[Released February 25, 1961. Dated February 24, 1961]
Dr. John Hannah,
Chairman Commission on Civil Rights
The Motor House, Williamsburg, Virginia
Please extend to all the participants
of your Third Annual Conference on Schools in Transition my best wishes
for a constructive session. The two previous conferences which the Commission
has sponsored on the problems of school desegregation have been notable
contributions to our national need for better understanding of this vital
matter.
It is a continuing contribution
for you to bring together for an exchange of views the men and women responsible
for maintaining our public schools and for carrying through the process
of desegregation.
Let me here pay tribute to these
educators - principals, officers of school boards, and public school teachers.
The Constitutional requirement of desegregation has presented them with
many new responsibilities and hard challenges. In New Orleans today, as
in many other places represented in your three conferences, these loyal
citizens and educators are meeting these responsibilities and challenges
with quiet intelligence and true courage. The whole country is in their
debt for our public school system must be preserved and improved. Our very
survival as a free nation depends upon it. This is no time for schools
to close for any reason, and certainly no time for schools to be closed
in the name of racial discrimination. If we are to give the leadership
the world requires of us, we must be true to the great principles of our
Constitution - the very principles which distinguish us from our adversaries
in the world.
Let me also pay tribute to the
school children and their parents, of both races, who have been on the
frontlines of this problem. In accepting the command of the Constitution
with dignity they too, are contributing to the education of all Americans.
Cordially,
JOHN F. KENNEDY