This speech is the same as Speech of The Day (255) - Graduation Execises of the University College of Addis Ababa, wich is dated for the 17th of June 1959!
U.C.A.A. 6TH GRADUATION
U.C.A.A. 6TH GRADUATION
.....
He who would be a leader must pay the price in self-discipline and moral
restraint. This entails the correction and improvement of personal character,
the checking of passions and desires, and an exemplary control of one’s bodily
needs and drives …..
This graduation ceremony is an occasion,
not merely for recapitulating and recounting the fruits of past efforts in
terms of examination results and of degrees and diplomas awarded, but also for
fixing one’s sights upon future accomplishments, obligations and possibilities.
For the sixth
time in the history of this College, We see an imposing group of young men and
women graduate from this institution. Most of you, as in previous years, will
continue your studies and prepare yourselves for higher degrees and varying
careers. But whether pursuing further studies or going directly into the world,
all of you will soon be embarking upon a new stage of your lives.
We, therefore,
deem it necessary and appropriate, on this occasion when you of this year’s
graduating class look back upon your student years with a measure of nostalgia
and look forward, perhaps with a measure of understandable apprehension towards
your future careers, to speak to you about leaders and leadership.
As you know,
leadership is required in all fields and no field is without its usefulness.
During Our visits, however, to the educational institutions of our country, We
have noticed, in answer to Our enquiries, that the percentage of students
pursuing courses of study useful for the development of technology and
industry, has been extremely low. We have, therefore, counselled you to take up
technological and industrial courses in preparing for an over-all programme.
The reason for Our introducing this topic at present is that We have found the
number of those receiving degrees in technological subjects today to be very
small indeed, and wish to impress upon you all that it is Our desire to see a
much larger number of Our young people benefiting from the resources We have on
Our own and have received as aid from abroad, and graduating in the fields of
technology and industrial education.
The Need for Leadership
We all know that
the need for good leadership in every walk of life is much greater today than
ever before. Every aspect of living demands guiding hands: business, the professions,
the fine arts, the mechanical arts, all. And all of you young people, who have
been given the enriching opportunity of an advanced education will in the
future be called upon to shoulder in varying degrees the responsibilities to
leading and serving the nation.
It is important,
however, to remember that leadership does not mean domination. The world is
always well supplied with people who wish to rule and dominate others. The true
leader is of a different sort: he seeks effective activity which has a truly
beneficient purpose. He inspires others to follow in his wake, and holding
aloft the torch of wisdom, leads the way for society to realize its genuinely
great aspirations.
You have learnt
from your study of history that the story of nations is often told in terms of
the accomplishments of individuals. In every significant event in history, you
will find a courageous and determined leader, an inspiring goal or objective,
and an adversary who sought to foil his efforts.
In any normal
society, every one has some opportunity to show himself as a leader. Even the
mechanic or clerk who has an assistant assigned to him not to speak of the
doctor with all his helpers, or the officer who commands his troops, is a
leader. Within his own sphere, each has the same opportunities for showing
ability, and the same potential satisfactions as has the leader of a
government. The leader is marked out by his individual craftsmanship, his
sensibility and insight, his initiative and energy.
The Sense of Responsibility
Leaders are
people who raise the standards by which they judge themselves – and by which
they are willing to be judged. The goal chosen, the objective selected, the
requirements imposed, are not merely for their followers alone. They develop
with consummate energy and devotion their own skill and knowledge in order to
reach the standards they themselves have set. This whole-hearted acceptance of
the demands imposed by ever higher standards is the basis of all human
progress. A love of high quality, we must remember, is essential in a leader.
Dependability is
another requirement in a leader. To be dependable is to be willing to accept
responsibility, and to carry it out faithfully. A leader will always be willing
to take counsel from his people, but will often have to act on what his own
mind tells him is right. This demands that the leader has trained himself out
of any inordinate fear of making mistakes.
