President Barack Obama offers a toast during a state dinner
hosted by Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn on July 27, 2015
at the National Palace in Addis Ababa.Evan Vucci/AP Photo
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
July 27, 2015
TOAST REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA AND PRIME MINISTER HAILEMARIAM DESALEGN OF ETHIOPIA AT STATE DINNER
National Palace
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
8:02 P.M. EAT
PRIME MINISTER HAILEMARIAM: Your Excellency, the President of the
United States of America, Mr. Barack Obama, distinguished guests, ladies
and gentlemen: In the history of the relationship by Ethiopia and the
United States of America, this is an exceptional occasion. Never before
did we have the opportunity to be able to welcome a sitting President
of the United States for an official visit to Ethiopia.
And, Mr. President, we welcome you and all the members of your
delegation to Ethiopia with open arms. (Applause.) Your visit is a
mark of the long friendship between our two countries and our two
peoples — a friendship that I am certain will be further enhanced in the
future. It shows the strengths and depths of the diplomatic and
cultural relations we enjoy today, and underlines our hopes for the
future.
Mr. President, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen, our links
were formally established at the beginning of the last century when a
treaty of commerce was signed during the reign of Emperor Menelik and
President Theodore Roosevelt administration in 1903. Since then, and
even earlier, the United States provided an inspiration for the
advancement of science and technology, and indeed, of democracy and good
governance.
Ethiopia, similarly, as the only surviving vessel of freedom and
independence in Africa, offered an inspiration to many in America. It
was a source of inspiration for a great African American thinker and
philosopher, Du Bois, as well as more recently, Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr. And many saw a source of enlightenment in the spirit of Ethiopia.
They saw the courageous struggle of Ethiopia as the symbol of the
struggle of the whole community of Africans across the world for civil
liberty, equality, and freedom.
Our relationship established on the basis of mutual understanding,
respect and dignity, and matured in the struggled against fascism. The
role of the United States to the struggle can only be described as
historic. People all over the country protested against Italy’s
invasion of Ethiopia. You raised funds and sent medical supplies.
People in New York, Harlem, Oklahoma, Texas, and many other cities
paraded in support of Ethiopia. Thousands offered to enlist to fight
for us. And even after the war, many more came to Ethiopia to help in
our post-war reconstruction.
It is perhaps appropriate to single out one person, as I feel this is
an appropriate moment to mention one African American hero who grew up
in Mississippi during the early 1920s, and came to Ethiopia in 1935 to
help us in our struggle against fascism and colonial aggression.
Colonel John Robinson was, I believe, one of the first Americans to take
up arms against fascism. Having earlier established an aviation school
in Alabama, Colonel Robinson was largely responsible for founding the
Ethiopian Air Force during the Italian invasion. Called here the “Brown
Condor of Ethiopia,” he then became the first commander of the air
force.
He was a wonderful example of those Americans who did so actively
support Ethiopia both in time of peace and conflict. And here, let me
also mention the exemplary dedication displayed by your youth in the
Peace Corps, both in the 1960s, all over the way through today.
In this context, let me also remember all those Americans who have
given their lives to Ethiopia, not least the late Congressman Mickey
Leland who worked so hard to build the relationship between our two
countries on the basis of dignity, faith and hope. He would have very
much appreciated this visit as a symbol of the friendship that has been
built up over the years, and which he did so much to encourage.
We, and indeed other Africans, who owe very gratitude to your
administration and the members of Congress for the recent renewal of the
African Growth and Opportunity Act for another decade. And this
bipartisan action by Congress was an impressive example of the way the
United States had prepared to assist in the development and growth in
Africa. I cannot speak too highly of those congresswomen and men who
are so active and for so many years in support of this cause. I believe
I can see a number of you here today. May I offer my very sincere
thanks for your determined efforts.
You showed a very real example of
the understanding that the people of America have for the problems of
Africa.
Your effort also provides another clear demonstration of the way we
can do work together, closely and harmoniously, for joint development of
our people.
Mr. President, Excellencies, today we are celebrating a longstanding,
time-tested, and exception relationship. I believe I can speak for us
all when I say that this closeness could now be expressed at a new level
of contact and development. The United States of course continues to
play a major role in
global efforts for peace and development.
There are the central issues for us as well, and I believe I can say
that we have similar views on major regional and global issues. We have
been cooperating closely at the United Nations, in the African Union,
and in our regional organization, IGAD. We greatly appreciate this
support we have received and continue to receive from the United States
for the resolution of conflict and peace-building and stability in our
region. We are most grateful for your steadfast support to our
collective efforts in the fight against violent extremism and terrorism.
