u2songs.com: Running to Stand Still

Communication => U2 Related Talk => Topic started by: slaneman on March 06, 2007, 01:20:17 AM

Title: The Speech
Post by: slaneman on March 06, 2007, 01:20:17 AM
The video is all over the place by now. I thought that the non-English speakers might like a transcription.

Bono’s Acceptance Speech for the Chairman’s Award
NAACP Image Awards
Fox Television
March 2, 2007


  Wow. Gee…Tyra Banks you are gorgeous. I… I was a finalist in Ireland’s Next Top Model. Uh, yeah, I look up to you. Literally. You’re beautiful.
    You’re beautiful too.
    Yeah. Eh…I of course am so truly humbled to share the stage with the, uh,  the great Julian Bond. Just… wow. Cool customer.
   
   Uh, for…I’m also you know when people talk about the greatness of America I just think of the NAACP. That’s what I think of, it genuinely comes into my head. And uhm, I’m also honored to be in, in, on the same stage as the other honorees. Soledad, Bill Crosby, Prince… ah… so cool, so cool.
   See, I grew up in Ireland, uhm, and, when I grew up Ireland was divided along religious lines, sectarian lines. Young people like me were, were parched for the vision that poured out of pulpits of black America, and the vision of a black reverend from Atlanta. A man who refused to hate because he knew love would do a better job.
   These ideas…these ideas travel, you know. And ah, they reach me, clear as any tune, uh, lodged in my brain like a song I couldn’t sh, I couldn’t shake that. And,an, and this is Ireland in the Seventies growing up. People like me looked across the ocean to the NAACP and I’m here tonight and I feels good, feels very, very good.
   Well today the world looks again to the NAACP. We need the community that taught the world about civil rights to teach it something about human rights. Oh yeah. I’m talking about the right to live like a human, the right to live, period. Those are the stakes in Africa right now. 5 and ½ thousand Africans dying every day of AIDS, a preventable, treatable disease. Nearly a million Africans, most of them children dying every year from malaria. Death by mosquito bite. And, uh, this is not about charity, as you know here in this room, this is about justice. It’s about justice and equality.
   Now I know that ah America hasn’t solved all of its problems and I know AIDS is still killing people right here in America, and I know the hardest hit are African-Americans, many of them young women. Today at a church at Oakland, ehm, I went to see such extraordinary people with this lioness here, Barbara Lee,  took me around, and uhm, with her pastor, J. Alfred Smith and, and may I say that it was the poetry and the righteous anger of the black church that was such an inspiration to me, a very white, almost pink Irish man growing up in Dublin.
   This is true religion. True religion will not let us fall asleep in the comfort of our freedom. Love Thy Neighbor is not a piece of advice.  It’s a command. And that means… a lot. That means a lot. That means that in the global village we’re gonna have to start loving a whole lot more people. That’s what that means. That’s right. His truth is marching on.
   2 million Americans have signed up for the One Campaign to make poverty history. Tonight the NAACP has signed up to work with us and so can you. His truth is marching on. Because where you live should not decide whether you live or whether you die.
   And to those in the church who still sit in judgement on the AIDS emergency let me climb into the pulpit for just one moment. Because whatever thoughts we have about God, who he is or even if God exists, most will agree that God has a special place for the poor. The poor are where God lives. God is in the slums in the cardboard boxes where the poor play house. God is where the opportunity is lost and lives are shattered. God is with the mother who has infected her child with a virus that will take both their lives. God is under the rubble, in the cries we hear during wartime. God, my friends,  is with the poor. And God is with us if we are with them.
   This is not a burden, this is an adventure. And don’t let anyone tell you it cannot be done. We can be the generation that ends extreme poverty. Thank you.