of who and what they truly stand for. Usually celebrations are celebrated because great things happened; yet Douglass called this festival a sham because it was America being fraudulent to African-Americans by not allowing and giving them the independence they desire.

         
   If a nation is held back from growth and prosperity it is only because they allowed their voices to be silenced. Their government is not hearing their opinions. An appropriate time to break silence is when the nation is falling or in a crisis. Silence is broken when it affects people individually and as a group. When the silence is broken and influential individuals who have an impact on others such as King and Douglass’s are heard, the world becomes hopeful and believes the issues and the hardships that society goes through can be reversed. Breaking the silence is always the first step into solving worldwide issues.






Works Cited
King, Martin Luther Jr. “Beyond Vietnam: A Time of Silence.” Clergy and Laymen  
Concerned About Vietnam. Riverside Church: New York City. 4 April 1967. 
 Keynote Address.
"The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro." PBS. PBS, Feb.-Mar. 2015. Web. 27 Feb. 
2015.





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