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Vartan Gregorian commencement address - Clark University 5.18.08

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  • Vartan Gregorian commencement address - Clark University 5.18.08

    PRESS RELEASE
    Clark University
    University Communications
    Jane Salerno
    Senior Associate Director, Media Relations
    950 Main Street, Worcester, MA 01610-1477
    Tel: 508-793-7635
    email: [email protected]
    web: www.clarku.edu


    Below is text from the Sunday, May 18, Clark University Commencement
    address, by Vartan Gregorian, President of the Carnegie Corporation of
    New York.

    Gregorian is a historian, educator and author. As president of
    Carnegie Corporation, a grant-making institution founded by Andrew
    Carnegie in 1911, he has worked for the past 10 years to promote
    Carnegie's vision of philanthropy by building on his two major
    concerns: advancing education and international peace.

    Born in Iran of Armenian parents, Gregorian was educated in Iran and
    Lebanon before entering Stanford University where he earned his
    B.A. in 1958 and Ph.D. in 1964. After teaching history at several
    American universities, he joined the University of Pennsylvania, where
    he was appointed founding dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences
    (1974), becoming that institution's 23rd provost four years later. He
    went on to become the president of The New York Public Library (1981-
    89), where he raised over $300 million, and president of Brown
    University (1989-97), where he nearly tripled the University's
    endowment.

    Among Gregorian's numerous awards and fellowships are the Ellis Island
    Medal of Honor (1986), the American Academy of the Institute of Arts
    and Letters' Gold Medal of Service to the Arts (1989), the National
    Humanities Medal (1998), awarded to him by President Bill Clinton and
    the Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award (2004). He
    serves on the boards of many institutions, including Brandeis
    University, Central European University, The Museum of Modern Art and
    Human Rights Watch and has been a board member of the J. Paul Getty
    Trust and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. He has been decorated
    by governments around the world.

    Gregorian is the author of "The Road To Home: My Life And Times,"
    "Islam: A Mosaic, Not a Monolith," and "The Emergence of Modern
    Afghanistan, 1880-1946."

    The speech, photos and more about Clark's event can be found online:
    http://www.clarku.edu/commencement/



    Cla rk University Commencement Address
    Vartan Gregorian
    Sunday, May 18, 2008

    President John Bassett, Chairman William Mosakowski, Trustees of Clark
    University, Provost David Angel, deans, distinguished faculty,
    dedicated staff, proud parents, wonderful students, Senior Class
    Speaker Emily Zoback, grateful benefactors who have invested so much
    and so wisely in Clark University, fellow honorees-Christopher
    Collier, Arthur Remillard, Diana Chapman Walsh-and ladies and
    gentlemen. . .

    I want to pay tribute to Clark University for not abandoning
    Worcester, for not walking away from Worcester; for not giving up on
    K-12 education but providing models for its renewal; for not giving up
    on local communities but rather forming productive partnerships such
    as Clark Park; for Clark's conviction that democracy and excellence
    are not mutually exclusive.

    Commencements are special, symbolic, solemn, and joyous occasions
    marking the end of one phase of life and the beginning of another. As
    I look out today, I am delighted that there are so many people to
    celebrate this wonderful day with you. In 1958 when I graduated from
    Stanford University, I had no family in this country, and indeed I had
    no one to attend my graduation ceremony. So I did not march. In 1964
    when Ph.D. degrees were awarded, I was teaching. I had once again no
    opportunity to attend that ceremony either. So today it is with envy,
    great enthusiasm, and admiration that I am participating in your
    commencement, and, for the first time, my sister and brother-in-law
    from Iran and my nephew from Boston are attending my graduation.

    Rest at ease. I am not a politician in search of votes or in need of
    yet another platform to "clarify," once again, my previous positions
    on a variety of issues. Thank God I am not one of those who is famous
    for being famous. I am here as an academic, to witness this solemn
    day of your commencement, your new beginning that marks the sacrifice
    of your parents, dedication of your professors and, most importantly,
    your own sustained hard work, faith, determination, and
    accomplishments.

