第一篇:奥巴马在911十周年纪念仪式的讲话(定稿)
奥巴马在911十周年纪念仪式的讲话
难度:容易 作者:沪江英语 来源:英文巴士
Remarks by the President at the September 11th Observance at the Pentagon Memorial
奥巴马总统在五角大楼911纪念仪式上的讲话 The Pentagon, Arlington, Virginia 五角大楼,弗吉尼亚州阿灵顿 September 11, 2013 2013年9月11日
THE PRESIDENT: Good morning.总统:早上好。AUDIENCE: Good morning!众人:早上好!
THE PRESIDENT: From Scripture, we learn of the miracle of restoration.“You who have made me see many troubles and calamities will revive me again.From the depths of the earth you will bring me up again.You will increase my greatness and comfort me again.”
总统:我们从圣经的经文中领悟到重生的奇迹。“你是叫我们多经历重大急难的,必使我们复活,从地的深处救上来,求你使我越发昌大,又转来安慰我。”
Secretary Hagel, General Dempsey, members of our Armed Forces and most of all, the survivors who bear the wounds of that day and the families of those we lost, it is an honor to be with you here again to remember the tragedy of twelve Septembers ago--to honor the greatness of all who responded and to stand with those who still grieve and to provide them some measure of comfort once more.Together we pause and we pray and we give humble thanks--as families and as a nation--for the strength and the grace that from the depths of our despair has brought us up again, has revived us again, has given us strength to keep on.国防部长哈格尔、登普西将军、我国武装部队成员,最重要的是,饱含那一日伤痛的幸存者以及遇难者家属,我有幸与你们一起再一次回顾12年前的那场悲剧,纪念全体有关人员的伟大精神,他们纷纷参加抢救工作,支持那些至今仍然悲不自胜的人们,再一次给他们一些慰藉。我们一起静默片刻,我们一起祈祷。我们作为一个个家庭、作为一个国家,一起谦卑地感谢我们获得的力量和恩典,使我们再一次从深度绝望中得到拯救,使我们再一次重振旗鼓,给予我们继续蹈厉奋发的力量。
We pray for the memory of all those taken from us--nearly 3,000 innocent souls.Our hearts still ache for the futures snatched away, the lives that might have been--the parents who would have known the joy of being grandparents, the fathers and mothers who would have known the pride of a child’s graduation, the sons and daughters who would have grown, maybe married and been blessed with children of their own.Those beautiful boys and girls just beginning to find their way who today would have been teenagers and young men and women looking ahead, imagining the mark they’d make on the world.我们为从我们身边被夺走的生命祈祷——近3,000名无辜的亡灵。我们的心依然悲痛,因为他们的未来被无情地掠去,原来应该享有的生活被扼杀——作为祖父母,本应享受子孙绕膝之乐;作为父母,本应看到儿女毕业感到自豪;作为儿女,本应长大成人,也可能结婚并生儿育女;那些奔向花样年华的漂亮的男孩和女孩,本应成长为今天的翩翩少年或青春少女;那些年轻的男男女女本应憧憬着未来,想象着他们将给这个世界留下什么样的印记。
They left this Earth.They slipped from our grasp.But it was written, “What the heart has once owned and had, it shall never lose.” What your families lost in the temporal, in the here and now, is now eternal.The pride that you carry in your hearts, the love that will never die, your loved ones’ everlasting place in America’s heart.他们离开了这个世界。他们从我们的手中被夺走。但有人曾这样写道:“心中珍惜和挚爱的东西永远不会丢失。”你们的家庭暂时失去的,此时此刻已永世长存。你们心中承载的骄傲、永不消逝的爱、你们所爱的人永远活在美国的心中。
We pray for you, their families, who have known the awful depths of loss.And in the quiet moments we have spent together and from the stories that you’ve shared, I’m amazed at the will that you’ve summoned in your lives to lift yourselves up and to carry on, and to live and love and laugh again.我们为你们祈祷,为他们的家人祈祷,你们深深体会到失去亲人的无限伤悲。在我们共同静默的时刻,通过你们讲述的故事,我感慨万分,你们在日常生活中表现了坚强意志,精神抖擞,兴微继绝;你们继续人生之路,重施仁爱,再展欢颜。
Even more than memorials of stone and water, your lives are the greatest tribute to those that we lost.For their legacy shines on in you--when you smile just like him, when you toss your hair just like her, when you foster scholarships and service projects that bear the name of those we lost and make a better world.When you join the firehouse or you put on the uniform or you devote yourself to a cause greater than yourself, just like they did, that’s a testimony to them.And in your resilience you have taught us all there is no trouble we cannot endure and there is no calamity we cannot overcome.你们的生活是对亡者最好的祭奠,胜于砖墙水泥建成的纪念碑。当你像他那样露出微笑,像她那样意气风发,或者为改善这个世界建立以亡者命名的奖学金和服务项目时,他们留下的精神就通过你们得到发扬光大。当你像他们一样成为消防队的一员,穿上军装或者投身于为他人的崇高事业时,就向他们证明了这一切。你们以坚韧不拔的毅力教导我们所有的人:没有我们不能承受的困难,没有我们无法战胜的灾难。
