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Remarks by President Obama at Barnard College Commencement Ceremony
Barnard College
Columbia University
New York, New York
May 14, 2012
美國(guó)總統(tǒng)奧巴馬在巴納德學(xué)院畢業(yè)典禮上的講話
紐約州 紐約市
哥倫比亞大學(xué)巴納德學(xué)院
2012年5月14日
Thank you so much. (Applause.) Thank you. Please, please have a seat. Thank you. (Applause.)
非常感謝大家。(掌聲)謝謝大家,請(qǐng)入座。謝謝大家。(掌聲)
Thank you, President Spar,
trustees, President Bollinger. Hello, Class of 2012! (Applause.) Congratulations on reaching this day. Thank you for the honor of being able to be a part of it.
謝謝你們,斯巴院長(zhǎng)[譯者注:中文名石德葆]、各位校董、伯林格校長(zhǎng)。2012屆畢業(yè)生,你們好?。ㄕ坡暎┳YR你們迎來(lái)了這一天。感謝你們讓我有幸來(lái)參加這個(gè)活動(dòng)。
There are so many people who are proud of you -- your parents, family, faculty, friends -- all who share in this achievement. So please give them a big round of applause. (Applause.) To all the moms who are here today, you could not ask for a better Mother’s Day gift than to see all of these folks graduate. (Applause.)
有很多人為你們感到驕傲——你們的父母、家人、師長(zhǎng)和朋友——都為取得這一成就出了力。因此,請(qǐng)為他們熱烈鼓掌。(掌聲)今天在座的各位母親們,再也沒(méi)有比看到所有這些孩子們畢業(yè)更好的母親節(jié)禮物了。(掌聲)
I have to say, though, whenever I come to these things, I start thinking about Malia and Sasha graduating, and I start tearing up and -- (laughter) -- it's terrible. I don't know how you guys are holding it together. (Laughter.)
但是我得說(shuō),每當(dāng)我來(lái)到這種場(chǎng)合,就會(huì)想到瑪莉婭和薩夏將來(lái)畢業(yè)的情景,我就會(huì)熱淚盈眶——(笑聲)——真不好意思。我不知道你們大家是怎么把持得住的。(笑聲)
I will begin by telling a hard truth: I’m a Columbia college graduate. (Laughter and applause.) I know there can be a little bit of a
sibling rivalry here. (Laughter.) But I’m honored nevertheless to be your commencement speaker today -- although I’ve got to say, you set a pretty high bar given the past three years. (Applause.) Hillary Clinton -- (applause) -- Meryl Streep -- (applause) -- Sheryl Sandberg -- these are not easy acts to follow. (Applause.)
我一開(kāi)始就要說(shuō)明一個(gè)確鑿的事實(shí):我是一名哥倫比亞大學(xué)的畢業(yè)生。(笑聲和掌聲)我知道可能會(huì)有一點(diǎn)同門弟子相爭(zhēng)的勁兒。(笑聲)但我還是為能夠在你們今天的畢業(yè)典禮上講話而感到榮幸——不過(guò)我得說(shuō),你們?cè)谶^(guò)去三年樹(shù)立了相當(dāng)高的標(biāo)準(zhǔn)。(掌聲)希拉里·克林頓——(掌聲)——梅麗爾·斯特里普——(掌聲)——謝里爾·桑德伯格——在她們之后出場(chǎng)可不容易。(掌聲)
But I will point out Hillary is doing an extraordinary job as one of the finest Secretaries of State America has ever had. (Applause.) We gave Meryl the Presidential Medal of Arts and Humanities. (Applause.) Sheryl is not just a good friend; she’s also one of our economic advisers. So it’s like the old saying goes -- keep your friends close, and your Barnard commencement speakers even closer. (Applause.) There's wisdom in that. (Laughter.)
但我要指出,希拉里的工作極為出色,她是美國(guó)有史以來(lái)最杰出的國(guó)務(wù)卿之一。(掌聲)我們已授予梅麗爾藝術(shù)與人文總統(tǒng)獎(jiǎng)?wù)?。(掌聲)謝里爾不僅是一位好朋友;她還是我們的經(jīng)濟(jì)顧問(wèn)之一。正如那句老話所說(shuō)——親近你的朋友,但更要親近在你們巴納德學(xué)院畢業(yè)典禮上講話的人。(掌聲)這話寓意深長(zhǎng)。(笑聲)
Now, the year I graduated -- this area looks familiar -- (laughter) -- the year I graduated was 1983, the first year women were admitted to Columbia. (Applause.) Sally Ride was the first American woman in space. Music was all about Michael and the Moonwalk. (Laughter.)
話說(shuō)我畢業(yè)那年——這個(gè)地方看著眼熟——(笑聲)——我畢業(yè)于1983年,哥倫比亞大學(xué)開(kāi)始錄取女生的第一年。(掌聲)當(dāng)時(shí)薩莉·萊德成為第一位進(jìn)入太空的美國(guó)女性。那時(shí)的音樂(lè)全是麥克爾和太空步。(笑聲)
[AUDIENCE MEMBER: Do it! (Laughter.)]
【畫外音:一名聽(tīng)眾說(shuō)“走一個(gè)!”(笑聲)】
No Moonwalking. (Laughter.) No Moonwalking today. (Laughter.)
不走太空步。(笑聲)今天不走太空步。(笑聲)
We had the Walkman, not iPods. Some of the streets around here were not quite so inviting. (Laughter.) Times Square was not a family destination. (Laughter.) So I know this is all ancient history. Nothing worse than commencement speakers droning on about bygone days. (Laughter.) But for all the differences, the Class of 1983 actually had a lot in common with all of you. For we, too, were heading out into a world at a moment when our country was still recovering from a particularly severe economic recession. It was a time of change. It was a time of uncertainty. It was a time of passionate political debates.