    Commencement speeches mark a rite of passage. While I am honored to
    be part of your celebration and the class of 2008, I have no illusion
    about my role. After all, hardly anyone remembers their commencement
    speech, or even who gave it, unless it was a celebrity like Jennifer
    Anniston, Quentin Tarantino, Bruce Willis, Orlando Bloom, Oprah
    Winfrey, or even the President of the United States. . .

    I checked to see what have been the most memorable commencement
    speeches ever given so that I would not be off the mark. Looking back
    half a century, I was astonished to find that, according to The
    Washington Post, there were three unforgettable commencement
    addresses: one was given in 1947 by U.S. Secretary of State George
    Marshall, who announced the legendary U.S. plan to rebuild Europe
    after World War II. Another was given in 1963 by President John
    F. Kennedy, who announced a moratorium on nuclear weapons tests. The
    third one, however, which had no news value at all, was given in 1997.

    It featured my late friend Kurt Vonnegut. It began with a famous
    line: "Ladies and gentlemen of the class of '97. Wear sunscreen."
    Other bits of advice included injunctions to "floss," "sing,"
    "stretch" and "don't mess too much with your hair." My favorite line
    was: "Remember compliments you receive. Forget the insults. If you
    succeed in doing this, tell me how." Thank God the so-called
    "Vonnegut Speech," which set a new tone for commencement speeches,
    turned out to be an internet hoax. . .

    I have also come here today to pay tribute to American higher
    education and one of its exemplary institutions, Clark University, to
    Clark's amazing legacy, its outstanding faculty, its remarkable
    leaders. I am here to pay homage to you, students, to your growth as
    educated, cultured citizens, to your metamorphosis into the kind of
    people-human beings-who have developed the ability at least to try to
    comprehend the incomprehensible; to make sense out of confusion;
    wrestle some logic out of the illogical; and challenge even ugliness
    to show some glimmer of beauty somewhere deep within its core. You
    have spent the last four, five or six years at Clark University in
    order to learn how to analyze, synthesize and systematize information
    and knowledge; to separate the chaff from the wheat; subjectivity from
    objectivity; fact from opinion; public interests from private
    interests; manipulations from influence; and "spin" from corruption.

    I hope you have learned to be flexible in your thinking, adaptable in
    your analysis of issues, and appreciative of the complexities that
    comprise almost every aspect of daily life-both on the human and
    global scale. I'm sure you don't yet realize just what an
    extraordinary skill you have developed, how well it will serve you in
    the future, and how desperately the world needs people who are not
    paralyzed by complexity but welcome the opportunity it brings to think
    new thoughts, develop new ideas, and find new ways to solve problems.
    I am sure you are, and always will be, mindful of the great American
    humorist H. L. Mencken's warning that: "there is always an easy
    solution to every human problem: neat, plausible...and wrong!"

    I am sure your Clark University education has prepared you to begin to
    understand the relationship of the unique and individual self to the
    social, political, and cultural world around you. I hope it has also
    given you the courage to think those big, imponderable thoughts that
    are our companions throughout our lives, such as: what is our
    relationship to universal order? What is our place as a human being
    amongst the great sea of mankind? Though you may never answer these
    and other questions for yourselves, and perhaps they will always be
    unanswerable, they will help you create a framework for the way you
    live your lives.

    In this difficult time when many of us worry about our country and its
    direction, about its values, its promise and its future, I'm still
    convinced that while America is not perfect, it is still
    perfectible. It is still a land of opportunity for immigrants and for
    international students, not only Americans alone. ... Many of you in
    the audience today are proof of that as well. It's amazing, isn't it,
    that until recently two-thirds of all students studying abroad have
    been attending American colleges and universities?

    But with the opportunity we have all had to study at America's great
    institutions of higher learning, comes responsibility, as well. What
    we have learned in school we must find ways to put into action. We
    cannot retreat from the big issues of society and the world and our
    time into the pygmy world of private piety. Nor can we become cynics
    paralyzed by our own disdain, and we must not become-we cannot afford
    to become-social, political and moral isolationists.