We pray for all those who have stepped forward in those years of war--diplomats who serve in dangerous posts, as we saw this day last year in Benghazi, intelligence professionals, often unseen and unheralded who protect us in every way--our men and women in uniform who defend this country that we love.我们为所有在战争岁月中挺身而出的人员祈祷——坚持在危险岗位上服务的外交人员,正如去年的这一天我们在班加西看到的;往往默默无闻却以各种方式保护我们的专业情报人员,以及保卫我们所爱的祖国的男女将士。
Today we remember not only those who died that September day.We pay solemn tribute to more than 6,700 patriots who have given their full measure since--militaryand civilians.We see their legacy in the friendships they forged, the attacks they prevented, the innocent lives they saved and in their comrades in Afghanistan who are completing the mission and who by the end of next year will have helped to end this war.今天,我们不仅缅怀那些在9月的那一天失去的生命。我们还向自那时以来作出了最大奉献的6,700多名爱国者——军人或平民——表达诚挚的敬意。通过他们缔结的友谊、他们阻止的袭击、他们挽救的无辜生命,以及他们在阿富汗正在最后完成使命并在明年年底结束这场战争的战友们,我们看到他们留下的财富。
This is the path that we’ve traveled together.These are the wounds that continue to heal.And this is the faith in God and each other that carries us through, that restores us and that we summon once more each time we come to hallowed ground--beside this building or in a Pennsylvania field or where the towers once stood.Here, in such moments of grace, we are renewed.And it is here that we reaffirm the values and virtues that must guide us.这是我们一起共同走过的征途。这些是需要继续愈合的创伤。这些表明了对上帝的信仰和我们彼此之间的信任,由此引领我们前进,让我们重振雄风,使我们每一次来到这些令人激越悲壮的地方——在这栋大楼旁,在宾夕法尼亚州的田野,在双子塔曾高高耸立的土地上——我们都会再一次听见信义的召唤。在这里,在这个庄严的时刻,我们获得新生。在这里,我们重申必须指引我们前进的价值和美德。Let us have the strength to face the threats that endure, different though they may be from 12 years ago, so that as long as there are those who would strike our citizens, we will stand vigilant and defend our nation.让我们积聚力量抗击凶顽的威胁,尽管这些威胁可能与12年前不同。只要有人妄图袭击我国人民,我们就要保持警惕,保卫家园。
Let us have the wisdom to know that while force is at times necessary, force alone cannot build the world we seek.So we recommit to the partnerships and progress that builds mutual respect and deepens trust and allows more people to live in dignity, prosperity and freedom.让我们运用智慧获得领悟,尽管有时需要使用武力,但单凭武力无法建立我们追求的世界。因此我们再次承诺发展合作伙伴关系,积极取得进展,相互尊重,加深信任,让更多的人在获得尊严、繁荣和自由的条件下生活。
Let us have the confidence in the values that make us American, which we must never lose, the shining liberties that make us a beacon of the world;the rich diversity that makes us stronger, the unity and commitment to one another that we sustain on this National Day of Service and Remembrance.让我们信守体现美国本质的价值观,我们决不能失去信念;坚持使我们成为世界灯塔的欣欣向荣的自由;维持使我们日益强盛的丰富的多样性;秉持我们在全国服务与纪念日强调的团结精神和共同承诺。
And above all, let us have the courage like the survivors and families here today to carry on, no matter how dark the night or how difficult the day.“You who have made me see many troubles and calamities will revive me again.And from the depths of the earth you will bring me up again.You will increase my greatness and you will comfort me again.”最重要的是,让我们以今天在场的幸存者和家属们为榜样勇敢奋进,无论夜晚多么黑暗,无论白天多么艰难。“你是叫我们多经历重大急难的,必使我们复活,从地的深处救上来,求你使我越发昌大,又转来安慰我。”
May God bless the memory of those that we lost.May he comfort you and your families and may God bless these United States of America.(Applause.)愿上帝赐福于我们对遇难者的怀念。愿他抚慰你们和你们的家人。上帝保佑美利坚合众国。(掌声)
第二篇:奥巴马9.11十周年纪念讲话
A Concert for Hope Kennedy Center Washington, D.C.8:12 P.M.EDT
THE PRESIDENT: The Bible tells us--“weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.”
