The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers, Digital Edition > My Day
My Day by Eleanor Roosevelt

[This column has emendations. View original version]

      

BOSTON—The two rival candidates, Vice-President Nixon and Senator Kennedy, are vacationing in Florida. For Mr. Nixon it will doubtless be a real vacation. For President-elect Kennedy, it will be a ceaseless round of work.

Too few of us think of the responsibility facing the man who will be President of the U.S. and of all its people on his inauguration, January 20. The crowds that have surrounded him during the past year, the feel he has had of the people who did support him—all this will now seem far away as he sits down to appraise the whole situation before him. Consistently through his campaign Senator Kennedy tried to tell the people of the country what many of them quite evidently did not want to hear—namely, that we were facing a very serious world situation and that we had not been taken into the confidence of our leaders. In spite of this he seems to have gained enough support from people who are uneasy without knowing just what it is that makes them uneasy.

The Senator has broken the religious taboo and brought us again to the position of being a country which cherishes freedom of religion. People will be busy analyzing this election for a long while. Judging by the states which went for Mr. Nixon, I surmise they will find that the people against Senator Kennedy are the people in this country who get limited information on the world in general and even on national affairs—and who therefore center on their own interests without any realization that their own interests are now tied to the interests of the world.

I thought of this aspect while spending last Friday in Maine. It is such beautiful country, it was such a beautiful day, and Maine people are such nice, staunch, independent people. As you look at some of the houses you wonder if life at times is not perhaps a little grim and, though good and solid and enduring, not very outgoing or very broad in its interests. How these people shy away from anything new, whether it is an idea or a change of habit! While the shock of a changing world has been absorbed by other areas of the country, they have been left to the pleasant dream that life will be kept as it always has been.

I do not know whether in the four years to come Senator Kennedy can educate the people of Maine and the other areas of the country which are not so very far removed from the same type of people. These are good people and one likes them enormously. But they are not attuned to the world in which they live, and in the months to come one of the most difficult tasks of the President will be this process of education—this bringing to the understanding of those of us who are still asleep the knowledge that we cannot sleep in safety any longer.

The whole of history points to the fact that when people attain the knowledge of destruction they use it. We have that knowledge and we are desperately trying not to use it; and even our opponents in the Soviet Union, led by Mr. Khrushchev, are trying not to use it. Will we succeed? On our success depends the survival of the present civilization of the world. Some may say we have done so little with our opportunities that, if we cannot learn to preserve ourselves, we deserve to be destroyed. Too few people, however, realize the great effort that must be made to bring about peace, to change the present trend of building up to a final explosion. One man will sit in the White House after January 20 on whose wisdom, power of communication and patience will depend the outcome of our future. By that I mean really the world's future, because destruction means world destruction and not just the destruction of any one nation.

Whether you are a Republican or a Democrat, it seems to me this question of how we approach saving the world and its people from themselves is not a partisan question. For eight years our President has genuinely believed that he and his Administration were doing all they possibly could to keep war away from our country, but the realization never seemed to be brought to us that this was not a question just of saving ourselves. This was a question of saving the whole of civilization, and it could not be done without bringing the best brains to work regardless of party, without trying new ways and taking some new risks.

Senator Kennedy took a risk in his campaign when he telephoned and promised to help the Rev. Martin Luther King. He might have lost those Southern states he so sorely need in the campaign. But he took the risks and he did not lose those states. It may well be that similar risks will have to be taken to save humanity from itself. If so, I hope they will be taken with the same background of principle and high purpose, because that is the only way in which the people can be brought to understanding and to action of their own in support of their leader.

E.R.

(Copyright, 1960, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)


Names and Terms Mentioned or Referenced

Geographic
  • Boston (Mass., United States) [ index ]


About this document

My Day by Eleanor Roosevelt, November 14, 1960

Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1884-1962
[ ERPP bio | LC | VIAF | WorldCat | DPLA | Wikidata | SNAC ]

Digital edition created by The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project The George Washington University 312 Academic Building 2100 Foxhall Road, NW Washington, DC 20007

  • Brick, Christopher (Editor)
    [ VIAF | ORCID ]
  • Regenhardt, Christy (Associate Editor)
    [ ISNI ]
  • Black, Allida M. (Editor)
    [ VIAF | ISNI ]
  • Binker, Mary Jo (Associate Editor)
    [ VIAF | ORCID ]
  • Alhambra, Christopher C. (Electronic Text Editor)
    [ VIAF | ORCID ]

Digital edition published 2008, 2017 by
The Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project

Available under licence from the Estate of Anna Eleanor Roosevelt.

Published with permission from the Estate of Anna Eleanor Roosevelt.

MEP edition publlished on June 30, 2008.

TEI-P5 edition published on April 28, 2017.

XML master last modified on June 9, 2017.

HTML version generated and published on May 3, 2022.

Transcription created from a photocopy of a UFS wire copy of a My Day column instance archived at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.
TMs, AERP, FDRL