
President Barack Obama
| credits: File copy
| credits: File copy
United
States President Barack Obama issued a somber warning on Wednesday that
the kidnapping of Nigerian girls and sectarian conflicts worldwide are a
sign that “we have not extinguished man’s darkest impulse,” Los Angeles Reuters reports.
Obama accepted a humanitarian award from
director Steven Spielberg at the University of Southern California’s
Shoah Foundation, a Holocaust museum founded by Spielberg after he made
the film “Schindler’s List.”
Obama spoke about a variety of global
conflicts including Ukraine, Syria, and the kidnapping of more than 200
Nigerian girls by the Boko Haram Islamist militant group.
“We only need to look at today’s
headlines: The devastation of Syria, the murders and kidnappings in
Nigeria, the sectarian conflicts, the tribal conflicts to see that we
have not yet extinguished man’s darkest impulses,” Obama said.
He expressed alarm about a rising tide of
anti-Semitism based on events such as a gunman’s attack on two Jewish
facilities in Kansas and the distribution of pamphlets in eastern
Ukraine that demanded the registration of Jews.
“None of the tragedies that we see today
may rise to the full horror of the Holocaust,” he said. However, he said
“they demand our attention that we not turn away.”
“We have to act even where there is
sometimes ambiguity. Even when the path is not always clearly lit. We
have to try. That includes confronting the rising tide of anti-Semitism
in the world,” he said.
Obama said Americans must speak out
against any rhetoric that threatens the existence of Israel “and to
sustain America’s unshakeable commitment to Israel’s security.”
The Shoah Foundation’s annual gala
featured Bruce Springsteen performing “Promised Land” and “Dancin’ in
the Dark,” and a comedy routine from Conan O’Brien.
At Obama’s table were Spielberg, Barbra Streisand and “Schindler’s List” star Liam Neeson.
No comments:
Post a Comment