Ten years ago, America confronted one of our darkest nights.Mighty towers crumbled.Black smoke billowed up from the Pentagon.Airplane wreckage smoldered on a Pennsylvania field.Friends and neighbors, sisters and brothers, mothers and fathers, sons and daughters –-they were taken from us with a heartbreaking swiftness and cruelty.And on September 12, 2001, we awoke to a world in which evil was closer at hand, and uncertainty clouded our future.In the decade since, much has changed for Americans.We’ve known war and recession, passionate debates and political divides.We can never get back the lives that were lost on that day or the Americans who made the ultimate sacrifice in the wars that followed.And yet today, it is worth remembering what has not changed.Our character as a nation has not changed.Our faith-– in God and in each other –-that has not changed.Our belief in America, born of a timeless ideal that men and women should govern themselves;that all people are created equal, and deserve the same freedom to determine their own destiny –-that belief, through tests and trials, has only been strengthened.These past 10 years have shown that America does not give in to fear.The rescue workers who rushed to the scene, the firefighters who charged up the stairs, the passengers who stormed the cockpit--these patriots defined the very nature of courage.Over the years we’ve also seen a more quiet form of heroism--in the ladder company that lost so many men and still suits up and saves lives every day, the businesses that have been rebuilt from nothing, the burn victim who has bounced back, the families who press on.Last spring, I received a letter from a woman named Suzanne Swaine.She had lost her husband and brother in the Twin Towers, and said that she had been robbed of, “so many would-be proud moments where a father watches their child graduate, or tend a goal in a lacrosse game, or succeed academically.” But her daughters are in college, the other doing well in high school.“It has been 10 years of raising these girls on my own,” Suzanne wrote.“I could not be prouder of their strength and resilience.” That spirit typifies our American family.And the hopeful future for those girls is the ultimate rebuke to the hateful killers who took the life of their father.These past 10 years have shown America’s resolve to defend its citizens, and our way of life.Diplomats serve in far off posts, and intelligence professionals work tirelessly without recognition.Two million Americans have gone to war since 9/11.They have demonstrated that those who do us harm cannot hide from the reach of justice, anywhere in the world.America has been defended not by conscripts, but by citizens who choose to serve-– young people who signed up straight out of high school, guardsmen and reservists, workers and business-people, immigrants and fourth-generation soldiers.They are men and women who left behind lives of comfort for two, three, four, five tours of duty.Too many will never come home.Those that do carry dark memories from distant places and the legacy of fallen friends.The sacrifices of these men and women, and of our military families, reminds us that the wages of war are great;that while service to our nation is full of glory, war itself is never glorious.Our troops have been to lands unknown to many Americans a decade ago-– to Kandahar and Kabul;to Mosul and Basra.But our strength is not measured in our ability to stay in these places;it comes from our commitment to leave those lands to free people and sovereign states, and our desire to move from a decade of war to a future of peace.These 10 years have shown that we hold fast to our freedoms.Yes, we’re more vigilant against those who threaten us, and there are inconveniences that come with our common defense.Debates –-about war and peace, about security and civil liberties –-have often been fierce these last 10 years.But it is precisely the rigor of these debates, and our ability to resolve them in a way that honors our values and our democracy, that is the measure of our strength.Meanwhile, our open markets still provide innovators the chance to create and succeed, our citizens are still free to speak their minds, and our souls are enriched in churches and temples, our synagogues and our mosques.These past 10 years underscores the bonds between all Americans.We have not succumbed to suspicion, nor have we succumbed to mistrust.After 9/11, to his great credit, President Bush made clear what we reaffirm today: The United States will never wage war against Islam or any other religion.Immigrants come here from all parts of the globe.And in the biggest cities and the smallest towns, in schools and workplaces, you still see people of every conceivable race and religion and ethnicity-– all of them pledging allegiance to the flag, all of them reaching for the same American dream –-e pluribus unum, out of many, we are one.These past 10 years tell a story of our resilience.The Pentagon is repaired, and filled with patriots working in common purpose.Shanksville is the scene of friendships forged between residents of that town, and families who lost loved ones there.New York--New York remains the most vibrant of capitals of arts and industry and fashion and commerce.Where the World Trade Center once stood, the sun glistens off a new tower that reaches towards the sky.Our people still work in skyscrapers.Our stadiums are still filled with fans, and our parks full of children playing ball.Our airports hum with travel, and our buses and subways take millions where they need to go.And families sit down to Sunday dinner, and students prepare for school.This land pulses with the optimism of those who set out for distant shores, and the courage of those who died for human freedom.Decades from now, Americans will visit the memorials to those who were lost on 9/11.They’ll run their fingers over the places where the names of those we loved are carved into marble and stone, and they may wonder at the lives that they led.And standing before the white headstones in Arlington, and in peaceful cemeteries and small-town squares in every corner of the country, they will pay respects to those lost in Iraq and Afghanistan.They’ll see the names of the fallen on bridges and statues, at gardens and schools.And they will know that nothing can break the will of a truly United States of America.They will remember that we’ve overcome slavery and Civil War;we’ve overcome bread lines and fascism and recession and riots, and communism and, yes, terrorism.They will be reminded that we are not perfect, but our democracy is durable, and that democracy –-reflecting, as it does, the imperfections of man-– also give us the opportunity to perfect our union.That is what we honor on days of national commemoration –-those aspects of the American experience that are enduring, and the determination to move forward as one people.More than monuments, that will be the legacy of 9/11 –-a legacy of firefighters who walked into fire and soldiers who signed up to serve;of workers who raised new towers, and citizens who faced down their private fears.Most of all, of children who realized the dreams of their parents.It will be said that we kept the faith;that we took a painful blow, and we emerged stronger than before.“Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.”
With a just God as our guide, let us honor those who have been lost, let us rededicate ourselves to the ideals that define our nation, and let us look to the future with hearts full of hope.May God bless the memory of those we lost, and may God bless the United States of America.
第三篇:奥巴马9.11十周年纪念讲话(中英对照)
A Concert for Hope Kennedy Center Washington, D.C.8:12 P.M.EDT THE PRESIDENT: The Bible tells us--“weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.”