我們當(dāng)時(shí)有“隨身聽(tīng)”,沒(méi)有IPod。這四周的一些街區(qū)沒(méi)有現(xiàn)在這樣誘人。(笑聲)時(shí)報(bào)廣場(chǎng)不是適合全家人去的地方。(笑聲)我知道這一切都屬于古老的過(guò)去了。畢業(yè)典禮演講人絮叨舊事是再糟糕不過(guò)的。但是,盡管有種種差別,1983年畢業(yè)班其實(shí)與你們各位有許多共同之處。這是因?yàn)?,?dāng)時(shí)我們踏入社會(huì)的時(shí)候,也正值國(guó)家從一場(chǎng)特別嚴(yán)重的經(jīng)濟(jì)衰退中恢復(fù)。那是一個(gè)變革的時(shí)期,一個(gè)充滿未知的時(shí)期,一個(gè)政治辨?zhèn)惣で楦邼q的時(shí)期。
You can relate to this because just as you were starting out finding your way around this campus, an economic crisis struck that would claim more than 5 million jobs before the end of your freshman year. Since then, some of you have probably seen parents put off retirement, friends struggle to find work. And you may be looking toward the future with that same sense of concern that my generation did when we were sitting where you are now.
你們能夠體會(huì)到這一點(diǎn),因?yàn)樵谀銈儎傞_(kāi)始熟悉這所校園的時(shí)候,經(jīng)濟(jì)危機(jī)降臨,不等你們第一學(xué)年結(jié)束,它已經(jīng)導(dǎo)致500多萬(wàn)人失業(yè)。從那個(gè)時(shí)候以來(lái),你們大概看到一些父母推遲了退休計(jì)劃,一些朋友在苦苦求職。面對(duì)未來(lái),你們也許像當(dāng)年我這一代坐在你們的座位上的時(shí)候一樣,感到憂心忡忡。
Of course, as young women, you’re also going to grapple with some unique challenges, like whether you’ll be able to earn equal pay for equal work; whether you’ll be able to balance the demands of your job and your family; whether you’ll be able to fully control decisions about your own health.
當(dāng)然,作為年輕女性,你們還要應(yīng)對(duì)某些特殊的挑戰(zhàn),比如是否能夠享有同工同酬;是否能夠平衡工作和家庭的需要;是否能夠?qū)ψ陨斫】涤腥繘Q定權(quán)。
And while opportunities for women have grown
exponentially over the last 30 years, as young people, in many ways you have it even tougher than we did. This recession has been more brutal, the job losses steeper. Politics seems nastier. Congress more
gridlocked than ever. Some folks in the financial world have not exactly been model corporate citizens. (Laughter.)
雖然過(guò)去30年來(lái)女性的機(jī)會(huì)有了突飛猛進(jìn)的增加,但作為年輕人,你們?cè)诤芏喾矫婷媾R著比我們當(dāng)時(shí)更嚴(yán)峻的挑戰(zhàn)。這場(chǎng)衰退更加嚴(yán)重,失業(yè)人數(shù)更多。政治爭(zhēng)議似乎更加難以調(diào)和。國(guó)會(huì)比以往任何時(shí)候更加僵持。金融界的一些人很難被稱為模范企業(yè)公民。(笑聲)
No wonder that faith in our institutions has never been lower, particularly when good news doesn’t get the same kind of ratings as bad news anymore. Every day you receive a steady stream of sensationalism and scandal and stories with a message that suggest change isn’t possible; that you can’t make a difference; that you won’t be able to close that gap between life as it is and life as you want it to be.
所以,毫不奇怪,對(duì)我們體制的信心達(dá)到空前之低,特別是好消息不如壞消息引人注意的時(shí)候。人們每天接到一連串聳人聽(tīng)聞的消息或者丑聞,其中傳遞的信息是:變革是不可能的;你們的努力無(wú)濟(jì)于事;你們無(wú)法消除現(xiàn)實(shí)生活與你們的理想生活之間的差距。
My job today is to tell you don’t believe it. Because as tough as things have been, I am convinced you are tougher. I’ve seen your passion and I’ve seen your service. I’ve seen you engage and I’ve seen you turn out in record numbers. I’ve heard your voices amplified by creativity and a digital fluency that those of us in older generations can barely comprehend. I’ve seen a generation eager, impatient even, to step into the rushing waters of history and change its course.
我今天的任務(wù)就是要告訴你們,不要相信這些說(shuō)法。因?yàn)楸M管困難很大,但我堅(jiān)信你們的能力更大。我看到過(guò)你們的激情,我看到過(guò)你們的奉獻(xiàn)。我看到過(guò)你們的投入,我看到過(guò)你們挺身而出,人數(shù)空前。我聽(tīng)到了你們的聲音,創(chuàng)意和對(duì)數(shù)碼技術(shù)的精通使得這種聲音格外響亮,而我們這些年長(zhǎng)的人幾乎不得其解。我看到心情迫切、躍躍欲試的一代人準(zhǔn)備躋身歷史激流中,扭轉(zhuǎn)其方向。
And that
defiant, can-do spirit is what runs through the veins of American history. It’s the lifeblood of all our progress. And it is that spirit which we need your generation to embrace and rekindle right now.
這種蔑視困難、積極進(jìn)取的精神貫穿于整個(gè)美國(guó)歷史的進(jìn)程。這種精神是我們一切進(jìn)步的源泉。此時(shí)此刻,我們需要你們這一代繼承和發(fā)揚(yáng)光大的正是這種精神。
See, the question is not whether things will get better -- they always do. The question is not whether we’ve got the solutions to our challenges -- we’ve had them within our grasp for quite some time. We know, for example, that this country would be better off if more Americans were able to get the kind of education that you’ve received here at Barnard -- (applause) -- if more people could get the specific skills and training that employers are looking for today.
可以看出,問(wèn)題并不在于事情是否會(huì)好轉(zhuǎn)——情況總是會(huì)變好的。問(wèn)題也不在于我們是否已經(jīng)有了應(yīng)對(duì)我們面臨的挑戰(zhàn)的解決辦法——我們一直掌握著這些解決辦法,已有相當(dāng)一段時(shí)間了。比如說(shuō),我們知道,如果有更多的美國(guó)人能得到你們?cè)诎图{德得到的這樣的教育(掌聲)——如果有更多的人能夠獲得今天的雇主所需要的那些特定的技能和訓(xùn)練,美國(guó)的情況會(huì)更好。
We know that we’d all be better off if we invest in science and technology that sparks new businesses and medical breakthroughs; if we developed more clean energy so we could use less foreign oil and reduce the carbon pollution that’s threatening our planet. (Applause.)
