Therefore today I am exceedingly glad that both white and colored
people have gathered here and I hope the time will come when
they shall live together in the utmost peace, unity and friendship. I
wish to say one thing of importance to both in order that the white
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race may be just and kind to the colored and that the colored race
may in turn be grateful and appreciative toward the white. The great
proclamation of liberty and emancipation from slavery was made
upon this continent. A long bloody war was fought by white men
for the sake of colored people. These white men forfeited their possessions
and sacrificed their lives by thousands in order that colored
men might be freed from bondage. The colored population of the
United States of America are possibly not fully informed of the wide-reaching
effect of this freedom and emancipation upon their colored
brethren in Asia and Africa where even more terrible conditions of
slavery existed. Influenced and impelled by the example of the United
States, the European powers proclaimed universal liberty to the
colored race and slavery ceased to exist. This effort and accomplishment
by the white nations should never be lost sight of. Both races
should rejoice in gratitude, for the institution of liberty and equality
here became the cause of liberating your fellow-beings elsewhere. The
colored people of this country are especially fortunate, for, Praise be to
God! conditions here are so much higher than in the East and comparatively
few differences exist in the possibility of equal attainments
with the white race. May both develop toward the highest degree of
equality and altruism. May you be drawn together in friendship and
may extraordinary development make brotherhood a reality and truth.
I pray in your behalf that there shall be no name other than that of
humanity among you.