My Last Will
and Testament
By: Mary
McLeod Bethune
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I
leave you love. Love builds. It is positive and helpful. It is
more beneficial than hate. Injuries quickly forgotten quickly
pass away. Personally and racially, our enemies must be
forgiven. Our aim must be to create a world of fellowship and
justice where no man's skin, color or religion, is held against
him. "Love thy neighbor" is a precept which could transform the
world if it were universally practiced. It connotes brotherhood
and, to me, brotherhood of man is the noblest concept in all
human relations. Loving your neighbor means being interracial,
interreligious and international.
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I
leave you hope. The Negro's growth will be great in the years to
come. Yesterday, our ancestors endured the degradation of
slavery, yet they retained their dignity. Today, we direct our
economic and political strength toward winning a ,ore abundant
and secure life. Tomorrow, a new Negro, unhindered by race
taboos and shackles, will benefit from more than 330 years of
ceaseless striving and struggle. Theirs will be a better world.
This I believe with all my heart.
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I
leave you the challenge of developing confidence in one another.
. As long as Negroes are hemmed into racial blocs by prejudice
and pressure, it will be necessary for them to band together for
economic betterment. Negro banks, insurance companies and other
businesses are examples of successful, racial economic
enterprises. These institutions were made possible by vision and
mutual aid. Confidence was vital in getting them started and
keeping them going. Negroes have got to demonstrate still more
confidence in each other in business. This kind of confidence
will aid the economic rise of the race by bringing together the
pennies and dollars of our people and ploughing them into useful
channels. Economic separatism cannot be tolerated in this
enlightened age, and it is not practicable. We must spread out
as far and as fast as we can, but we must also help each other
as we go.
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I
leave you a thirst for education. Knowledge is the prime need of
the hour. More and more, Negroes are taking full advantage of
hard-won opportunities for learning, and the educational level
of the Negro population is at its highest point in history. We
are making greater use of the privileges inherent in living in a
democracy. If we continue in this trend, we will be able to rear
increasing numbers of strong, purposeful men and women, equipped
with vision, mental clarity, health and education.
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I
leave you a respect for the uses of power. We live in a world
which respects power above all things. Power, intelligently
directed, can lead to more freedom. Unwisely directed, it can be
a dreadful, destructive force. During my lifetime I have seen
the power of the Negro grow enormously. It has always been my
first concern that this power should be placed on the side of
human justice.
Now that the barriers are crumbling everywhere, the Negro in
America must be ever vigilant lest his forces be marshalled
behind wrong causes and undemocratic movements. He must not lend
his support to any group that seeks to subvert democracy. That
is why we must select leaders who are wise, courageous, and of
great moral stature and ability. We have great leaders among us
today:
Ralph Bunche,
Channing Tobias,
Mordecai Johnson,
Walter White, and
Mary Church Terrell. (The latter two are now deceased). We
have had other great men and women in the past:
Frederick Douglass,
Booker T. Washington,
Harriet Tubman, and
Sojourner Truth. We must produce more qualified people like
them, who will work not for themselves, but for others.
Faith
is the first factor in a life devoted to service. Without faith,
nothing is possible. With it, nothing is impossible. Faith in
God is the greatest power, but great, too, is faith in oneself.
In 50 years the faith of the American Negro in himself has grown
immensely and is still increasing. The measure of our progress
as a race is in precise relation to the depth of the faith in
our people held by our leaders. Frederick Douglass, genius
though he was, was spurred by a deep conviction that his people
would heed his counsel and follow him to freedom. Our greatest
Negro figures have been imbued with faith. Our forefathers
struggled for liberty in conditions far more onerous than those
we now face, but they never lost the faith. Their perseverance
paid rich dividends. We must never forget their sufferings and
their sacrifices, for they were the foundations of the progress
of our people.
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I
leave you racial dignity. I want Negroes to maintain their human
dignity at all costs. We, as Negroes, must recognize that we are
the custodians as well as the heirs of a great civilization. We
have given something to the world as a race and for this we are
proud and fully conscious of our place in the total picture of
mankind's development. We must learn also to share and mix with
all men. We must make and effort to be less race conscious and
more conscious of individual and human values. I have never been
sensitive about my complexion. My color has never destroyed my
self-respect nor has it ever caused me to conduct myself in such
a manner as to merit the disrespect of any person. I have not
let my color handicap me. Despite many crushing burdens and
handicaps, I have risen from the cotton fields of South Carolina
to found a college, administer it during its years of growth,
become a public servant in the government of our country and a
leader of women. I would not exchange my color for all the
wealth in the world, for had I been born white I might not have
been able to do all that I have done or yet hope to do.
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I
leave you a desire to live harmoniously with your fellow men.
The problem of color is worldwide. It is found in Africa and
Asia, Europe and South America. I appeal to American Negroes --
North, South, East and West -- to recognize their common
problems and unite to solve them.
I pray that we will learn to live harmoniously with the white
race. So often, our difficulties have made us hyper-sensitive
and truculent. I want to see my people conduct themselves
naturally in all relationships -- fully conscious of their manly
responsibilities and deeply aware of their heritage. I want them
to learn to understand whites and influence them for good, for
it is advisable and sensible for us to do so. We are a minority
of 15 million living side by side with a white majority. We must
learn to deal with these people positively and on an individual
basis.
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I
leave you finally a responsibility to our young people. The
world around us really belongs to youth for youth will take over
its future management. Our children must never lose their zeal
for building a better world. They must not be discouraged from
aspiring toward greatness, for they are to be the leaders of
tomorrow. Nor must they forget that the masses of our people are
still underprivileged, ill-housed, impoverished and victimized
by discrimination. We have a powerful potential in our youth,
and we must have the courage to change old ideas and practices
so that we may direct their power toward good ends.
Faith, courage, brotherhood, dignity, ambition, responsibility
-- these are needed today as never before. We must cultivate
them and use them as tools for our task of completing the
establishment of equality for the Negro. We must sharpen these
tools in the struggle that faces us and find new ways of using
them. The Freedom Gates are half-ajar. We must pry them fully
open.
If I have a legacy to leave my people, it is my philosophy of
living and serving. As I face tomorrow, I am content, for I
think I have spent my life well. I pray now that my philosophy
may be helpful to those who share my vision of a world of Peace,
Progress, Brotherhood, and Love.
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