我們知道,如果我們投資于能夠造就新的企業(yè)并帶動(dòng)醫(yī)學(xué)突破的科學(xué)與技術(shù),如果我們開(kāi)發(fā)出更多的清潔能源以減少使用外國(guó)石油并減少對(duì)我們的地球構(gòu)成威脅的碳污染,我們大家的日子會(huì)過(guò)得更好。(掌聲)
We know that we’re better off when there are rules that stop big banks from making bad bets with other people’s money and -- (applause) -- when insurance companies aren’t allowed to drop your coverage when you need it most or charge women differently from men. (Applause.) Indeed, we know we are better off when women are treated fairly and equally in every aspect of American life -- whether it’s the salary you earn or the health decisions you make. (Applause.)
我們知道,如果有一定的規(guī)則制止大銀行拿別人的錢去惡賭(掌聲)——如果不允許保險(xiǎn)公司在你最需要的時(shí)候取消你的保險(xiǎn)資格或者對(duì)男女收費(fèi)標(biāo)準(zhǔn)不一,我們的日子會(huì)過(guò)得更好。(掌聲)確實(shí),我們都知道,如果婦女在國(guó)家生活的方方面面都能得到公平與平等的對(duì)待——無(wú)論是你的薪金所得還是你所作的健康決定,我們的日子會(huì)過(guò)得更好。(掌聲)
We know these things to be true. We know that our challenges are eminently solvable. The question is whether together, we can muster the will -- in our own lives, in our common institutions, in our politics -- to bring about the changes we need. And I’m convinced your generation possesses that will. And I believe that the women of this generation -- that all of you will help lead the way. (Applause.)
我們知道這些都是實(shí)實(shí)在在的道理。我們知道,我們面臨的挑戰(zhàn)顯然都是可以解決的。問(wèn)題是,我們是否能夠擰成一股繩,拿出意志力——在我們自己的生活中,在我們共同的體制中,在我們的政治事務(wù)中——實(shí)現(xiàn)我們所需的變革。我堅(jiān)信,你們這一代具有這種意志力。我相信,這一代女性——你們所有的人將會(huì)在這條道路上走在前面。
Now, I recognize that’s a cheap applause line when you're giving a commencement at Barnard. (Laughter.) It’s the easy thing to say. But it’s true. It is -- in part, it is simple math. Today, women are not just half this country; you’re half its workforce. (Applause.) More and more women are out-earning their husbands. You’re more than half of our college graduates, and master’s graduates, and PhDs. (Applause.) So you’ve got us outnumbered. (Laughter.)
我承認(rèn),這是不用費(fèi)力就能在巴納德學(xué)院的畢業(yè)典禮上贏得鼓掌喝彩的一句話。(笑聲)說(shuō)這樣的話很容易。但事實(shí)確實(shí)如此。這是——在某種程度上,這是簡(jiǎn)單的數(shù)學(xué)題。今天,婦女不僅占這個(gè)國(guó)家總?cè)丝诘囊话?,你們還是這個(gè)國(guó)家勞動(dòng)力的一半。(掌聲)越來(lái)越多的女性收入超過(guò)了她們的丈夫。你們?cè)谖覀兊拇髮W(xué)畢業(yè)生中,在擁有碩士學(xué)位和博士學(xué)位的畢業(yè)生中占了一半以上。(掌聲)所以,你們?cè)谌藬?shù)上超過(guò)了我們。(笑聲)
After decades of slow, steady, extraordinary progress, you are now poised to make this the century where women shape not only their own destiny but the destiny of this nation and of this world.
在幾十年來(lái)的緩慢、持續(xù)、不凡的進(jìn)展之后,你們即將在本世紀(jì)實(shí)現(xiàn)這樣的目標(biāo):婦女不僅能改變自己的命運(yùn),還能改變這個(gè)國(guó)家乃至這個(gè)世界的命運(yùn)。
But how far your leadership takes this country, how far it takes this world -- well, that will be up to you. You’ve got to want it. It will not be handed to you. And as someone who wants that future -- that better future -- for you, and for Malia and Sasha, as somebody who’s had the good fortune of being the husband and the father and the son of some strong, remarkable women, allow me to offer just a few pieces of advice. That's obligatory. (Laughter.) Bear with me.
然而,你們的主動(dòng)性能使這個(gè)國(guó)家走多遠(yuǎn)、能使這個(gè)世界走多遠(yuǎn),還要取決于你們自己。你們必須有這種愿望。進(jìn)步不可能由別人拱手奉上。作為一個(gè)希望你們、瑪莉婭和薩夏擁有這一前途及更美好前途的人,作為一個(gè)有幸成為幾位堅(jiān)強(qiáng)杰出的女性的丈夫、父親和兒子的人,請(qǐng)?jiān)试S我貢獻(xiàn)幾條建議。這是義不容辭的。(笑聲) 容我慢慢道來(lái)。
My first piece of advice is this: Don’t just get involved. Fight for your seat at the table. Better yet, fight for a seat at the head of the table. (Applause.)
我的第一條建議是,僅僅參與還不夠,要為在決策中贏得一席之地而奮斗。能為坐上首席而奮斗就更好了。(掌聲)
It’s been said that the most important role in our democracy is the role of citizen. And indeed, it was 225 years ago today that the Constitutional Convention opened in Philadelphia, and our founders, citizens all, began crafting an extraordinary document. Yes, it had its flaws -- flaws that this nation has strived to perfect over time. Questions of race and gender were unresolved. No woman’s signature graced the original document -- although we can assume that there were founding mothers whispering smarter things in the ears of the founding fathers. (Applause.) I mean, that's almost certain.