Ten years ago, America confronted one of our darkest nights.Mighty towers crumbled.Black smoke billowed up from the Pentagon.Airplane wreckage smoldered on a Pennsylvania field.Friends and neighbors, sisters and brothers, mothers and fathers, sons and daughters –-they were taken from us with a heartbreaking swiftness and cruelty.And on September 12, 2001, we awoke to a world in which evil was closer at hand, and uncertainty clouded our future.In the decade since, much has changed for Americans.We’ve known war and recession, passionate debates and political divides.We can never get back the lives that were lost on that day or the Americans who made the ultimate sacrifice in the wars that followed.And yet today, it is worth remembering what has not changed.Our character as a nation has not changed.Our faith-– in God and in each other –-that has not changed.Our belief in America, born of a timeless ideal that men and women should govern themselves;that all people are created equal, and deserve the same freedom to determine their own destiny –-that belief, through tests and trials, has only been strengthened.These past 10 years have shown that America does not give in to fear.The rescue workers who rushed to the scene, the firefighters who charged up the stairs, the passengers who stormed the cockpit--these patriots defined the very nature of courage.Over the years we’ve also seen a more quiet form of heroism--in the ladder company that lost so many men and still suits up and saves lives every day, the businesses that have been rebuilt from nothing, the burn victim who has bounced back, the families who press on.Last spring, I received a letter from a woman named Suzanne Swaine.She had lost her husband and brother in the Twin Towers, and said that she had been robbed of, “so many would-be proud moments where a father watches their child graduate, or tend a goal in a lacrosse game, or succeed academically.” But her daughters are in college, the other doing well in high school.“It has been 10 years of raising these girls on my own,” Suzanne wrote.“I could not be prouder of their strength and resilience.” That spirit typifies our American family.And the hopeful future for those girls is the ultimate rebuke to the hateful killers who took the life of their father.These past 10 years have shown America’s resolve to defend its citizens, and our way of life.Diplomats serve in far off posts, and intelligence professionals work tirelessly without recognition.Two million Americans have gone to war since 9/11.They have demonstrated that those who do us harm cannot hide from the reach of justice, anywhere in the world.America has been defended not by conscripts, but by citizens who choose to serve-– young people who signed up straight out of high school, guardsmen and reservists, workers and business-people, immigrants and fourth-generation soldiers.They are men and women who left behind lives of comfort for two, three, four, five tours of duty.Too many will never come home.Those that do carry dark memories from distant places and the legacy of fallen friends.The sacrifices of these men and women, and of our military families, reminds us that the wages of war are great;that while service to our nation is full of glory, war itself is never glorious.Our troops have been to lands unknown to many Americans a decade ago-– to Kandahar and Kabul;to Mosul and Basra.But our strength is not measured in our ability to stay in these places;it comes from our commitment to leave those lands to free people and sovereign states, and our desire to move from a decade of war to a future of peace.These 10 years have shown that we hold fast to our freedoms.Yes, we’re more vigilant against those who threaten us, and there are inconveniences that come with our common defense.Debates –-about war and peace, about security and civil liberties –-have often been fierce these last 10 years.But it is precisely the rigor of these debates, and our ability to resolve them in a way that honors our values and our democracy, that is the measure of our strength.Meanwhile, our open markets still provide innovators the chance to create and succeed, our citizens are still free to speak their minds, and our souls are enriched in churches and temples, our synagogues and our mosques.These past 10 years underscores the bonds between all Americans.We have not succumbed to suspicion, nor have we succumbed to mistrust.After 9/11, to his great credit, President Bush made clear what we reaffirm today: The United States will never wage war against Islam or any other religion.Immigrants come here from all parts of the globe.And in the biggest cities and the smallest towns, in schools and workplaces, you still see people of every conceivable race and religion and ethnicity-– all of them pledging allegiance to the flag, all of them reaching for the same American dream –-e pluribus unum, out of many, we are one.These past 10 years tell a story of our resilience.The Pentagon is repaired, and filled with patriots working in common purpose.Shanksville is the scene of friendships forged between residents of that town, and families who lost loved ones there.New York--New York remains the most vibrant of capitals of arts and industry and fashion and commerce.Where the World Trade Center once stood, the sun glistens off a new tower that reaches towards the sky.Our people still work in skyscrapers.Our stadiums are still filled with fans, and our parks full of children playing ball.Our airports hum with travel, and our buses and subways take millions where they need to go.And families sit down to Sunday dinner, and students prepare for school.This land pulses with the optimism of those who set out for distant shores, and the courage of those who died for human freedom.Decades from now, Americans will visit the memorials to those who were lost on 9/11.They’ll run their fingers over the places where the names of those we loved are carved into marble and stone, and they may wonder at the lives that they led.And standing before the white headstones in Arlington, and in peaceful cemeteries and small-town squares in every corner of the country, they will pay respects to those lost in Iraq and Afghanistan.They’ll see the names of the fallen on bridges and statues, at gardens and schools.And they will know that nothing can break the will of a truly United States of America.They will remember that we’ve overcome slavery and Civil War;we’ve overcome bread lines and fascism and recession and riots, and communism and, yes, terrorism.They will be reminded that we are not perfect, but our democracy is durable, and that democracy –-reflecting, as it does, the imperfections of man-– also give us the opportunity to perfect our union.That is what we honor on days of national commemoration –-those aspects of the American experience that are enduring, and the determination to move forward as one people.More than monuments, that will be the legacy of 9/11 –-a legacy of firefighters who walked into fire and soldiers who signed up to serve;of workers who raised new towers, and citizens who faced down their private fears.Most of all, of children who realized the dreams of their parents.It will be said that we kept the faith;that we took a painful blow, and we emerged stronger than before.“Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.”