Mr. President, with all this in mind, we in Ethiopia would like to
infuse a new level of commitment into our relationship with the United
States. We have built a firm relationship on the basis of mutual trust
and respect, and now we’d like to extend this and raise our links to a
new level, to explore further opportunities for development and build a
wider network of activity that can strengthen our bilateral
relationship. It is something from which I believe we can both benefit.
Mr. President, you have here a very trusted friend, a country and
people that highly appreciate what the United States stands for. Now,
in the spirit of the friendship, I would therefore like to propose a
toast to the bright future that awaits the people of our two countries,
and to the good health and happiness of Your Excellency.
Distinguished guests, may I ask you to stand and join me in a toast
to the President of the United States of America and to all the people
of the great nation. Long live Ethiopia-U.S friendship. Cheers. (A
toast is given.) (Applause.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Thank you so much. Good evening, everybody. I
would greet you in all the languages of Ethiopia, but I’m told that
there are more than 80. (Laughter.) So that would keep us here all
night. (Laughter.) So let me just say indemin walachu. (Applause.)
Prime Minister Halemariam, distinguished guests, ladies and
gentlemen, it is a great honor for me to be here tonight as the first
sitting United States President to visit Ethiopia. And I want to thank
the great people of Ethiopia, including Teddy Mak — he’s the one who
sang that catchy song upon my welcome — I want to thank all of you for
the wonderful reception we’ve received.
You know Ethiopians are an ancient people in an ancient land. We
honor Ethiopia as the birthplace of humankind. In fact, I just met
Lucy, our oldest ancestor. (Applause.) As your great poet laureate
wrote, “Here is the land where the first harmony in the rainbow was
born…Here is the root of the Genesis of Life; the human family was first
planted here.”
When you see our ancestor, 3.5 million years old, we are reminded
that Ethiopians, Americans, all the people of the world are part of the
same human family, the same chain. (Applause.) And as one of the
professors who was describing the artifacts correctly pointed out, so
much of the hardship and conflict and sadness and violence that occurs
around the world is because we forget that fact. We look at superficial
differences as opposed to seeing the fundamental connection that we all
share.
And for more than a century, our two nations have enjoyed a harmony
that enriched us both. We’ve worked together to lift up the fortunes of
those most in need; tonight we also remember former Prime Minister
Meles and his dedication to reducing poverty. Together, we’ve sheltered
and cared for refugees fleeing conflict. We’ve sought to secure our
shared future against those who would threaten us.
Of course, of the many contributions Ethiopia has made to the world
over the centuries, I’m certain that Americans want to thank you for one
in particular, discovering something that sustains people around the
world, day and night, and many people in the White House, and that is
coffee. (Laughter.)
Thank you, Ethiopia. (Applause.) We are large
consumers of coffee in the White House. (Laughter.)
And Ethiopia has ignited the imagination of Americans for
generations. Before African Americans won their civil rights, many of
them were inspired by this country — a nation that never suffered the
indignities of colonialism, people who defended their freedom and their
right in self-determination. You already mentioned, Mr. Prime Minister,
Colonel John Robinson, an American who was one of the fathers of the
Tuskegee Airmen, nicknamed the Brown Condor, who then came to Ethiopia
and trained Ethiopian pilots to tame their heavens and, as you
indicated, helped to set up the Ethiopian Air Force. You sparked the
passion of American poets like Paul Laurence Dunbar and Langston Hughes,
who saw in Ethiopia a dignity to be celebrated and emulated.
Ethiopia kindled a commitment to service for generations of young
Americans who volunteered for the Peace Corps and who have for decades
worked alongside the people of this proud land. For my part, I was
impressed by the courage of the Ethiopian journalists that I welcomed to
the White House earlier this year, moved by their determination to
champion a robust free press, and I very much appreciated the comments
you made at the press conference today about the evolution that’s taking
place to deepen democracy here.
So the deep connections between our peoples is built on the values
that we share. We saw that so clearly two years ago when the Boston
Marathon suffered that horrendous terrorist bombing. And in a gesture
of great solidarity and compassion, the runner who won the race, an
Ethiopian, returned his medal to honor the victims of the attack. And
at this year’s Marathon, Americans cheered all the harder when he once
again crossed the finish line first with an even faster time.
(Applause.) And that, I think, is the hallmark of the American and
Ethiopian bond.
We don’t give in or give up when things get hard, but we come back
better and we come back stronger. So there’s no doubt that Ethiopians
and Americans are sprung from the same root of life — we have evidence
of that. Tonight, I’d like to offer a toast: To another century of
friendship, to our one human family, and to a bright future for the land
where the first harmony of the rainbow was born. Letenachin.
(Applause.) For you Americans, that means “to our health” or “cheers.”
(Laughter.)
Thank you very much. (Applause.)
END
8:18 P.M. EAT
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