Michelle Obama delivered a powerful and emotional speech at the Memorial Service for Maya Angelou.
The renowned author, poet and activist passed away on the 28th of May 2014.
First Lady of the United States of America Michelle Obama has always cited Maya Angelou as a major source of inspiration. In 2012, the first lady presented a BET Honors Literrary Arts award to her role model.
The renowned author, poet and activist passed away on the 28th of May 2014.
First Lady of the United States of America Michelle Obama has always cited Maya Angelou as a major source of inspiration. In 2012, the first lady presented a BET Honors Literrary Arts award to her role model.
Read the Speech Transcript
MRS. OBAMA: Thank you so much.
(Applause.) My heart is so full. My heart is so full. Bebe — Oprah, why
did you do that? Just why did you put me after this? (Laughter.)
To the family, Guy, to all of you; to
the friends; President Clinton; Oprah; my mother, Cicely Tyson;
Ambassador Young — let me just share something with you. My mother,
Marian Robinson, never cares about anything I do. (Laughter.) But when
Dr. Maya Angelou passed, she said, you’re going, aren’t you? I said,
well, Mom, I’m not really sure, I have to check with my schedule. She
said, you are going, right? (Laughter.) I said, well, I’m going to get
back to you but I have to check with the people, figure it out. I came
back up to her room when I found out that I was scheduled to go, and she
said, that’s good, now I’m happy. (Laughter.)
It is such a profound honor, truly, a
profound honor, to be here today on behalf of myself and my husband as
we celebrate one of the greatest spirits our world has ever known, our
dear friend, Dr. Maya Angelou.
In the Book of Psalms it reads: “I
praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Wonderful are your
works; my soul knows it very well. My frame was not hidden from you when
I was being made in secret, intricately woven in the depths of the
Earth.” What a perfect description of Maya Angelou, and the gift she
gave to her family and to all who loved her.
She taught us that we are each
wonderfully made, intricately woven, and put on this Earth for a purpose
far greater than we could ever imagine. And when I think about Maya
Angelou, I think about the affirming power of her words.
The first time I read “Phenomenal
Woman”, I was struck by how she celebrated black women’s beauty like no
one had ever dared to before. (Applause.) Our curves, our stride, our
strength, our grace. Her words were clever and sassy; they were powerful
and sexual and boastful. And in that one singular poem, Maya Angelou
spoke to the essence of black women, but she also graced us with an
anthem for all women –- a call for all of us to embrace our God-given
beauty.
And, oh, how desperately black girls
needed that message. As a young woman, I needed that message. As a
child, my first doll was Malibu Barbie. (Laughter.) That was the
standard for perfection. That was what the world told me to aspire to.
But then I discovered Maya Angelou, and her words lifted me right out of
my own little head.
Her message was very simple. She told us
that our worth has nothing to do with what the world might say.
Instead, she said, “Each of us comes from the creator trailing wisps of
glory.” She reminded us that we must each find our own voice, decide our
own value, and then announce it to the world with all the pride and joy
that is our birthright as members of the human race.
Dr. Angelou’s words sustained me on
every step of my journey –- through lonely moments in ivy-covered
classrooms and colorless skyscrapers; through blissful moments mothering
two splendid baby girls; through long years on the campaign trail
where, at times, my very womanhood was dissected and questioned. For me,
that was the power of Maya Angelou’s words –- words so powerful that
they carried a little black girl from the South Side of Chicago all the
way to the White House. (Applause.)
And today, as First Lady, whenever the
term “authentic” is used to describe me, I take it as a tremendous
compliment, because I know that I am following in the footsteps of great
women like Maya Angelou. But really, I’m just a beginner — I am
baby-authentic. (Laughter.) Maya Angelou, now she was the original, she
was the master. For at a time when there were such stifling constraints
on how black women could exist in the world, she serenely disregarded
all the rules with fiercely passionate, unapologetic self. She was
comfortable in every last inch of her glorious brown skin.
But for Dr. Angelou, her own transition
was never enough. You see, she didn’t just want to be phenomenal
herself, she wanted all of us to be phenomenal right alongside her.
(Applause.) So that’s what she did throughout her lifetime -– she
gathered so many of us under her wing. I wish I was a daughter, but I
was right under that wing sharing her wisdom, her genius, and her
boundless love.
I first came into her presence in 2008,
when she spoke at a campaign rally here in North Carolina. At that
point, she was in a wheelchair, hooked up to an oxygen tank to help her
breathe. But let me tell you, she rolled up like she owned the place.
(Laughter.) She took the stage, as she always did, like she’d been born
there. And I was so completely awed and overwhelmed by her presence I
could barely concentrate on what she was saying to me.
But while I don’t remember her exact
words, I do remember exactly how she made me feel. (Applause.) She made
me feel like I owned the place, too. She made me feel like I had been
born on that stage right next to her. And I remember thinking to myself,
“Maya Angelou knows who I am, and she’s rooting for me. So, now I’m
good. I can do this. I can do this.” (Applause.)
And that’s really true for us all,
because in so many ways, Maya Angelou knew us. She knew our hope, our
pain, our ambition, our fear, our anger, our shame. And she assured us
that despite it all –- in fact, because of it all -– we were good. And
in doing so, she paved the way for me and Oprah and so many others just
to be our good, old, black-woman selves. (Applause.)
She showed us that eventually, if we
stayed true to who we are, then the world would embrace us. (Applause.)
And she did this not just for black women, but for all women, for all
human beings. She taught us all that it is okay to be your regular old
self, whatever that is –- your poor self, your broken self, your
brilliant, bold, phenomenal self.
That was Maya Angelou’s reach. She
touched me. She touched all of you. She touched people all across the
globe, including a young white woman from Kansas who named her daughter
after Maya, and raised her son to be the first black President of the
United States. (Applause.)
So when I heard that Dr. Angelou had
passed, while I felt a deep sense of loss, I also felt a profound sense
of peace. Because there is no question that Maya Angelou will always be
with us, because there was something truly divine about Maya. I know
that now, as always, she is right where she belongs.
May her memory be a blessing to us all. Thank you. God bless. (Applause.)
Photo Credit: AP