With a just God as our guide, let us honor those who have been lost, let us rededicate ourselves to the ideals that define our nation, and let us look to the future with hearts full of hope.May God bless the memory of those we lost, and may God bless the United States of America.奥巴马在肯尼迪中心的演讲全文摘录如下:(中文版)
圣经告诉我们“哭泣可能会持续一夜,但欢乐会在明早到来。”
十年前,美国经历了历史上最黑暗的一天。双子塔楼坍塌了,五角大楼升起了黑烟,飞机在宾夕法尼亚州坠毁。亲朋好友们,兄弟姐妹们,父亲母亲们,孩子们,他们离开了我们,让我们承受着难以弥合的伤痛。在2001年9月12日,我们醒来所面对的世界充满了罪恶和对未知未来的恐惧。
在此之后的十年里,美国人经历了许多变故。我们经历了战争和萧条,激烈的争辩和政治分歧。我们永远也不能唤回失去的生命,或是那些在此后战争中英勇捐躯的英烈。
但是,在今天,我们应该去纪念我们走过的路。我们国家的核心价值依然没有变。我们的信念——相信上帝和彼此的力量——并没有变。我们这个国家坚信,人人自律、人人平等、人人自由,这一信念经受了考验,现在更加坚不可摧。
过去的十年证明,美国并没有畏缩。搜救人员跑进了火场,消防警察冲锋陷阵,飞机乘客跟歹徒搏斗,这些勇士证明了美国人的勇敢。在之后的十年中,我们看到了美国英雄主义的另一种表现形式:云梯消防队依然有勇敢的队员在拯救人们生命,工商企业开始重建,灾难幸存者重新振作起来,遇难者家属开始了新的生活。去年春天,我收到了一位叫Suzanne Swaine女士的来信。她在双子塔楼的灾难中失去了丈夫和兄弟,她说“那么多骄傲的瞬间从她的生命里被剥夺了,父亲原本可以看到孩子毕业、在曲棍球比赛中得分、在考试中获得好成绩。”这位女士还有两个在上大学的女儿,以及一个在念高中的孩子。她在信中写道:“十年来,我一个人养育我的女儿们。她们的坚强和勇敢让我骄傲无比。”这一家人的精神就是全部美国家庭的写照。这些女孩用充满希望的未来给了杀害她们父亲的凶手最有力的回击。
这整整十年证明了美国保护公民、维护美国生活方式的决心。外交官远离故土辛勤工作、情报人员默默无闻无私奉献。在9·11后,二百万美国人参与了战争。他们证明,那些伤害了我们的人绝对无法逃脱正义的审判,不论他们藏身何处。事实上,那些保卫国家的人不是征召的士兵,而是自愿服役的公民——他们是毕业入伍的年轻人,国民警卫队士兵和后备役,工人和商业人士,移民和第四代士兵。他们放弃舒适的生活,甚至坚持超期服役。他们中的很多人从此再也没有回来。而即便是平安回来的人也从此留下了难以治愈的心灵创伤和战友逝去的记忆。
这些军人的奉献以及他们家庭承受的牺牲提醒我们,战争的代价是巨大的,虽然他们对国家的贡献是荣耀的,战争本身却永远不是光荣的。十年中,我们的军队被派到了美国人并不熟悉的地方——坎大哈和喀布尔,摩苏尔和巴士拉。我们的强大并不是用驻军数量来衡量的,而是体现在我们要把这些地方交还给自由人民和主权国家的决心上,以及我们要结束十年的战争迎接和平未来的心愿上。
这十年证明,我们坚定地捍卫我们的自由。是的,我们对那些潜在威胁更加警惕,而且在共同防御过程中我们也造成了一些不便。对于战争与和平、对于安保和民权的争论也一直在激烈地进行着。但是,恰恰由于这些讨论的存在,以及守卫美国价值观的决心,我们证明了我们的强大。同时,我们开放的市场仍然给予创新者革新的机会,我们的公民仍然可以自由地表达观点,我们的灵魂仍然在教堂、寺庙、(犹太)教会堂和清真寺中得到洗礼。
过去的十年让美国人团结得更加紧密。我们没有变得草木皆兵、互相猜疑。在9·11之后,乔治·W·布什总统清楚地说过,我们今天再次重申:美国将永远不对伊斯兰教或其他任何宗教开战。我们有来自全世界各地的移民。无论是在美国的大都市还是小城镇,在我们的学校还是工作场所,你都可以见到各个人种、各个宗教、各个种族的人,我们都忠于一个国家,我们都怀着同一个美国梦,我们都是一家人。
过去的十年体现了美国人的坚强。五角大楼被修复了,我们的工作人员为了共同的目标在为国家工作。93号航班上失与尚克斯维尔市的居民结成深厚友谊。纽约仍然焕发生机,是艺术、工业、时尚和贸易的中心。在世贸中心曾经矗立的地方,一座新的摩天大楼直耸云霄。我们的民众还在摩天大楼内工作。我们的体育场依然挤满了球迷,我们的公园仍然有孩子嬉闹的场景。我们的机场还是熙熙攘攘,我们的公交和地铁依然承载着百万乘客。美国家庭还会在周日晚上聚餐,学生们仍然照常上课。这片土地的脉搏像往常一样跳动,普通民众乐观地工作出行,军人为人类的自由不怕牺牲。十年了,美国人再次回到这个地方纪念遇难的人群。人们的手指轻轻地划过纪念碑的大理石,寻找遇难家属的名字,想念他们曾经在世的样子。站在阿林顿市白色墓石前,或是全国各地的墓园和小城镇的广场上,我们会对那些在阿富汗战争和伊拉克战争中英勇捐躯的战士表示敬意。我们可以看到他们的名字被刻在大桥上、雕像上、公园内、学校里。
我们知道,没有任何事情可以击败真正的美国意志。我们将永远铭记,我们战胜了奴隶制、内战、灾荒、种族主义、经济萧条、城市暴动、冷战,当然还有恐怖主义。我们将提醒自己,我们不是完美的,但是我们的民主是持久的,而这一民主——反映出了人性的瑕疵——给予了我们不断完善国家的机会。这就是我们在这几天的国家纪念日中所要突出纪念的,这些价值观念让我们的国家持续进步、让我们的民众团结一致。
除了纪念碑,我们还将有其他的9·11精神遗产,它们来自冲进火场的消防队员,来自自愿入伍的士兵,来自修建新楼的建筑工人,来自坚强勇敢的公民,来自继承父母遗志的孩子。我们会坚持这样的信念,承受沉痛的打击,但却变得更加强大。
“哭泣可能会持续一夜,但欢乐会在明早到来。”