有人說(shuō),我們民主中最重要的角色是公民角色。的確如此,225年前的今天,費(fèi)城召開(kāi)了制憲大會(huì),我們的開(kāi)國(guó)元?jiǎng)?,我們所有的公民,開(kāi)始起草一項(xiàng)偉大的綱領(lǐng)。是的,該文件有缺陷,這個(gè)國(guó)家后來(lái)為了完善它而作出了努力。種族和性別問(wèn)題當(dāng)時(shí)沒(méi)有得到解決。最初的文件上沒(méi)有婦女的簽名來(lái)為之增添光彩,但是我們可以想象,一些開(kāi)國(guó)之母在開(kāi)國(guó)之父的耳旁輕聲細(xì)語(yǔ)地指點(diǎn)一些高招。(掌聲)我是說(shuō),幾乎肯定如此。
What made this document special was that it provided the space -- the possibility -- for those who had been left out of our charter to fight their way in. It provided people the language to appeal to principles and ideals that broadened democracy’s reach. It allowed for protest, and movements, and the
dissemination of new ideas that would repeatedly, decade after decade, change the world -- a constant forward movement that continues to this day.
這份文件之所以特別,是因?yàn)樗鼮槟切](méi)有被納入我們的憲法的人們提供了爭(zhēng)取權(quán)利的空間和可能性。它為人民提供了借助于一些原則和理想拓展民主范圍的語(yǔ)言。它允許發(fā)起抗議和運(yùn)動(dòng),允許傳播新思想,一代又一代地改變著世界,形成了一股永不休止的潮流,一直延續(xù)到今天。
Our founders understood that America does not stand still; we are dynamic, not static. We look forward, not back. And now that new doors have been opened for you, you’ve got an obligation to seize those opportunities.
我們的開(kāi)國(guó)元?jiǎng)渍J(rèn)識(shí)到,美國(guó)并非一成不變;我們充滿活力,不會(huì)停滯不前。我們向前看,不回頭。既然新的大門已為你們敞開(kāi),你們就有義務(wù)把握這些機(jī)會(huì)。
You need to do this not just for yourself but for those who don’t yet enjoy the choices that you’ve had, the choices you will have. And one reason many workplaces still have outdated policies is because women only account for 3 percent of the CEOs at Fortune 500 companies. One reason we’re actually refighting long-settled battles over women’s rights is because women occupy fewer than one in five seats in Congress.
你們需要這么做,不僅是為了你們自己,也是為了那些沒(méi)有得到你們已經(jīng)有過(guò)以及還將擁有的種種選擇的人。許多工作場(chǎng)所仍在實(shí)行過(guò)時(shí)的政策,原因之一就是婦女只占財(cái)富500強(qiáng)公司首席行政官的3%。我們?nèi)栽跒闋?zhēng)取婦女權(quán)利而再次進(jìn)行早已完成的抗?fàn)?,原因之一就是婦女在國(guó)會(huì)所占的席位還不到五分之一。
Now, I’m not saying that the only way to achieve success is by climbing to the top of the corporate ladder or running for office -- although, let’s face it, Congress would get a lot more done if you did. (Laughter and applause.) That I think we’re sure about. But if you decide not to sit yourself at the table, at the very least you’ve got to make sure you have a say in who does. It matters.
我不是說(shuō)取得成功的唯一途徑是晉升到公司的最高層,或是競(jìng)選公職,不過(guò),請(qǐng)讓我們面對(duì)這個(gè)事實(shí):如果你們競(jìng)選公職,國(guó)會(huì)將能大有作為。(笑聲和掌聲) 我想大家對(duì)此是深信無(wú)疑的。但如果你們決定不親身參政,至少也應(yīng)該確保自己有權(quán)選擇議員。這很重要。
Before women like Barbara Mikulski and Olympia Snowe and others got to Congress, just to take one example, much of federally-funded research on diseases focused solely on their effects on men. It wasn’t until women like Patsy Mink and Edith Green got to Congress and passed Title IX, 40 years ago this year, that we declared women, too, should be allowed to compete and win on America’s playing fields. (Applause.) Until a woman named Lilly Ledbetter showed up at her office and had the courage to step up and say, you know what, this isn’t right, women weren’t being treated fairly -- we lacked some of the tools we needed to uphold the basic principle of equal pay for equal work.
例如,在像芭芭拉·米庫(kù)爾斯基和奧林匹婭·斯諾及其他女性進(jìn)入國(guó)會(huì)前,聯(lián)邦資助的大部分疾病研究主要側(cè)重于疾病對(duì)男性的影響。40年前的今天,帕齊·明克和伊迪絲·格林等女性進(jìn)入國(guó)會(huì)并通過(guò)[教育法修正案]《第九條》,從而宣布女性也有資格在美國(guó)的運(yùn)動(dòng)場(chǎng)上參與競(jìng)賽并取勝。(掌聲)一個(gè)名叫莉莉·萊德貝特的女性來(lái)到她的辦公室,勇敢地而明確地說(shuō):你們知道嗎,這不對(duì),女性沒(méi)有得到公正待遇——我們?nèi)狈σ恍┍匾氖侄魏葱l(wèi)同工同酬的基本原則。
So don’t accept somebody else’s construction of the way things ought to be. It’s up to you to right wrongs. It’s up to you to point out injustice. It’s up to you to hold the system accountable and sometimes upend it entirely. It’s up to you to stand up and to be heard, to write and to lobby, to march, to organize, to vote. Don’t be content to just sit back and watch.
所以不要接受別人對(duì)于事情理當(dāng)如何的看法。你應(yīng)當(dāng)來(lái)糾正錯(cuò)誤做法。你應(yīng)當(dāng)來(lái)指出不公不義。你應(yīng)當(dāng)來(lái)督促社會(huì)體制負(fù)起責(zé)任,有時(shí)需要全盤改變。你應(yīng)當(dāng)挺身而出,發(fā)表意見(jiàn),撰文游說(shuō),游行示威,組織民眾,投票表決。不要滿足于袖手旁觀。
Those who oppose change, those who benefit from an unjust status quo, have always bet on the public’s cynicism or the public's complacency. Throughout American history, though, they have lost that bet, and I believe they will this time as well. (Applause.) But ultimately, Class of 2012, that will depend on you. Don’t wait for the person next to you to be the first to speak up for what’s right. Because maybe, just maybe, they’re waiting on you.
