Excerpt from The Question of Caste
Mr. President: -
In asking you to consider the Question of Caste, I open a great subject of immediate practical interest. Happily, Slavery no longer exists to disturb the peace of our Republic; but it is not yet dead in other lands, while among us the impious pretension of this great wrong still survives against the African because he is black, and against the Chinese because he is yellow. Here is nothing less than a claim of hereditary power from color, and it assumes that human beings, cast in the same mould with ourselves, and in all respects men, having the same title of manhood that we have, may be shut out from Equal Rights on account of the skin. Such is the pretension plainly stated.
On other occasions it has been my duty to show how inconsistent is this pretension with our character as a Republic, and with the promises of our Fathers, - all of which I consider never out of order to say and to urge. But my present purpose is rather to show how inconsistent it is with that sublime truth, being a part of God"s law for the government of the world, which teaches the Unity of the Human Family, and its final harmony on earth. In this law, which is both commandment and promise, I find duties and hopes; perpetual duties never to be postponed, and perpetual hopes never to be abandoned, so long as man is man.
Believing in this law, and profoundly convinced that by the blessing of God it will all be fulfilled on earth, it is easy to see how unreasonable is a claim of power founded on any unchangeable physical incident derived from birth. Because man is black, - because man is yellow, he is none the less man. Because man is white, he is none the more man. By this great title be is universal heir to all that man can claim. Because he is man, and not on account of color, he enters into possession of the promised dominion over the animal kingdom, - "over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth." But this equal copartnership without distinction of color symbolizes equal copartnership in all the Rights of Man.
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