公正的上帝是我们的指引,让我们纪念逝去的人们,让我们为美国理想奋斗,让我们充满希望面向未来。
愿上帝保佑我们逝去的亲人,愿上帝保佑美国。
2011年,是“十二五”开局之年,做好今年的工作对于完成“十二五”各项目标任务至关重要。过去一年,我们的各项工作取得了很大成绩。国内生产总值增长10.3%,居民消费价格涨幅控制在3.3%,城镇新增就业1168万人,国际收支状况有所改善。这为做好今年的工作打下了良好基础。
今年,我国发展面临的形势仍然极其复杂。世界经济将继续缓慢复苏,但复苏的基础不牢。发达经济体经济增长乏力,失业率居高难下,一些国家主权债务危机隐患仍未消除,主要发达经济体进一步推行宽松货币政策,全球流动性大量增加,国际大宗商品价格和主要货币汇率加剧波动,新兴市场资产泡沫和通胀压力加大,保护主义继续升温,国际市场竞争更加激烈,不稳定不确定因素仍然较多。我国经济运行中一些长期问题和短期问题相互交织,体制性矛盾和结构性问题叠加在一起,加大了宏观调控难度。我们要准确判断形势,保持清醒头脑,增强忧患意识,做好应对风险的准备。今年国民经济和社会发展的主要预期目标是:国内生产总值增长8%左右;经济结构进一步优化;居民消费价格总水平涨幅控制在4%左右;城镇新增就业900万人以上,城镇登记失业率控制在4.6%以内;国际收支状况继续改善。总的考虑是,为转变经济发展方式创造良好环境,引导各方面把工作着力点放在加快经济结构调整、提高发展质量和效益上,放在增加就业、改善民生、促进社会和谐上。
实现上述目标,要保持宏观经济政策的连续性、稳定性,提高针对性、灵活性、有效性,处理好保持经济平稳较快发展、调整经济结构、管理通胀预期的关系,更加注重稳定物价总水平,防止经济出现大的波动。
继续实施积极的财政政策。保持适当的财政赤字和国债规模。今年拟安排财政赤字9000亿元,其中中央财政赤字7000亿元,继续代地方发债2000亿元并纳入地方预算,赤字规模比上年预算减少1500亿元,赤字率下降到2%左右。要着力优化财政支出结构,增加“三农”、欠发达地区、民生、社会事业、结构调整、科技创新等重点支出;压缩一般性支出,严格控制党政机关办公楼等楼堂馆所建设,出国(境)经费、车辆购置及运行费、公务接待费等支出原则上零增长,切实降低行政成本。继续实行结构性减税。依法加强税收征管。对地方政府性债务进行全面审计,实施全口径监管,研究建立规范的地方政府举债融资机制。
实施稳健的货币政策。保持合理的社会融资规模,广义货币增长目标为16%。健全宏观审慎政策框架,综合运用价格和数量工具,提高货币政策有效性。提高直接融资比重,发挥好股票、债券、产业基金等融资工具的作用,更好地满足多样化投融资需求。着力优化信贷结构,引导商业银行加大对重点领域和薄弱环节的信贷支持,严格控制对“两高”行业和产能过剩行业贷款。进一步完善人民币汇率形成机制。密切监控跨境资本流动,防范“热钱”流入。加强储备资产的投资和风险管理,提高投资收益。
第四篇:奥巴马纪念911十周年全国讲话
奥巴马纪念9/11十周年全国讲话:Coming Together as One Nation to Remember [视频]
This weekend, we’re coming together, as one nation, to mark the 10th anniversary of the September 11th attacks.We’re remembering the lives we lost—nearly 3,000 innocent men, women and children.We’re reaffirming our commitment to always keep faith with their families.We’re honoring the heroism of first responders who risked their lives—and gave their lives—to save others.And we’re giving thanks to all who serve on our behalf, especially our troops and military families—our extraordinary 9/11 Generation.At the same time, even as we reflect on a difficult decade, we must look forward, to the future we will build together.That includes staying strong and confident in the face of any threat.And thanks to the tireless efforts of our military personnel and our intelligence, law enforcement and homeland security professionals—there should be no doubt.Today, America is stronger and al Qaeda is on the path to defeat.We’ve taken the fight to al Qaeda like never before.Over the past two and a half years, more senior al Qaeda leaders have been eliminated than at any time since 9/11.And thanks to the remarkable courage and precision of our forces, we finally delivered justice to Osama bin Laden.We’ve strengthened the