那些反對(duì)變革、受益于不公平現(xiàn)狀的人,總是賭定公眾要不是憤世嫉俗就是洋洋自得??墒强v觀美國(guó)歷史,他們一再下錯(cuò)賭注,我相信這一次也不例外。(掌聲)可是說(shuō)到底,2012屆的同學(xué)們,這將取決于你們。不要等待你身旁的人第一個(gè)為正義發(fā)言。因?yàn)橛锌赡埽皇怯写丝赡?,他們正在等你帶頭。
Which brings me to my second piece of advice: Never underestimate the power of your example. The very fact that you are graduating, let alone that more women now graduate from college than men, is only possible because earlier generations of women -- your mothers, your grandmothers, your aunts -- shattered the myth that you couldn’t or shouldn’t be where you are. (Applause.)
這就涉及我的第二條建議:切勿低估以身作則的力量。你們即將畢業(yè)的事實(shí),且不說(shuō)目前大學(xué)畢業(yè)的女生人數(shù)超過(guò)男生,都是因?yàn)榍拜吪裕銈兊哪赣H、祖母、姨嬸--打破了你不能或者不應(yīng)當(dāng)身在此處的神話。(掌聲)
I think of a friend of mine who’s the daughter of immigrants. When she was in high school, her guidance counselor told her, you know what, you’re just not college material. You should think about becoming a secretary. Well, she was stubborn, so she went to college anyway. She got her master’s. She ran for local office, won. She ran for state office, she won. She ran for Congress, she won. And lo and behold, Hilda Solis did end up becoming a secretary -- (laughter) -- she is America’s Secretary of Labor. (Applause.)
我想起一位朋友,她是移民的女兒。念中學(xué)時(shí),她的指導(dǎo)老師告訴她,你不是念大學(xué)的材料,你應(yīng)當(dāng)考慮去當(dāng)秘書(shū)。她很固執(zhí),所以還是念了大學(xué),進(jìn)而拿到碩士學(xué)位。她競(jìng)選地方公職,結(jié)果勝選。她競(jìng)選州政府公職,再度勝選。她競(jìng)選國(guó)會(huì)議員,又是勝選。請(qǐng)聽(tīng)好了,希爾達(dá)·索利斯最終的確成為一名秘書(shū)--(笑聲)--她成為美國(guó)勞工部的秘書(shū)[譯者注:“秘書(shū)”和“部長(zhǎng)”在英文中是同一個(gè)單詞]。(掌聲)
So think about what that means to a young Latina girl when she sees a Cabinet secretary that looks like her. (Applause.) Think about what it means to a young girl in Iowa when she sees a presidential candidate who looks like her. Think about what it means to a young girl walking in Harlem right down the street when she sees a U.N. ambassador who looks like her. Do not underestimate the power of your example.
所以想想看,當(dāng)一名拉丁裔的小女孩看到一名長(zhǎng)得像她的內(nèi)閣部長(zhǎng),會(huì)作何感想。(掌聲) 當(dāng)一名艾奧瓦州的小女孩看到一名長(zhǎng)得像她的總統(tǒng)候選人,會(huì)作何感想。當(dāng)一名小女孩走在哈萊姆區(qū)的街上,看到一名長(zhǎng)得像她的駐聯(lián)合國(guó)大使,她會(huì)作何感想。不要低估了你們以身作則的力量。
This diploma opens up new possibilities, so reach back, convince a young girl to earn one, too. If you earned your degree in areas where we need more women -- like computer science or engineering -- (applause) -- reach back and persuade another student to study it, too. If you're going into fields where we need more women, like construction or computer engineering -- reach back, hire someone new. Be a mentor. Be a role model.
這張文憑將會(huì)開(kāi)辟新的可能性,因此,回過(guò)頭去,說(shuō)服另一個(gè)小女孩也去追求文憑。如果你們學(xué)習(xí)的專業(yè)是需要更多女性投入的領(lǐng)域--比如計(jì)算機(jī)科學(xué)或者工程學(xué)--(掌聲)--也要說(shuō)服另一名學(xué)生加入你們的學(xué)習(xí)行列。如果你們進(jìn)入的是需要更多女性加入的領(lǐng)域,如建筑施工或者計(jì)算機(jī)工程--那就回頭聘一位新人。做一個(gè)指導(dǎo)者。做一個(gè)好榜樣。
Until a girl can imagine herself, can picture herself as a computer programmer, or a combatant commander, she won’t become one. Until there are women who tell her, ignore our pop culture obsession over beauty and fashion -- (applause) -- and focus instead on studying and inventing and competing and leading, she’ll think those are the only things that girls are supposed to care about. Now, Michelle will say, nothing wrong with caring about it a little bit. (Laughter.) You can be stylish and powerful, too. (Applause.) That's Michelle’s advice. (Applause.)
一名女孩要成為計(jì)算機(jī)程序員或者軍事指揮官,她必須首先具備這樣的理想。如果沒(méi)有別的女性告訴她,不要在意我們的流行文化對(duì)于美麗和時(shí)尚的迷戀--(掌聲)--而是專注學(xué)習(xí),發(fā)明創(chuàng)新,與人競(jìng)爭(zhēng),發(fā)揮領(lǐng)導(dǎo)作用,她就會(huì)一直在意那些事情。好,米歇爾會(huì)說(shuō),在意一點(diǎn)又何妨。(笑聲)你可以既時(shí)髦又有力量。(掌聲) 那是米歇爾的建議。(掌聲)
And never forget that the most important example a young girl will ever follow is that of a parent. Malia and Sasha are going to be outstanding women because Michelle and Marian Robinson are outstanding women. So understand your power, and use it wisely.
千萬(wàn)不要忘記一個(gè)女孩仿效的最重要榜樣就是她的父母?,斃驄I和莎夏將會(huì)成為杰出的女性,因?yàn)槊仔獱柡同旣惏病斮e遜都是杰出的女性。所以,要認(rèn)識(shí)到你們的力量,并且明智地加以運(yùn)用。
My last piece of advice -- this is simple, but perhaps most important: Persevere. Persevere. Nothing worthwhile is easy. No one of achievement has avoided failure -- sometimes catastrophic failures. But they keep at it. They learn from mistakes. They don’t quit.
我的最后一點(diǎn)建議--這很簡(jiǎn)單,但可能是最重要的一點(diǎn):堅(jiān)持不懈。堅(jiān)持不懈。有價(jià)值的事物得之不易。沒(méi)有一個(gè)有成就的人能夠避免失?。袝r(shí)甚至是一敗涂地。可是他們堅(jiān)持不懈,從錯(cuò)誤中學(xué)習(xí)。他們絕不放棄。
You know, when I first arrived on this campus, it was with little money, fewer options. But it was here that I tried to find my place in this world. I knew I wanted to make a difference, but it was vague how in fact I’d go about it. (Laughter.) But I wanted to do my part to do my part to shape a better world.
