Quotes about Emancipation
We are chained to that which we do not forgive.
— Richard Paul Evans
In the end, of course, Republicans ended slavery and permanently outlawed it through the Thirteenth Amendment. Democrats responded by opposing the amendment and a group of them assassinated the man they held responsible for emancipation, Abraham Lincoln.
— Dinesh D'Souza
The Republican ethos underlying these landmark provisions was aptly framed by the great abolitionist Republican, Frederick Douglass. Douglass said, "It is evident that white and black must fall or flourish together. In light of this great truth, laws ought to be enacted, and institutions established—all distinctions, founded on complexion, and every right, privilege and immunity, now enjoyed by the white man, ought to be as freely granted to the man of color."
— Dinesh D'Souza
Emancipation was a proclamation, but not a fact.
— Lyndon B. Johnson
The old demands are gone and you—and the former slaves—are fre to do what God created you to do, not what everyone teels you to do….What if the war was about your emancipation as well as the slaves?
— Lynn Austin
LET A MAN REALIZE that his life, in its totality, proceeds from his mind. Let him realize that the mind is a combination of habits which he can, by patient effort, modify to any extent, and over which he can thus gain complete ascendancy, mastery, and control. At once, he will have obtained possession of the key which shall open the door to his complete emancipation.
— James Allen
The greater a man's folly, the greater his enslavement. The wiser a man is, the greater his freedom.
— Matshona Dhliwayo
Women ought to be free - as free as we are,' he declared, making a discovery of which he was too irritated to measure the terrific consequences.
— Edith Wharton
I don't like to see people get kicked around. You have to stand up for them.
— Luis Alberto Urrea
I intend no modification of my oft-expressed wish that all men everywhere could be free.
— Abraham Lincoln
A man who takes away another man's freedom is a prisoner of hatred, he is locked behind the bars of prejudice and narrow mindedness.
— Nelson Mandela
I only ask to be free, the butterflies are free.
— Charles Dickens