    That is especially true for those of us who are foreign or current
    international students. Whether we remain here or to return to our
    native countries, we have the obligation to build bridges between our
    nations, our societies and the United States, and vice versa,
    especially now. And those who come from developing countries have yet
    another obligation, and a very weighty one, to work toward creating a
    better quality of life for those at home and to advance the
    opportunities that are available to them. After all, you represent
    their hopes for a better future.

    For those of us who were born elsewhere but were educated here and
    then became American citizens, we have reason to be doubly
    grateful. One, because we received our education in America, not to
    mention financial support. And two, because America granted us the
    privilege of citizenship in a country whose Constitution proclaims
    that "we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are
    created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain
    unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit
    of happiness."

    These are lofty aspirations. Remember, however, that America has
    always been and will always be a work in progress. Every generation
    has and must contribute to that ongoing progress. As John Gardner once
    said, it is important to be both a loving critic and a critical
    lover. America needs all of us to be both.

    And now let me come back to you! Clark marks the beginning of your
    latest wonderful, arduous journey. It has provided you with the means
    to be on your way. It has given you not only an education, a
    profession and all the skills and confidences you need to do well in
    the world, but it has also given you choices and the ability to
    choose. Sometimes you may find you have so many choices that all the
    possibilities available to you will be overwhelming. This morning I'd
    like to share with you three lessons I have learned that may-I stress
    may-assist you in making your choices.

    The first lesson, actually, is a well-known one. I believe, if I'm not
    mistaken, it was Sir William Osler, professor of medicine at Oxford
    University in the early years of the 20th century, who said that young
    men-and women-should be careful in the selection of their ambitions
    because they're likely to realize them. Since you have the education,
    the knowledge and the training to realize your ambitions, be as sure
    as you can that your ambition also reflects what you really love to
    do.

    Speaking of your ambition, sometimes you may be masters of it, but
    watch out. Sometimes you may be its slave, and watch out. Other times
    you may be a victim of hubris. No matter what, try to bear in mind the
    next lesson: don't confuse a job with a career. In the past I used to
    say to students that in your life, you will have many jobs but only
    one career. Now, however, if we keep on the way we are going in terms
    of how long we can expect to live, many of you will be octogenarians,
    some of you may even be centenarians, so you may have not only many
    jobs, but also many careers as well. I haven't quite reached either
    age category as yet, but I have worked in a number of fields, as it
    was mentioned-academia, libraries and now philanthropy-and I can share
    with you the fact that people often ask me, "Which job did you like
    best?" But they're asking me the wrong question. I've never considered
    any of the positions I've held as jobs. In fact, I even think of them
    as more than careers. To me, they have been missions in which teaching
    and learning are primary ingredients, with me as the primary student.

    So even though this is probably the last thing you want to hear today,
    I want to remind you that whether you like it or not, in order to
    survive and thrive, you will have to be lifelong students and lifetime
    learners. And yes, there are and always will be difficult times when
    you will think you have come to a dead end in your life or in your
    career, even an apparent point of no return, but let me tell you as
    one who has experienced those events once or twice, when that happens,
    think of what the author Gabriel Garcia Marquez once said when he
    spoke of the condition that human beings are not born once and for all
    on the day their mothers gave birth to them, but that life obliges
    them to give birth to themselves over and over again. Time,
    experience, knowledge, education, love, one's values, all these can
    and do affect us and change us, and enable us to reinvent ourselves. I
    have invented myself many times and I'm sure you will do the same
    thing.

