Liberian Lawyer Foresees Brighter Future for Liberia
The Inquirer
Monrovia, Liberia
Distributed by
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
Posted December 29, 2003
A prominent Liberian lawyer, Cllr. Varney Sherman says he foresees a brighter
future for Liberia, but pointed out that good leadership and good governance
are sine quo non for transforming the country.
Speaking on Sunday at the convocation exercises of the Cuttington University
College(CUC) at the Trinity Cathedral on Broad Street, Cllr. Sherman, said,
" I have faith that good things will happen to this country, our country;
I am confident that one day, one day soon our country will rise from the ashes
and degradation of the past 14 years and that the Lone Star will shine brighter
than ever before."
He observed that the resilience of the Liberian people is ample evidence of
his faith and confidence; but more than that, he pointed out, "I see
a clear sign of my faith and confidence right here in this Cathedral today,
and all around me in this city of Monrovia. For even as the evil and despicable
people among us hold us hostage, institutions like our Cuttington are training
you and other Liberians and certifying you and them to assume responsibility
for Liberia and to chart a new course for it."
However, he noted that higher education and advanced training are not enough;
as they by themselves will not transform the country. He then named good leadership
and good governance as the sine qua non for the transformation of the country
and indicated that college graduates, who being best prepared to assess good
leadership and good governance, must insist on these necessities for the transformation
of our country.
In addition, he urged the 112 graduates in different disciplines to match
their training and education with seizing opportunities and working hard and
honestly in order to take charge of and determine their personal destiny and
ultimately, the destiny of the country
"While some may differ, I believe that the future of our country does
not lie beyond our vision; it certainly is not beyond our control. College
education has prepared you to dream about what Liberia’s tomorrow will
be, the role you will play, and the responsibility you will assume. I urge
you to use this preparation to dream, dream of the best for yourself, our
people and our country," Cllr. Sherman, a 1975 graduate of the institution,
said.
He said the graduates should dream of a country free of nepotism, corruption,
misuse of power, and abuse of human rights.
He went on: "dream of a country based on the rule of law, the rights
and liberties of the individual, the sanctity of life and the holiness and
dignity of the human spirit. Dream of a country with basic public services,
modern facilities and amenities for its people. Dream of the transformation
of Liberia and the role you will play. Dream of a country where the evil people
and their collaborators and supporters who have done so much damage to us
will never have another opportunity or another chance to inflict such harm
on us or abuse us again. Say to yourself like the Jews all over the world
say to themselves, ‘Never Again, Never Again, Never Again!"
Recounting the perennial conflict in Liberia, Cllr. Sherman said Liberians
have suffered much, too much, and that they continue to suffer even now, not
at the hands of strangers or foreigners, but at the "hands of our own
countrymen, our fellow Liberians, under the guise of what these evil and wicked
people call "liberation", "democracy", or "patriotism".
He added, "with their guns and their drugs, they have maimed and killed,
stolen and destroyed; with their guns and their drugs, they have subjugated
and abused us, even the children. And one of the things that is most distressful
is that, these so-called patriots and liberators, who have done so much damage
to our country, were our neighbors and our friends, went to some of the best
schools in Liberia and out of Liberia, some of them hold fancy degrees. Yet
they chose to maim, kill, steal and destroy." To his fellow Cuttingtonians,
he said it is not only the foot soldiers and rebels who have destroyed us
and our country, it is their leaders and those who supported them and collaborated
with them. Each and every one of them is responsible for our plight; each
and every one of them, individually and collectively, have inflicted so much
damage and destruction on our country.
"If you kill, maim, steal and destroy, you are not and can’t be
a true Cuttingtonian. If you support, cooperate, collaborate or connive with
those who kill, maim, steal and destroy, you are not and can’t be a
true Cuttingtonian, " he told the new members of the alumni association
of the school. He said if they do not make a difference, then, "you may
have passed through the walls of Cuttington and received a degree but certainly
our Cuttington would not have passed through you. For a true Cuttingtonian
does not only work for what he is or gets, he is compassionate and committed
to making a difference in the lives of his fellow man and in his community."
He then urged them to be true Cuttingtonians, espousing and practicing values
which distinguish you in everything you do and avoid being like them and the
likes of them who killed and maimed our people, stole and pillaged our resources
and destroyed our infrastructures. The renowned Liberian lawyer, who is also
special envoy to Chairman Charles Gyude Bryant, said many of them are praying
very hard today that you would forget the part they played in the destruction
of Liberia. But, he said, "I urge you not to forget because evil strives
when good men and women ignore it; evil re-surfaces and re-manifests itself
when good people pretend to forget it and exalt those who perpetrated it.
Unlike those evil and wicked people, I urge you to use your college education
and advance training to rebuild what they and their supporters and collaborators
have destroyed."
He then implored the graduates to use their college education to make a positive
and meaningful difference in the lives of the men, women and children whom
these evil and wicked people and their collaborators have afflicted and abused.
He called on them to help change for the better the country that they have
torn apart and that they can do so by "seizing every opportunity that
comes your way and working assiduously each day at what ever you pursue after
Cuttington, doing good along the way, making a meaningful and positive difference
all the time, every time-all the time, every time."