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    <fdsys-metadata>
        <President>Barack Obama</President>
        <dateIssued>2013-01-01</dateIssued>
        <bookNumber>1</bookNumber>
        <printPageRange first="671" last="671"/>
    </fdsys-metadata>
    <item-head>
        Remarks Following a Tour of the 
        
        Maison des 
        
        Esclaves on Goree Island, Senegal
    </item-head>
        
    <item-date>
June 27, 2013</item-date>
        
    <para>
        Hey! Well, the--I want to thank the 
        
        President of Senegal, but also the mayor of Goree and the museum curator here. Obviously, it's a very powerful moment whenever I can travel with my family, but especially for Michelle and Malia and my mother-in-law to be able to come here and to fully appreciate the magnitude of the slave trade, to get a sense, in a very intimate way, of the incredible inhumanity and hardship that people faced before they made the Middle Passage and that crossing.
    </para>
        
    <para>
And I think more than anything, what it reminds us of is that we have to remain vigilant when it comes to the defense of people's human rights, because I'm a firm believer that humanity is fundamentally good, but it's only good when good people stand up for what's right. And this is a testament to, when we're not vigilant in defense of what's right, what can happen.</para>
        
    <para>
        And so it's always powerful for me to visit countries outside of the United States generally, but obviously, for an African American--and an African American President--to be able to visit this site, I think, gives me even greater motivation in terms of the 
        
        defense of human rights around the world. All right?
    </para>
        
    <para>
Thank you, guys.</para>
        
    <note>
                
        <b>Note:</b>
                 The President spoke at 3:33 p.m. In his remarks, he referred to President Macky Sall of Senegal; Mayor Augustin Senghor of Goree, Senegal; and Eloi Coly, museum curator, Maison des Esclaves de Goree. He also referred to his mother-in-law Marian Robinson.
    
    </note>
    
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