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Hommage à Kirk Douglas

Kirk Douglas est mort à 103 ans. Une carrière exceptionnelle marquée de très nombreux films dont beaucoup furent excellents. Parmi ceux qui m’ont marqué, je pourrai citer Règlement de comptes à OK Coral (je suis un grand fan de Westerns malgré le narratif qu’ils essaient de donner de l’Amérique et du combat en le bien et le mal), Spartacus ou encore l’excellent film de Stanley Kubrick qui donne une triste image des généraux français pendant la première guerre mondiale.

 

Interviews de Kirk Douglas

 

Du haut de ses 103 ans, Kirk Douglas est donc né en 1916 pendant la Première Guerre mondiale – Woodrow Wilson était président – et a vu une partie sombre de l’histoire qui a vu la grande dépression, la montée des dictatures et la Deuxième Guerre mondiale.

Parmi ses différents faits d’armes, il avait écrit une tribune peu de temps avant les élections de 2016. A l’heure où le Sénat vient d’acquitter le 45e président des Etats-Unis sans même avoir chercher à découvrir les faits, la lecture de cette tribune est à nouveau d’actualité.

Il était francophone et francophile. Un plus.

 


The Road Ahead

I have always been deeply proud to be an American. In the time I have left, I pray that will never change.

09/19/2016 04:07 pm

I am in my 100th year.  When I was born in 1916 in Amsterdam, New York, Woodrow Wilson was our president.

My parents, who could not speak or write English, were emigrants from Russia.  They were part of a wave of more than two million Jews that fled the Czar’s murderous pogroms at the beginning of the 20th Century.  They sought a better life for their family in a magical country where, they believed, the streets were literally paved with gold.

What they did not realize until after they arrived was that those beautiful words carved into the Statute of Liberty in New York Harbor: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free,” did not apply equally to all new Americans.  Russians, Poles, Italians, Irish and, particularly Catholics and Jews, felt the stigma of being treated as aliens, as foreigners who would never become “real Americans.”

The longer I’ve lived, the less I’ve been surprised by the inevitability of change, and how I’ve rejoiced that so many of the changes I’ve seen have been good.

They say there is nothing new under the sun.  Since I was born, our planet has traveled around it one hundred times.  With each orbit, I’ve watched our country and our world evolve in ways that would have been unimaginable to my parents – and continue to amaze me with each passing year.

In my lifetime, American women won the right to vote, and one is finally the candidate of a major political party. An Irish-American Catholic became president.  Perhaps, most incredibly, an African-American is our president today.

The longer I’ve lived, the less I’ve been surprised by the inevitability of change, and how I’ve rejoiced that so many of the changes I’ve seen have been good.

Yet, I’ve also lived through the horrors of a Great Depression and two World Wars, the second of which was started by a man who promised that he would restore his country it to its former greatness.

I was 16 when that man came to power in 1933.  For almost a decade before his rise he was laughed at ― not taken seriously.  He was seen as a buffoon who couldn’t possibly deceive an educated, civilized population with his nationalistic, hateful rhetoric.

The “experts” dismissed him as a joke.  They were wrong.

A few weeks ago we heard words spoken in Arizona that my wife, Anne, who grew up in Germany, said chilled her to the bone.  They could also have been spoken in 1933:

“We also have to be honest about the fact that not everyone who seeks to join our country will be able to successfully assimilate. It is our right as a sovereign nation to choose immigrants that we think are the likeliest to thrive and flourish here…[including] new screening tests for all applicants that include an ideological certification to make sure that those we are admitting to our country share our values…”

These are not the American values that we fought in World War II to protect.

I have lived a long, good life. I will not be here to see the consequences if this evil takes root in our country. But your children and mine will be.

Until now, I believed I had finally seen everything under the sun.  But this was the kind of fear-mongering I have never before witnessed from a major U.S. presidential candidate in my lifetime.

I have lived a long, good life. I will not be here to see the consequences if this evil takes root in our country.  But your children and mine will be.  And their children.  And their children’s children.

All of us still yearn to remain free. It is what we stand for as a country.  I have always been deeply proud to be an American. In the time I have left, I pray that will never change.  In our democracy, the decision to remain free is ours to make.

My 100th birthday is exactly one month and one day after the next presidential election. I’d like to celebrate it by blowing out the candles on my cake, then whistling “Happy Days Are Here Again.”

As my beloved friend Lauren Bacall once said, “You know how to whistle don’t you?  You just put your lips together and blow.” 


 

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