To embark
successfully on a career involving leadership demands a courageous and
determined spirit. Once a person has decided upon his life work, and is assured
that in doing the work for which he is best endowed and equipped, he is filling
a vital need, what he then needs is faith and integrity, coupled with a
courageous spirit, so that, no longer preferring himself to the fulfillment of
his task, he may address himself to the problems he must solve in order to be
effective. One mark of the great leader is that he feels sufficiently secure to
devote his thought and attention to the well-being of his subordinates and the
perfection of his task, rather than being constantly worried about the approval
or disapproval of others.
He who would be
a leader must pay the price in self-discipline and moral restraint. This
entails the correction and improvement of personal character, the checking of
passions and desires, and an exemplary control of one’s bodily needs and
drives.
Leaders have to
submit themselves to a stricter self-discipline and develop a more exemplary
moral character than is expected of others. To be first in place, one must be
first in merit as well.
It should not
surprise Us then, to find that the greater number of acknowledged leaders have
been people who trained themselves in the art of discipline and obedience. He
who has not learned to render prompt and willing service to others will find it
difficult to win and keep the goodwill and co-operation of his subordinates.
A Leader Must Stay Ahead
Further, a
leader must possess initiative, which is the creative ability to think in new
ways and do new things. The leader has always to stay ahead. He cannot afford
to set up a procedure, and then fold his hands and linger lazily watching it
work. He cannot be content merely to see new trends and take advantage of them.
He must keep his imagination vividly alive, so as to originate ideas and start
trends.
A word of
warning is in order here. To help one’s subordinates or dependents at the cost
of harm to the public, is tantamount to sacrilege and blasphemy. It is
unfortunate, that many in positions of leadership, both great and small, have
been found guilty of such practices.
A good leader is
devoted to his work and will willingly forego even the demands of sleep to see
its accomplishment. This does not mean that he is impetuous. On the other hand,
he maintains a balance between emotional drive and sound thinking.
His labours,
which sometimes appear excessive, derive from his firm realization that unless
a man undertakes more than he can possibly do he will never be able to do all
he can do. It is his enthusiasm that stimulates his energy.
No matter what
our point of departure in speaking of leadership, we reach the inescapable
conclusion that the art of leadership consists in the ability to make people
want to work for you, when they are really under no obligation to do so.
The true leader
is one who realizes by faith that he is an instrument in the hands of God, and
dedicates himself to be a guide and inspirer of the nobler sentiments and
aspirations of the people. He will kindle interest, teach, aid, correct and
inspire. Those whom he leads will co-operate with him in maintaining discipline
for the good of the group. He will instruct his followers in the goals towards
which to strive, and create in them a sense of mutual effort for attaining the
goal.
Basic Aspirations
To sum up, there
is no power on earth, in this University or elsewhere, that can take a clerk
from his desk or a mechanic from his bench, and easily mould him into a leader.
To develop oneself, one has to develop one’s own initiative and perseverance –
a man has to strive in order to grow.
As educated
people, you will be looked up to, and much will be expected of you. You will be
regarded, and rightly so, as those who have the necessary knowledge and the
ability to inspire, to guide and to lead. It is for this reason that we expect
from you to whom we have given the opportunity of education in your chosen
fields, great and productive service to Our country.
These
fundamental ideas of which We have briefly spoken this day, constitute, We
presume, part of the thought you have absorbed during the course of your
studies in this University College. May these basic thoughts accompany you
during the years ahead and aid you in accomplishing great things for Our
beloved country, Ethiopia.
In conclusion,
We would like to express Our thanks and appreciation to the members of the
faculty and the Board of this University College for their zealous and untiring
efforts for the growth of knowledge and the development of character in the
young people who learn here.
We would like
especially to entrust Our Vice-Minister of Education, on the basis of the
statement made by him regarding the expansion and growth of education in the
country, with the high responsibility of assiduously and untiringly striving to
carry out the schemes mentioned and the decisions made by the Board.
July 17, 1959.
Selected
Speeches of His Imperial Majesty Haile Selassie – page 12 –
Keine Kommentare:
Kommentar veröffentlichen