partnerships and tools we need to prevail in this war against al Qaeda—working closer with allies and partners;reforming intelligence to better detect and disrupt plots;investing in our Special Forces so terrorists have no safe haven.We’re constantly working to improve the security of our homeland as well—at our airports, ports and borders;enhancing aviation security and screening;increasing support for our first responders;and working closer than ever with states, cities and communities.A decade after 9/11, it’s clear for all the world to see—the terrorists who attacked us that September morning are no match for the character of our people, the resilience of our nation, or the endurance of our values.They wanted to terrorize us, but, as Americans, we refuse to live in fear.Yes we face a determined foe, and make no mistake—they will keep trying to hit us again.But as we are showing again this weekend, we remain vigilant.We’re doing everything in our power to protect our people.And no matter what comes our way, as a resilient nation, we will carry on.They wanted to draw us in to endless wars, sapping our strength and confidence as a nation.But even as we put relentless pressure on al Qaeda, we’re ending the war in Iraq and beginning to bring our troops home from Afghanistan.Because after a hard decade of war, it is time for nation building here at home.They wanted to deprive us of the unity that defines us as a people.But we will not succumb to division or suspicion.We are Americans, and we are stronger and safer when we stay true to the values, freedoms and diversity that make us unique among nations.And they wanted to undermine our place in the world.But a decade later, we’ve shown that America doesn’t hunker down and hide behind walls of mistrust.We’ve forged new partnerships with nations around the world to meet the global challenges that no nation can face alone.And across the Middle East and North Africa a new generation of citizens is showing that the future belongs to those that want to build, not destroy.Ten years ago, ordinary Americans showed us the true meaning of courage when they rushed up those stairwells, into those flames, into that cockpit.In the decade since, a new generation has stepped forward to serve and keep us safe.In their memory, in their name, we will never waver.We will protect the country we love and pass it safer, stronger and more prosperous to the next generation.
第五篇:奥巴马在911纪念仪式上的讲话
9月12日讯 据美国媒体报道,当日上午,美国总统奥巴马在华盛顿肯尼迪中心举行的“9·11”纪念音乐会上发表讲话,意在使美国民众在遭受9·11恐怖袭击十年后重新燃起对美国价值观念的信心。昨晚,奥巴马携夫人米歇尔访问了9·11事件中的三处遇难地,并参加了悼念活动。
