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For release on delivery
6:00 p.m. EDT
May 22, 2007

Recognizing Leadership

Remarks

by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
to the
Princeton Prize in Race Relations Awards Program
Washington, D.C.
May 22, 2007

As a fonner member ofthe Princeton community, I am very pleased to see the
university recognizing these young people--the two prize winners, John Gentile and
Brianna Casey Lyons, as well as the eight certificate recipients--for demonstrating
exemplary leadership in the area of race relations. Slavery and segregation cast long dark
shadows on our nation's history and our society, but there have been flickers oflight in
the fonn of people of good will and courage who fought against those evils. Today, I can
think of no higher calling than promoting hannony, understanding, and respect among
people of different racial and ethnic backgrounds. The two prize winners, though young,
have already contributed significantly. As you have heard, John energetically advocated
improved race relations in his own school and helped to bring diversity concerns before a
wider group of high schools in the District of Columbia metro area. Casey led a group of
exurban teenagers in starting a 4-H Club at a more-urban, and racially mixed, elementary
school.
If you are a baseball fan, as I am, you know that we recently observed the sixtieth
anniversary of an important event in the history of race relations--J ackie Robinson's
breaking of the color barrier in major league baseball. Robinson was a great baseball
player, but--critically, for the mission he set out to accomplish--he was also a great
leader, a person of courage and character. As a second lieutenant in the Anny in 1944, he
refused to obey an order to move to the back of a military bus in Texas. Lieutenant
Robinson was court-martialed but then acquitted by a military jury, and he received an
honorable discharge. It was Jackie Robinson's character as much as his daring style of
play that commanded the respect of players and fans and paved the way for other black
athletes to enter the major leagues. No one who watched Robinson perfonn under often-

-2hostile conditions could long deny that he was the equal of any white player, not only as
an athlete but as a human being. Other flickers of light appear in this story as well,
including the decision of Dodgers General Manager Branch Rickey to give Robinson a
chance and the public support provided Robinson by a few of his white teammates.
In a way, Jackie Robinson was lucky, because he was rewarded for his skills and
courage. He was named Rookie of the Year, played on six World Series teams, and was
once named the National League's Most Valuable Player. Someone less fortunate in this
respect was Josh Gibson, considered the greatest power hitter ofthe Negro Leagues. He
played right here in Washington for the Homestead Grays in the 1930s and 1940s. Some
people say he was the equal of Babe Ruth as a hitter. But he never got the chance to play
in the major leagues. He died at the age of thirty-five, three months before Jackie
Robinson first trotted onto Ebbets Field with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. Both men
played the game superbly, but whereas Jackie Robinson was honored and recognized in
his lifetime for his achievements, both as a baseball player and a civil rights leader,
recognition of Josh Gibson came only after his death. Gibson, along with other greats of
the Negro Leagues, was finally admitted to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1972, a
quarter century after he died and a decade after Robinson was admitted.

It is tragic that Gibson did not live to see the integration of major league baseball
or to enjoy the honors that were due him. However, even though society's recognition of
Gibson's achievements came too late for him to enjoy it, honoring him was still
worthwhile. The belated recognition of Gibson illustrates a most important reason to
honor achievement: We do it not so much for the person being honored but rather for
ourselves. Please do not misunderstand me. I hope today is a joyous and proud day for

-3today's prize winners and certificate recipients and their families. But I strongly suspect
that when they set out on the path that earned them this recognition, they were not
motivated at all by--and probably were not even aware of--the prospect of an award such
as the Princeton Prize. They did what they did from inner motivation. So, if the prospect
of recognition had little or nothing to do with their achievement, why go through the
exercise? The reason they are being honored, and the reason we remember Jackie
Robinson and Josh Gibson and countless other achievers in countless other endeavors, is
because doing so provides inspiration for all of us. And, usually, the aspect of an
achievement that is most worth recognizing is not the achievement itself but the spirit of
energy, determination, and courage that made it possible. So, let me say to today's
honorees: Thank you. Thank you not only for serving as a role model for your peers in
high school but also for being exemplars for us all.
Now, because we are in the midst not only of baseball season but also of
graduation season, I would like to touch briefly on the theme of education. The saddest
aspect of Josh Gibson's story is that he had talent but was denied an opportunity. Then as
now, the principal path to opportunity is through education. As an economist, I am
persuaded that a strong educational system--one that promotes lifetime learning and skill
development--is a critical factor in our nation's prosperity. The economic importance of
education will only increase as technology advances and as the global economy becomes
increasingly integrated and complex.
But education is important for non-economic reasons as well. By providing us
with a broader view of the world, education helps each of us become the most complete
person we can be. Many--I hope all--ofthe young people here today will continue their

- 4-

education, and I hope it leads them to work that brings financial success. But I also hope
it cultivates their creativity and appreciation for other cultures and leads them to work
they find personally satisfying and meaningful. I know it will help them continue to
demonstrate the kind of leadership that they have already shown. Perhaps, as they
acquire a deeper knowledge of places and times other than their own and a fuller
understanding of people from backgrounds other than their own, it will also lead them to
contribute positively at the national or intemationallevels, as they already have done in
their schools and local communities.
But this evening, I don't think we should dwell entirely on the future. I hope each
ofthe honorees will take pride in what he or she has already achieved and will celebrate
that achievement with family and friends. Congratulations to all of you.