你們知道,我剛到這個(gè)校園時(shí),沒(méi)多少錢,更沒(méi)多少選擇。但正是在這里,我試圖尋找我在這個(gè)世界上的立足之地。我知道我想有所作為,但卻不清楚如何去做。(笑聲)可我想盡自己的力量去建設(shè)一個(gè)更美好的世界。
So even as I worked after graduation in a few unfulfilling jobs here in New York -- I will not list them all -- (laughter) -- even as I went from motley apartment to motley apartment, I reached out. I started to write letters to community organizations all across the country. And one day, a small group of churches on the South Side of Chicago answered, offering me work with people in neighborhoods hit hard by steel mills that were shutting down and communities where jobs were dying away.
因此,即使當(dāng)我畢業(yè)后在紐約從事幾份沒(méi)有成就感的工作的時(shí)候——我不會(huì)一 一列舉——(笑聲)——即使在我搬出一間雜亂的公寓又搬到另一間同樣雜亂的公寓的時(shí)候,我也在努力求索。我開(kāi)始給全國(guó)各地的社區(qū)組織寫信。有一天,芝加哥南區(qū)的一個(gè)小型教會(huì)組織回了信,給了我一份為當(dāng)?shù)鼐用穹?wù)的工作,他們那里的鋼廠停業(yè)使他們受到沉重打擊,那里的就業(yè)機(jī)會(huì)也一天天消失。
The community had been plagued by gang violence, so once I arrived, one of the first things we tried to do was to mobilize a meeting with community leaders to deal with gangs. And I’d worked for weeks on this project. We invited the police; we made phone calls; we went to churches; we passed out flyers. The night of the meeting we arranged rows and rows of chairs in anticipation of this crowd. And we waited, and we waited. And finally, a group of older folks walked in to the hall and they sat down. And this little old lady raised her hand and asked, “Is this where the bingo game is?” (Laughter.) It was a disaster. Nobody showed up. My first big community meeting -- nobody showed up.
當(dāng)?shù)厣鐓^(qū)一直被幫派暴力所擾,所以我一到那里,我們爭(zhēng)取做的第一件事情就是與社區(qū)領(lǐng)袖開(kāi)會(huì)商量應(yīng)對(duì)幫派的對(duì)策。我為這項(xiàng)工作忙了好幾個(gè)星期。我們邀請(qǐng)了警察;我們打了電話,我們?nèi)チ私烫?;我們散發(fā)了傳單。要開(kāi)會(huì)的那天晚上,我們排好了一排排椅子,以為會(huì)有一大群人到會(huì)。我們等啊等。最后,一??群老人走進(jìn)大廳,然后坐下來(lái)。有一位瘦小的老太太舉起了手,問(wèn)道:“賓果游戲是在這里嗎?”(笑聲)真是糟糕透了。沒(méi)有人來(lái)。我的第一個(gè)社區(qū)大會(huì)——沒(méi)有人到場(chǎng)。
And later, the volunteers I worked with told me, that's it; we’re quitting. They'd been doing this for two years even before I had arrived. They had nothing to show for it. And I’ll be honest, I felt pretty discouraged as well. I didn't know what I was doing. I thought about quitting. And as we were talking, I looked outside and saw some young boys playing in a vacant lot across the street. And they were just throwing rocks up at a boarded building. They had nothing better to do -- late at night, just throwing rocks. And I said to the volunteers, “Before you quit, answer one question. What will happen to those boys if you quit? Who will fight for them if we don’t? Who will give them a fair shot if we leave?
后來(lái),和我一起工作的志愿人員對(duì)我說(shuō),夠了,我們不干了。他們?cè)谖襾?lái)之前已經(jīng)干了兩年之久。他們覺(jué)得沒(méi)有任何成就可言。說(shuō)實(shí)話,我也感到相當(dāng)氣餒??。我不知道我在做什么。我想過(guò)不干了。當(dāng)我們交談的時(shí)候,我往外邊看了看,看到一群年輕的男孩在馬路對(duì)面的空地上玩耍。他們正對(duì)著一座用板子釘起來(lái)的建筑物投擲石塊。他們百無(wú)聊賴——在深夜,扔石頭玩。我對(duì)那些志愿人員說(shuō):“在你們退出之前,先回答一個(gè)問(wèn)題。如果你們不干了那些男孩會(huì)怎么樣?如果我們不為他們著想,還有誰(shuí)會(huì)為他們奮斗呢?如果我們走了,還有誰(shuí)會(huì)給他們一個(gè)公平的機(jī)會(huì)呢?
And one by one, the volunteers decided not to quit. We went back to those neighborhoods and we kept at it. We registered new voters, and we set up after-school programs, and we fought for new jobs, and helped people live lives with some measure of dignity. And we sustained ourselves with those small victories. We didn’t set the world on fire. Some of those communities are still very poor. There are still a lot of gangs out there. But I believe that it was those small victories that helped me win the bigger victories of my last three and a half years as President.
志愿者們一個(gè)接一個(gè)地決定不放棄。我們回到那些街區(qū),繼續(xù)堅(jiān)持工作。我們給新選民登記,我們安排課后活動(dòng),我們爭(zhēng)取新的就業(yè)機(jī)會(huì),并幫助人們活得更有尊嚴(yán)。我們用那些小小的勝利鼓勵(lì)自己。我們并沒(méi)有做什么驚天動(dòng)地的事。這些社區(qū)中有一些仍然很貧窮。那里仍然有很多的幫派出沒(méi)。但我相信,就是這些小小的勝利幫助我在這三年半里作為總統(tǒng)贏得了更大的勝利。
And I wish I could say that this perseverance came from some innate toughness in me. But the truth is, it was learned. I got it from watching the people who raised me. More specifically, I got it from watching the women who shaped my life.
