Heal The Kids/Carnegie Hall Address
February 14, 2001
Below is a transcript of a speech that Michael made during the Heal The
Kids debate that took place at Carnegie Hall in New York City, USA on February
14, 2001.
Michael:
"I would like to welcome you to Carnegie Hall, ... the world's most famous
concert hall to hear an entirely different kind of music -- a loftier melody.
It's a more eternal song.
There are two kinds of music. One comes from the strings of a guitar, the
other from the strings of the heart. One sound comes from a chamber orchestra,
the other from the beating of the heart's chamber. One comes from an
instrument of graphite and wood, the other from an organ of flesh and blood.
This loftier music I speak of tonight is more pleasing than the notes of
the most gifted composers, more moving than a marching band, more harmonious
than a thousand voices joined in hymn and more powerful than all the world's
percussion instruments combined. That ... sweet and sound of love.
Just a generation ago, it was this sound that could be heard in every turn
in every town. It was the sound of love that echoed in the livingroom when a
father giggled with his son or a mother tickled a small infant child. It was
the sound of love that echoed from children's literary classes as the parents
read their children ... tales before they went to bed. And it was the sound of
love that reverberated in their dinner conversations. Between parents and
children, not just once a year but should be discovered everyday for peace and
prosper.
Sadly, that sound has become a lost melody, a forgotten refrain, an empty
tune and all we have in its place today is a dark and terrible noise. Instead
of dinner conversations, there is the noise of video games. Instead of
homework there is the din of the evening news. And instead of regular
conversations between parents and children about the [webs of violence?],
there is the ... sound -- the deafening sounds of silence.
Who among us would have believed that the sound of children at their
playground would be replaced by the sound of automatic machinegun fire at our
schools. That the sound of little girls skipping rope would be overshadowed by
the frantic squeals of children dodging bullets. Yet instead of loving our
children more we've installed metal detectors in our schools.
Are we blind to the fact that our children are raging against the
indifference; crying out against the abandonment; of thundering against the
neglect.
Heal The Kids is about doing something, about making a difference and
trying to help adults and parents realize that its in our power to change the
world that our children live in.
As a wise man once said, 'If not us, then who; if not now, then when?'
My friends, with 2 children of my own, I know what it means to have to
balance the demand of family and career -- let's not even talk about finding a
date for myself, even though... Even though Rabbi Shmuley keeps telling me
he's going to find me the perfect woman, my response is: As long as it's not a
journalist.
But learning how to strike this very necessary balance is what this special
evening is all about.
In 3 weeks time, at Oxford University I will be delivering an address with
strong implications for dealing with the parent-child relationship and giving
an address that is certain to surprise you. Until then, I want to thank you
all for coming out...showing your love. And I want to offer a couple of
special thank-yous going .....that we have 100 ... New York City teachers with
us .... I want to thank Steven Shaunfeld, he's a wonderful, wonderful.
Everything he does for Heal the Kids is just incredible.
Together we can make a change for the better; together we can heal the
world and make it a better place. God bless you all, I love you all."
[Thank you to Marla D. Collins for this transcript.] |