Текст песни Eu Tenho Um Sonho - Rappin' Hood
I
am
happy
to
join
with
you
today
in
what
will
go
down
in
history
as
the
greatest
demonstration
for
freedom
in
the
history
of
our
nation.
Five
score
years
ago,
a
great
American,
in
whose
symbolic
shadow
we
stand
today,
signed
the
Emancipation
Proclamation.
This
momentous
decree
came
as
a
great
beacon
light
of
hope
to
millions
of
Negro
slaves
who
had
been
seared
in
the
flames
of
withering
injustice.
It
came
as
a
joyous
daybreak
to
end
the
long
night
of
their
captivity.
But
one
hundred
years
later,
the
Negro
still
is
not
free.
One
hundred
years
later,
the
life
of
the
Negro
is
still
sadly
crippled
by
the
manacles
of
segregation
and
the
chains
of
discrimination.
One
hundred
years
later,
the
Negro
lives
on
a
lonely
island
of
poverty
in
the
midst
of
a
vast
ocean
of
material
prosperity.
One
hundred
years
later,
the
Negro
is
still
languished
in
the
corners
of
American
society
and
finds
himself
an
exile
in
his
own
land.
And
so
we've
come
here
today
to
dramatize
a
shameful
condition.
In
a
sense
we've
come
to
our
nation's
capital
to
cash
a
check.
When
the
architects
of
our
republic
wrote
the
magnificent
words
of
the
Constitution
and
the
Declaration
of
Independence,
They
were
signing
a
promissory
note
to
which
every
American
was
to
fall
heir.
This
note
was
a
promise
that
all
men,
yes,
black
men
as
well
as
white
men,
Would
be
guaranteed
the
"unalienable
Rights"
of
"
Life,
Liberty
and
the
pursuit
of
Happiness."
It
is
obvious
today
that
America
has
defaulted
on
this
promissory
note,
Insofar
as
her
citizens
of
color
are
concerned.
Instead
of
honoring
this
sacred
obligation,
America
has
given
the
Negro
people
a
bad
check,
A
check
which
has
come
back
marked
"insufficient
funds."
But
we
refuse
to
believe
that
the
bank
of
justice
is
bankrupt.
We
refuse
to
believe
that
there
are
insufficient
funds
in
the
great
vaults
of
opportunity
of
this
nation.
And
so,
we've
come
to
cash
this
check,
a
check
that
will
give
us
upon
demand
the
riches
of
freedom
and
the
security
of
justice.
We
have
also
come
to
this
hallowed
spot
to
remind
America
of
the
fierce
urgency
of
Now.
This
is
no
time
to
engage
in
the
luxury
of
cooling
off
or
to
take
the
tranquilizing
drug
of
gradualism.
Now
is
the
time
to
make
real
the
promises
of
democracy.
Now
is
the
time
to
rise
from
the
dark
and
desolate
valley
of
segregation
to
the
sunlit
path
of
racial
justice.
Now
is
the
time
to
lift
our
nation
from
the
quicksands
of
racial
injustice
to
the
solid
rock
of
brotherhood.
Now
is
the
time
to
make
justice
a
reality
for
all
of
God's
children.
It
would
be
fatal
for
the
nation
to
overlook
the
urgency
of
the
moment.
This
sweltering
summer
of
the
Negro's
legitimate
discontent
will
not
pass
until
there
is
an
invigorating
autumn
of
freedom
and
equality.
Nineteen
sixty-three
is
not
an
end,
but
a
beginning.
And
those
who
hope
that
the
Negro
needed
to
blow
off
steam
and
will
now
be
content
will
have
a
rude
awakening
if
the
nation
returns
to
business
as
usual.
And
there
will
be
neither
rest
nor
tranquility
in
America
until
the
Negro
is
granted
his
citizenship
rights.
The
whirlwinds
of
revolt
will
continue
to
shake
the
foundations
of
our
nation
until
the
bright
day
of
justice
emerges.
But
there
is
something
that
I
must
say
to
my
people,
who
stand
on
the
warm
threshold
which
leads
into
the
palace
of
justice:
In
the
process
of
gaining
our
rightful
place,
we
must
not
be
guilty
of
wrongful
deeds.
Let
us
not
seek
to
satisfy
our
thirst
for
freedom
by
drinking
from
the
cup
of
bitterness
and
hatred.
We
must
forever
conduct
our
struggle
on
the
high
plane
of
dignity
and
discipline.
We
must
not
allow
our
creative
protest
to
degenerate
into
physical
violence.
Again
and
again,
we
must
rise
to
the
majestic
heights
of
meeting
physical
force
with
soul
force.
The
marvelous
new
militancy
which
has
engulfed
the
Negro
community
must
not
lead
us
to
a
distrust
of
all
white
people,
For
many
of
our
white
brothers,
as
evidenced
by
their
presence
here
today,
Have
come
to
realize
that
their
destiny
is
tied
up
with
our
de
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