我希望我能說(shuō)這種執(zhí)著源于我與生俱來(lái)的某種毅力。但事實(shí)是,這是后天學(xué)到的。我是從養(yǎng)育我的人身上學(xué)到的。更具體地說(shuō),我是從影響了我的生活的那些女性身上學(xué)到的。
I grew up as the son of a single mom who struggled to put herself through school and make ends meet. She had marriages that fell apart; even went on food stamps at one point to help us get by. But she didn’t quit. And she earned her degree, and made sure that through scholarships and hard work, my sister and I earned ours. She used to wake me up when we were living overseas -- wake me up before dawn to study my English lessons. And when I’d complain, she’d just look at me and say, “This is no picnic for me either, buster.” (Laughter.)
我是一個(gè)單身母親的兒子,她含辛茹苦,在努力維持家庭生計(jì)的同時(shí)完成學(xué)業(yè)。她有過(guò)破碎的婚姻,甚至一度靠領(lǐng)取食品劵勉強(qiáng)養(yǎng)家度日。但她沒(méi)有放棄。她獲得了學(xué)位,并確保我和我妹妹能依靠獎(jiǎng)學(xué)金和辛勤努力來(lái)獲得我們的學(xué)位。當(dāng)我們?cè)诤M馍顣r(shí),她常常叫我起床——天不亮就起床,學(xué)習(xí)英語(yǔ)課程。當(dāng)我抱怨時(shí),她就會(huì)看著我說(shuō):“小子,這對(duì)我也并不輕松。”(笑聲)
And my mom ended up dedicating herself to helping women around the world access the money they needed to start their own businesses -- she was an early pioneer in microfinance. And that meant, though, that she was gone a lot, and she had her own struggles trying to figure out balancing motherhood and a career. And when she was gone, my grandmother stepped up to take care of me.
我的母親最終完全投入到幫助世界各地婦女獲得創(chuàng)業(yè)所需資金的工作中——她是微型信貸的一個(gè)先驅(qū)。但這意味著她經(jīng)常不在家,而且她有著自身的掙扎,要努力在做母親和發(fā)展事業(yè)之間找到平衡。她不在家時(shí),我的外祖母承擔(dān)起照顧我的責(zé)任。
She only had a high school education. She got a job at a local bank. She hit the glass ceiling, and watched men she once trained promoted up the ladder ahead of her. But she didn’t quit. Rather than grow hard or angry each time she got passed over, she kept doing her job as best as she knew how, and ultimately ended up being vice president at the bank. She didn’t quit.
她僅受過(guò)高中教育。她在當(dāng)?shù)劂y行找到一份工作,她遇到了事業(yè)上的玻璃天花板,眼看著她曾經(jīng)培訓(xùn)過(guò)的男人晉升到比她更高的級(jí)別。但她沒(méi)有退卻。她沒(méi)有因一次次機(jī)會(huì)旁落而變得冷漠或憤怒,而是繼續(xù)盡自己最大努力做好工作,最終她成為銀行的副總裁。她沒(méi)有退卻。
And later on, I met a woman who was assigned to advise me on my first summer job at a law firm. And she gave me such good advice that I married her. (Laughter.) And Michelle and I gave everything we had to balance our careers and a young family. But let’s face it, no matter how enlightened I must have thought myself to be, it often fell more on her shoulders when I was traveling, when I was away. I know that when she was with our girls, she’d feel guilty that she wasn’t giving enough time to her work, and when she was at her work, she’d feel guilty she wasn’t giving enough time to our girls. And both of us wished we had some superpower that would let us be in two places at once. But we persisted. We made that marriage work.
后來(lái),我遇到一位女性,她被派來(lái)?yè)?dān)任我在一家律師事務(wù)所從事的第一份暑期工作的指導(dǎo)。她對(duì)我的指導(dǎo)如此之好,以致于我娶了她。(笑聲)米歇爾和我竭盡全力在發(fā)展事業(yè)與照顧幼小的孩子之間找到平衡。但是說(shuō)實(shí)話,不管我當(dāng)時(shí)可能認(rèn)為自己是多么開(kāi)通,在我外出旅行時(shí),在我不在家時(shí),家事往往更多地落在她的肩上。我知道,在照顧我們的兩個(gè)女兒時(shí),她為沒(méi)有在工作上付出足夠時(shí)間感到內(nèi)疚;而當(dāng)她上班時(shí),又為沒(méi)有給孩子足夠的時(shí)間感到內(nèi)疚。我們倆都唯愿我們有某種超人的能力,使我們能夠兩者兼顧。但我們堅(jiān)持住了,我們的努力保證了婚姻的成功。
And the reason Michelle had the strength to juggle everything, and put up with me and eventually the public spotlight, was because she, too, came from a family of folks who didn’t quit -- because she saw her dad get up and go to work every day even though he never finished college, even though he had crippling MS. She saw her mother, even though she never finished college, in that school, that urban school, every day making sure Michelle and her brother were getting the education they deserved. Michelle saw how her parents never quit. They never
indulged in self-pity, no matter how stacked the odds were against them. They didn't quit.
米歇爾之所以能夠堅(jiān)強(qiáng)地招架一切并忍受我,而且最終忍受公眾聚光,是因?yàn)樗瑯觼?lái)自一個(gè)不輕易退卻的家庭——因?yàn)樗吹剿母赣H每天一大早起來(lái)去上班,盡管他從未念完大學(xué),盡管他患有影響行動(dòng)的多發(fā)性硬化癥。她看到,盡管她的母親從未念完大學(xué),但在那個(gè)學(xué)校,那個(gè)貧民區(qū)的學(xué)校,她每天都確保米歇爾和她的哥哥受到他們應(yīng)該得到的教育。米歇爾看到她的父母從不放棄。他們從不沉溺于自憐,不管他們面臨多么不利的境況。他們從不放棄。
Those are the folks who inspire me. People ask me sometimes, who inspires you, Mr. President? Those quiet heroes all across this country -- some of your parents and grandparents who are sitting here -- no
fanfare, no articles written about them, they just persevere. They just do their jobs. They meet their responsibilities. They don't quit. I'm only here because of them. They may not have set out to change the world, but in small, important ways, they did. They certainly changed mine.