奥巴马在911纪念仪式上的讲话
《圣经》告诉我们,哭泣可能会持续整夜,但欢乐会在清晨到来。
十年前,美国经历了最黑暗的一个夜晚。雄伟的高楼坍塌了,五角大楼升起滚滚黑烟,飞机残骸在宾夕法尼亚州燃烧。好友近邻们,兄弟姐妹们,父亲母亲们,孩子们,他们从我们身边被带走了,如此迅速和残酷地离开了我们,让我们悲痛万分。2001年9月12日,当我们醒来时,面对的是一个新的世界,邪恶离我们更近,对未知的恐惧笼罩着我们的未来。
之后的十年,美国人民改变了很多。我们懂得了战争和衰退,我们懂得了激烈的争辩和政治分歧。我们永远无法唤回那天逝去的生命,或是那些在后来的战争中英勇献身的美国人。
但是在今天,我们应该铭记的是那些未曾改变的东西。我们
国家的性格没有改变。我们的信念并没有变,我们始终相信上帝、并彼此信任。我们这个国家抱着永恒的理想,我们坚信人人都应该自律,人人生来平等并享有同等的决定自己命运的自由。这一信念经受住了无数考验,现在更是坚不可摧。
过去的十年表明,美国没有向恐惧妥协。救援人员赶往现场,消防员冲上大楼,机上乘客与歹徒搏斗,这些爱国者们证明了什么叫做勇敢。十年来,我们也看到了英雄主义更低调的一种表现形式:失去那么多战友的消防队依然每天整装待发挽救生命,被摧毁的企业得到重建,受伤的幸存者重新振作起来,遇难者家属开始了新的生活。
今年春天,我收到了一位叫苏珊娜•斯万(Suzanne Swaine)的女士的来信。她在双子塔的灾难中失去了丈夫和兄弟。她说,“那么多骄傲的瞬间被剥夺了,父亲原本可以看到孩子们毕业,看到她们在长曲棍球比赛中得分,看到她们在学业上取得佳绩”。这位女士有两个女儿在上大学,还有一个女儿在上高中并且表现很好。她在信中写道,“十年来,我一直一个人养育三个女儿;她们的自强和坚韧让我无比骄傲”。这一家人的精神就是所有美国家庭的写照。这些女孩充满希望的未来就是对杀害她们父亲的可恶凶手最有力的回击。
过去这十年展示了美国保护公民、维护美国生活方式的决心。外交官们背井离乡驻守远方,情报人员默默无闻不知疲倦地工作。911后有200万美国人参与了战争。这些人证明,那些伤害了我们的人无法逃脱正义的审判,不论他们藏在何处。事实上,保卫美国的并不是征召的士兵,而是自愿服役的公民,他们是毕业便直接入伍的年轻人,他们是国民警卫队士兵和后备役军人,他们是工人和商人,他们是移民和第四代士兵。他们放弃舒适的生活,坚持两期、三期、四期或五期超期服役。他们中的很多人从此再也没有回来。即便是平安回来的人,他们也背负着远方的黑暗记忆,以及对逝去战友的永恒怀念。
这些军人及其家属所做的牺牲提醒我们,战争的代价是巨大的,虽然他们对国家的贡献充满荣耀,战争本身却绝不光荣。十年间,我们的军队被派到了很多美国人闻所未闻的地方:坎大哈和喀布尔,摩苏尔和巴士拉。但我们的强大并不是用驻军能力来衡量的,而是体现在我们把这些地方留给自由人民和主权政府的决心上,以及我们要结束十年战争、迎接和平未来的愿望上。
这十年表明,我们一直在坚持各项自由权利。没错,对威胁我们的人我们提高了警惕,而我们的一般性防御也带来了种
种麻烦。有关战争与和平、安全与公民自由的讨论常常是激烈的。但正是这些讨论的激烈程度和以符合我们价值观的方式化解这些争论的能力才是我们的力量所在。此外,美国开放的市场仍向创新者提供发明创造的机会,美国人仍可以自由地直抒胸臆,我们的灵魂仍在教堂、佛教寺院、犹太教堂和清真寺中得到净化和提升。
过去的这十年凸显出全体美国人之间的凝聚力。我们没有陷入猜忌和怀疑中不可自拔。911发生后,小布什总统曾明确表示过:美国永远不会向伊斯兰教或任何其它宗教发动战争。这也是我们今天要重申的观点。人们从世界各地移民来到美国。无论是在美国的大都市还是小城镇,无论是在学校还是在工作场所,仍然可以看到肤色、宗教和种族各不相同的人们汇聚在这里,大家都宣誓忠于一面国旗,所有人都为了实现共同的美国梦──合众为一。
过去这十年讲述了一个关于不屈不挠精神的故事。五角大楼得到了修复,爱国者在那里为了共同的目标而努力工作。在尚克斯维尔,当地居民和那些在这里失去了自己至亲的家庭结下了友谊。纽约仍是一个生机勃勃的艺术、工业、时尚和商业之都。在世界贸易中心曾经屹立的地方,一座新建大厦拔地而起,在阳光下熠熠生辉。美国人仍在摩天大楼中工作,体育场里挤满了运动爱好者,公园里到处都是玩球的孩童。我们的机场呈现出一片繁忙景象,我们的巴士和地铁运送数百万旅客奔赴目的地。到了周日晚上,全家人一起坐下来享受晚餐,孩子们则为第二天上学做准备。在这片土地上,既有人们准备奔赴远途的乐观,也有为了人类自由而牺牲的勇气。
几十年后,美国人会来参观这些纪念碑以悼念那些911的遇难者。他们的手指会掠过那些我们曾经深爱着的、现如今被刻入大理石和石碑的亲友的名字,并对这些人的生活感到好奇。站在阿灵顿国家公墓白色的墓碑前,在美国各地小城镇的广场上举办的宁静的纪念仪式上,他们会向那些在阿富汗和伊拉克战争中阵亡的人致敬,他们会在桥梁和雕塑上、在花园和学校里看到逝者的名字。
他们会知道,没有什么可以击垮真正代表美利坚合众国的意志。他们会记得,我们一路走过了奴隶制和南北战争,见证了排队领面包的队伍和法西斯主义,经历了经济衰退和**,也征服了共产主义和恐怖主义。有人会提醒他们说,美国并不完美,但美国的民主是久经考验的,这种民主反映出人类的不完美,但同时也让我们有机会改善我们的国家。在举国悼念的日子里,我们引以为荣的就是这些永不磨灭的美
国历史和推动我们合众为
一、向前迈进的决心。
911遗产不止于纪念碑,还有那些走向火海的消防员、报名参军的士兵、合力建造新楼的工人、临危不惧的公民以及实现了父母梦想的子女。我们坚守信仰、遭到沉重打击并变得更为坚强的故事将流传给后人。
“哭泣可能会持续整夜,但欢乐会在清晨到来。”
以公正的上帝作为我们的向导,让我们向那些逝者致敬,努力为实践那些令我们国家卓尔不群的精神而奋斗,让我们满怀希望畅想未来。愿上帝保佑我们对逝者的追忆,保佑美利坚合众国。