<h2 class="nobreak" id="vi"><span class="tint">vi</span><br/> <span class="subhead">On Making Our Race Life Count in the Life of the Nation</span></h2></div>
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<p class="drop-cap-image i"><span class="idcfirst">In</span> the Bible one finds over and
over again the words “a peculiar
people.” Reference is made to the
Jews as “a peculiar people,”—a
people differing in thought and
temperament and mode of life from others by
whom they were surrounded. Now the race to
which Americans of African lineage belong is
often described as “a peculiar people,” having
had, as we know, a peculiar history. They differ
in color and in appearance, and in a very large
degree their temperament and thought differ
from that of the people about them. Now the
Jews because they were different from the peoples
by whom they were surrounded, because
of their peculiar religious bent, were able to
give to the world the doctrine of the unity and
Fatherhood of God, and Christianity, the finest
flower of Jewry. It is then, I think, not too
much to hope that the very qualities which
make the Negro different from the peoples by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
whom he is surrounded will enable him, in the
fulness of time, to make a peculiar contribution
to the nation of which he forms a part.</p>
<p>What that contribution is to be no man can
now tell, but we must keep in mind that the
race is made of individuals and</p>
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<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent6">“every man God made</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Is different, has some deed to do,</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Some work to work. Be undismayed.</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Though thine be humble, do it, too.”</div>
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<p class="in0">As with an individual, so with a race. When
you and I and all the other individuals that go
to make up our race shall have learned to do
well our own peculiar work, we shall be able
to determine the bent of the race. It must fall
upon you and me, who have had opportunity
to work out in some measure our own individual
problems, to give direction to the race. It
is for us, therefore, to bring to the enrichment
of our lives, as individuals, every quality which
we are capable of cultivating.</p>
<p>There is in the New Testament a passage
which I like to refer to and to think of; it reads
something like this: “He that overcometh shall
be clothed in white raiment.” The expression
“He that overcometh” occurs several times in
the New Testament. I am anxious that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
Tuskegee students shall get the idea firmly
fixed in their minds that there are definite rewards
coming to the individual or to the race
that overcomes obstacles and succeeds in spite
of seemingly insurmountable difficulties. The
palms of victory are not for the race that merely
complains and frets and rails. I do not mean
to say that there is not a place for race loyalty
and enthusiasm. There is a proper and vital
place for protests against the wrongs that are
inflicted without cause or reason. Every race,
like every individual, should be swift to protest
against injustice and wrongs, but no race must
be content with mere protests. Every race
must show to the world by tangible, visible, indisputable
evidence that it can do more than
merely call attention to the wrongs inflicted
upon it. The reward of life is for those who
choose the good where evil calls out on every
hand. That reward is moral character. The
more temptations resisted—the more difficult
the struggle—the more robust the character.
The wholly innocent person is much less
praiseworthy than is he who has faced temptation
and has come out of it unscarred. The
virtues of foresight and thrift and frugality,
brought bravely to the front, will bring large
material possessions which if properly used<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
will refine and enrich life.</p>
<p>I am constrained to refer once more to that
“peculiar people,” the Jews,—a race that has
been handicapped in very much the same way
as the colored people. Their opportunities have
been limited in many directions. In Russia
to-day they are in many cases debarred from
schools and from entrance into the professions.
And, notwithstanding the barriers in this country,
one of the most noted banking firms in the
United States is composed of Jews. Members
of a despised race, they made up their minds
that in spite of difficulties they would not stop
to complain, but would compel recognition by
making a real contribution to the country of
which they formed a part. The Japanese race is
a convincing example of the respect which the
world gives to a race that can put brains and
commercial activity into the development of the
resources of a country. What material difficulties
the thrifty Hollanders have had to overcome
in the development of their country! But
the battle against water and wind has developed
not only a country, but an energetic, thrifty
people. The Netherlands have literally been
made by these sturdy Hollanders, who because
they overcame are looked upon as a great and
happy people.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span></p>
<p>There is, then, opportunity for the colored people
to enrich the material life of their adopted
country by doing what their hands find to do,
minor duties though they be, so well that nobody
else of any race can do them better. This
is the aim that the Tuskegee student should
keep steadily before him. If he remembers that
all service, however lowly, is true service, an
important step will have been taken in the solution
of what we term “the race problem.”</p>
<p>For it must be remembered that no individual
of any race can contribute to the solution of
any general problem until he has first worked
out his own peculiar problem. Some months
ago I met a former schoolmate whom I had not
seen for a number of years. I was naturally interested
to hear about his progress, and began
to question him. I asked him where he lived,
and he said he had no abiding-place, in fact he
had lived in a half dozen places since we parted.
In answer to other questions, I found that he
had no special trade, no special business, no
bank account. I asked then what he had been
doing in the intervening years, and he answered
he had been travelling about over the country,
doing his best to solve the race problem. That
man should rather have been at work at the
solution of his own individual problem. An<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
individual circumstanced as he was could
not solve anybody’s problem. It is important to
have one’s own dooryard clean before calling
attention to the imperfection in the neighbor’s
yard. Each Negro can put much into the life
of his race by making his own individual life
present a model in purity and patience, in industry
and courage, in showing the world how
to get strength out of difficulties. The late
President Garfield once said that no person
ever drowned, no matter how many times he
was thrown overboard, who was worth saving,
and that remark, with a few modifications,
might be applied to a race. No race is ever lost
that is worth saving, and no race need be
lost that wants to save itself. The world is full
of little people who through lack of wisdom
and patience and perseverance merely add to
the world’s burdens. The despised Negro has
the chance to show to the world that charity
which suffereth long and is kind and which
never faileth. In the face of discouragements and
difficulties the Negro must ever remember
that nobody can degrade him. Nobody can degrade
a big race or a big man. No one can degrade
a single member of any race. The individual
himself is the only one who can inflict
that punishment. Frederick Douglass was on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
one occasion compelled to ride for several hours
in a portion of a freight car. A friend went into
the freight car to console him and said to him
that he hated to see a man of his intelligence in
so humiliating a position. “I am ashamed that
they have thus degraded you.” But Douglass,
straightening himself up in his seat, looked the
friend in the face and said, “They cannot degrade
Frederick Douglass.” And so they cannot
degrade a single individual who does not
want to be degraded. Injustice cannot work
harm upon the oppressed without injuring the
oppressor. The Negro people must live the
precepts taught by the Christ. They must go on
multiplying, day by day, deeds of worthiness,
piling them up mountain high. And just as you
and I, as individuals, are called upon to serve
the race of which we are a part, so let us as a
race recognize the fact that we are a part of a
great nation which we are bound to serve.</p>
<p class="p2 center wspace">The End</p>
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<h2 class="nobreak p1" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
<p>A larger version of the Frontispiece may be seen by right-clicking it
and selecting an option to view it separately, or by double-tapping and/or
stretching it.</p>
<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected.
Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made
consistent when a predominant preference was found
in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
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