正是這些人激勵(lì)著我。人們有時(shí)問(wèn)我,總統(tǒng)先生,是誰(shuí)激勵(lì)著你?是這個(gè)國(guó)家各地那些默默耕耘的英雄——今天在座的你們一些人的父母和祖父母——他們不張揚(yáng),沒(méi)有文章報(bào)道他們,他們只是堅(jiān)持不懈。他們只是做好本職工作。他們履行自己的責(zé)任。他們不放棄。正是因?yàn)橛兴麄兾也耪镜竭@里。他們或許并沒(méi)有從一開(kāi)始就要改變世界,但他們以一點(diǎn)一滴的重要方式,改變了世界。他們無(wú)疑改變了我的世界。
So whether it’s starting a business, or running for office, or raising an amazing family, remember that making your mark on the world is hard. It takes patience. It takes commitment. It comes with plenty of setbacks and it comes with plenty of failures.
因此,無(wú)論是創(chuàng)辦一家企業(yè)、 競(jìng)選公職、還是撫養(yǎng)一個(gè)美好的家庭,請(qǐng)記?。阂谶@個(gè)世界上留下你的影響不是一件輕而易舉的事情。它需要耐心。它需要投入。隨之而來(lái)的是大量挫折,以及無(wú)數(shù)次的失敗。
But whenever you feel that creeping
cynicism, whenever you hear those voices say you can’t make a difference, whenever somebody tells you to set your sights lower -- the trajectory of this country should give you hope. Previous generations should give you hope. What young generations have done before should give you hope. Young folks who marched and mobilized and stood up and sat in, from Seneca Falls to Selma to Stonewall, didn’t just do it for themselves; they did it for other people. (Applause.)
但每當(dāng)你感覺(jué)到那種迎面撲來(lái)的冷嘲熱諷,每當(dāng)你聽(tīng)到人們說(shuō)你無(wú)法改變現(xiàn)狀,每當(dāng)有人告訴你要茍且偷生——這個(gè)國(guó)家走過(guò)的道路應(yīng)該給你帶來(lái)希望。前幾代人的經(jīng)歷應(yīng)該給你帶來(lái)希望。在你之前的一代又一代年輕人做過(guò)的一切應(yīng)該給你帶來(lái)希望。無(wú)論是在塞尼卡福爾斯還是在塞爾瑪或是在石墻,當(dāng)時(shí)那些參加游行、動(dòng)員起來(lái)、挺身而出、進(jìn)行靜坐的年輕人,他們不僅僅是為自己這樣做 ;他們這樣做是為了別人。(掌聲)
That’s how we achieved women’s rights. That's how we achieved voting rights. That's how we achieved workers’ rights. That's how we achieved gay rights. (Applause.) That’s how we’ve made this Union more perfect. (Applause.)
就是這樣,我們獲得了婦女權(quán)利;就是這樣,我們獲得了選舉權(quán);就是這樣,我們獲得了工人權(quán)利;就是這樣,我們獲得了同性戀權(quán)利。(掌聲)就是這樣,我們使我們的合眾國(guó)更趨完美。(掌聲)
And if you’re willing to do your part now, if you're willing to reach up and close that gap between what America is and what America should be, I want you to know that I will be right there with you. (Applause.) If you are ready to fight for that brilliant, radically simple idea of America that no matter who you are or what you look like, no matter who you love or what God you worship, you can still pursue your own happiness, I will join you every step of the way. (Applause.)
如果你們?cè)敢猬F(xiàn)在就來(lái)盡你們的職責(zé),如果你們?cè)敢饨弑M所能縮小美國(guó)現(xiàn)狀與理想之間的差距,我想讓你們知道:我會(huì)與你們站在一起。(掌聲)。不管你是誰(shuí)、不管你的外貌如何、不管你愛(ài)的是誰(shuí)或敬拜什么樣的神,你仍然可以追求自己的幸?!绻銣?zhǔn)備為美國(guó)實(shí)現(xiàn)這個(gè)十分簡(jiǎn)單卻又非常美好的想法而奮斗,我會(huì)在前進(jìn)的道路上與你并肩邁出每一步。(掌聲)
Now more than ever -- now more than ever, America needs what you, the Class of 2012, has to offer. America needs you to reach high and hope deeply. And if you fight for your seat at the table, and you set a better example, and you persevere in what you decide to do with your life, I have every faith not only that you will succeed, but that, through you, our nation will continue to be a beacon of light for men and women, boys and girls, in every corner of the globe.
與以往任何時(shí)候相比——與以往任何時(shí)候相比,現(xiàn)在美國(guó)都更需要你們——2012屆的同學(xué)們——所能貢獻(xiàn)的一切。美國(guó)需要你們高瞻遠(yuǎn)矚、胸懷大志。如果你們?yōu)闋?zhēng)取自己的發(fā)言權(quán)而奮斗,樹(shù)立一個(gè)更好的榜樣,堅(jiān)持做你們一生中立志要做的事情,我堅(jiān)信,不僅你們會(huì)取得成功,而且由于你們的努力,我們的國(guó)家將繼續(xù)是為全球每一個(gè)角落的男人和女人、男孩和女孩照耀航程的燈塔。
So thank you. Congratulations. (Applause.) God bless you. God bless the United States of America. (Applause.)
因此,謝謝大家。向你們祝賀。(掌聲)上帝保佑你們。上帝保佑美利堅(jiān)合眾國(guó)。(掌聲)
巴納德學(xué)院簡(jiǎn)介:
巴納德學(xué)院(Barnard College)是美國(guó)的一所私立女子高等學(xué)校,1889年于紐約市創(chuàng)辦,以原哥倫比亞學(xué)院院長(zhǎng)費(fèi)雷德里克·巴納德的名字命名。1900年并入哥倫比亞大學(xué),仍保留獨(dú)立的學(xué)校董事會(huì)和財(cái)政機(jī)構(gòu),有自己的教師、圖書(shū)館和與哥倫比亞大學(xué)共同享有的設(shè)備,但學(xué)士學(xué)位由哥倫比亞大學(xué)授予。課程涉及人文學(xué)、社會(huì)科學(xué)和自然科學(xué),亦提供音樂(lè)、戲劇等方面的專門課程。學(xué)生可參加哥倫比亞大學(xué)的許多活動(dòng),亦可到哥倫比亞大學(xué)聽(tīng)課。