    For me, Marquez's words have a particular resonance because they
    reinforce values that were taught to me by my maternal grandmother, an
    illiterate peasant woman. She raised me. My grandmother was an
    illiterate peasant, a poor one at that. I don't believe that she knew
    where Greece was, nor Rome, nor the United States. She certainly did
    not know who Plutarch was, but even so she taught me the same lesson
    as Plutarch highlighted in his celebrated Lives almost 2,000 years
    ago, when he said, essentially, that character makes the man and
    woman. My grandmother was my first teacher. She instructed me in the
    moral lessons of life and the "right way," through her sheer
    character, stoic tenacity, formidable dignity, individuality and utter
    integrity. She was for me the best example of what good character
    means. In spite of many adversities and tragedies, wartime ravages,
    poverty, deprivation and the deaths of her seven children, she never
    became cynical, never abandoned her values and never compromised her
    dignity. Indeed, it was from my grandmother that I learned that
    dignity is not negotiable. Your reputation is not for sale and must
    not be mortgaged as a down payment on your ambitions. It was my
    grandmother's living example that shaped the very foundation of my
    character. Between what I have learned from Plutarch and my
    grandmother-a combination of forces I would dare anybody to
    challenge!-I feel confident in telling you that in the coming years
    you will meet people who are more powerful than you, richer than you,
    smarter than you, even handsomer or more beautiful than you, but what
    will be your distinguishing mark will always be your character. And
    what will define your character? Your conduct, your ability to live by
    principles you believe in, even if that means fighting tenaciously for
    what is right over what you know to be wrong.

    Nobody goes through life without encountering obstacles,
    disappointments, and problems. Nobody can keep from making mistakes or
    taking a wrong turn. Nobody can escape illness or avoid the specter of
    failure. Let me point out that coping with success is easy. How you
    deal with adversity, with failure, and with setbacks will reveal your
    true character. How nimble you are about getting back on your feet
    after some large or small disaster or defeat will help you to
    determine just how far those feet of yours will take you in the world.

    But that's where your upbringing, the texture of your education and
    your values will help you to develop a distinctive attitude toward
    life, an attitude that persistently seeks meaning and perspective, an
    attitude that exudes adaptability and resilience in a relentlessly
    changing and perplexing world, an attitude of moral courage and
    steadfastness in the face of overwhelming human need and
    suffering. How to develop and maintain such attitudes in an age where
    "individualism" has become a cult and celebrities, icons-where people
    are famous for being famous-is not an easy task. We must be reminded
    time and time again that we are not mere
    consumer/entertainment/socio-economic/socio-b iological and information
    units, to be processed. We are not numbers. We are unique, rational,
    spiritual and social beings full of competing sentiments, insatiable
    yearnings, dreams, imagination, quests and ties that bind us to the
    past and the future.

    It might be helpful to remind ourselves that it was Alexis de
    Tocqueville who in the 1830s coined the word "individualism," to
    describe the self-reliant character of Americans. But he also went on
    to extol Americans' generosity, their proclivity to create voluntary
    citizens associations and the fact that volunteers and altruists have
    played a critical role in preserving and strengthening what he called
    the modern world's first nation that did not have a ruling class. In
    that way, he made clear that both the private and public realm,
    private good and public good, are interdependent. One without the
    other will diminish the bonds of community and creativity. Some 125
    years later, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. put it more succinctly: "We
    may have all come in different ships but we are in the same boat now."

    Today we must be reminded that what is unique about each of us should
    be celebrated and cherished, that we must not forget that we also
    belong to a larger community, society and, indeed, humanity. As
    Americans and as human beings we have an obligation to contribute to
    the well-being of our communities; hence, to the public good.

    I hope as you climb the ladder of success, you will always remember
    the dictum "From those to whom much has been given, much is expected."

    In conclusion, I would like to offer you just one last thought about
    our shared human condition. Today information floods over us, and a
    millisecond later in comes another flood of data and information, and
    then another and another. Images of pleasure and pain, fear and joy,
    love and hate assault us from all the angles. The world around us is
    full of raucous chatter and noise. Amid all this cacophony, it's hard
    to see ourselves as part of a larger whole, a continuing eternal
    harmony, that music of the spheres that the ancients thought we would
    hear only in our inner ear. Well, today I would like to remind you of
    your connection to history. Try to listen with your inner ears to
    those who went before you, parents, grandparents, great-grandparents
    and on and on, who all wanted to be good ancestors to you.

    As an historian, educator and a fellow student, I feel bound to remind
    you that the time has come for you to return the favor. You have to
    learn to be good ancestors to the future.

    Today's commencement marks the beginning of many other beginnings for
    you, many other commencements in your life. Many mornings, many
    beginnings are before you. The future is waiting for you with open
    arms. I wish you good luck, great success and great humanity. Thank
    you very much.
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