An interview with the Queen of Creole Cuisine Leah Chase and Pat Mitchell

Leah Chase: Oh, this is beautiful.

Oh, gosh, I never saw such a room

and beauty and strength
like I’m looking at.

That’s gorgeous. It is.

It is a beautiful room.

Pat Mitchell: I almost said your age,
because you gave me permission,

but I realized that I was
about to make you a year older.

You’re only 94.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

LC: Yeah, I’m only 94.

(Applause)

I mean, you get this old
and parts start wearing out.

Your legs start wearing out.

The one thing that my children always say:

“But nothing happened to your mouth.”

(Laughter)

So you’ve got to have something going,
so I’ve got my mouth going.

(Laughter)

PM: So Mrs. Chase,
the first time we were there,

I brought a group of young women,
who work with us at TED,

into the kitchen,

and we were all standing around
and you had already cooked lunch

for hundreds of people,
as you do every day,

and you looked up at them.

You have to share with this audience
what you said to those young women.

LC: Well, you know,
I talk to young women all the time,

and it’s beginning to bother me,

because look how far I came.

I’d come with women
that had to really hustle and work hard,

and they knew how to be women.

They didn’t play that man down.

And, well, we didn’t have
the education you have today,

and God, I’m so proud

when I see those women
with all that education under their belt.

That’s why I worked hard,

tried to get everybody
to use those resources.

So they just don’t know their power,

and I always tell them,
just look at my mother,

had 12 girls before she had a boy.

(Laughter)

So you know how I came out.

(Laughter)

Now, she had 14 children.

She raised 11 of us out of that 14,

and up until last year,
we were all still living,

a bunch of old biddies,
but we’re still here.

(Laughter)

And sometimes we can be just cantankerous
and blah blah blah blah blah,

but we still go.

And I love to see women.

You don’t know what it does for me

to see women in the position
that you’re in today.

I never thought I’d see that.

I never thought I’d see women

be able to take places
and positions that we have today.

It is just a powerful thing.

I had a young woman come to me.

She was an African-American woman.

And I said, “Well, what do you do, honey?”

She said, “I am a retired Navy pilot.”

Oh God, that just melted me,

because I knew how hard it was
to integrate that Navy.

You know, the Navy was the last thing
to really be integrated,

and that was done by Franklin Roosevelt

as a favor to an African-American man,

Lester Granger, that I knew very well.

He was the head of the National
Urban League back there,

and when Roosevelt asked him,

he wanted to appoint Lester
as maybe one of his cabinet members.

Lester said, “No, I don’t want that.

All I want you to do
is integrate that Navy.”

And that was what Franklin did.

Well, Franklin didn’t live to do it,

but Truman did it.

But when this woman told me,

“I have flown everything there is to fly,”

bombers, just all kinds of planes,

it just melted me, you know,

just to see how far women have come.

And I told her, I said,

“Well, you could get
into the space program.”

She said, “But Ms. Chase, I’m too old.”

She was already 60-some years old,

and, you know, you’re over the hill then.

(Laughter)

They don’t want you flying
up in the sky at 60-something years old.

Stay on the ground.

When I meet women,

and today everybody comes to my kitchen,

and you know that,

and it upsets Stella, my daughter.

She doesn’t like people
coming in the kitchen.

But that’s where I am,

and that’s where you’re going
to see me, in the kitchen.

So when they come there,
I meet all kinds of people.

And that is the thing
that really uplifts me,

is when I meet women on the move.

When I meet women on the move,
it is good for me.

Now, I’m not one of these
flag-waving women.

You’re not going to see me
out there waving.

No, I don’t do that.

(Laughter)

No, I don’t do that, and I don’t want
any of you to do that.

Just be good women.

And you know, my mother taught us …

she was tough on us,

and she said, “You know, Leah,”

she gave us all this plaque,

“to be a good woman,
you have to first look like a girl.”

Well, I thought I looked like a girl.

“Act like a lady.”

That, I never learned to do.

(Laughter)

“Think like a man.”

Now don’t act like that man;
think like a man.

And “work like a dog.”

(Laughter)

So we learned that the hard way.

And they taught you that.

They taught you what women had to do.

We were taught that women
controlled the behavior of men.

How you act, they will act.

So you’ve got to do that,
and I tell you all the time.

You know, don’t play this man down.

It upsets me when you may have a husband

that maybe he doesn’t have as much
education under his belt as you have,

but still you can’t play him down.

You’ve got to keep lifting him up,

because you don’t want
to live with a mouse.

So you want that man to be a man,
and do what he has to do.

And anyway, always remember,

he runs on cheap gas.

(Laughter)

So fill him up with cheap gas –

(Laughter)

and then, you got him.

It’s just so –

(Laughter)

It’s just –

PM: You have to give us
a minute to take that in.

(Laughter)

LC: When I heard this young lady
speak before I came out –

she was so beautiful,

and I wished I could be like that,

and my husband, poor darling –

I lost him after
we were married 70 years –

didn’t agree on one thing,

never did, nothing,

but we got along together

because he learned to understand me,

and that was just hard,

because he was so different.

And that lady reminded me.

I said, “If I would have
just been like her,

Dooky would have really loved it.”

(Laughter)

But I wasn’t.

I was always pushy, always moving,

always doing this,

and he used to come to me
all the time, and he said,

“Honey, God’s going to punish you.”

(Laughter)

“You – you’re just not grateful.”

But it isn’t that I’m not grateful,

but I think, as long as you’re living,
you’ve got to keep moving,

you’ve got to keep trying to get up

and do what you’ve got to do.

(Applause)

You cannot sit down.

You have to keep going,

keep trying to do a little bit every day.

Every day, you do a little bit,

try to make it better.

And that’s been my whole life.

Well, I came up
in the country, small town,

had to do everything,
had to haul the water,

had to wash the clothes, do this, do that,

pick the dumb strawberries,
all that kind of stuff.

(Laughter)

But still, my daddy insisted
that we act nice,

we be kind.

And that’s all.

When I heard this young woman –

oh, she sounds so beautiful –

I said, “I wish I could be like that.”

PM: Mrs. Chase, we don’t want you
to be any different than you are.

There is no question about that.

Let me ask you.

This is why it’s so wonderful
to have a conversation

with someone who has such a long view –

LC: A long time.

PM: to remembering Roosevelt

and the person he did that favor for.

What is in your head and your mind

and what you have seen and witnessed …

One of the things that it’s good
to remember, always,

is that when you opened that restaurant,

whites and blacks could not
eat together in this city.

It was against the law.

And yet they did, at Dooky Chase.
Tell me about that.

LC: They did, there.

Well, my mother-in-law first started this,

and the reason she started is,

because her husband was sickly,
and he would go out –

and people from Chicago
and all the places,

you would call his job a numbers runner.

But in New Orleans,
we are very sophisticated –

(Laughter)

so it wasn’t a numbers runner,

it was a lottery vendor.

(Laughter)

So you see, we put class to that.

But that’s how he did it.

And he couldn’t go from house to house
to get his clients and all that,

because he was sick,

so she opened up
this little sandwich shop,

so she was going to take down the numbers,

because he was sick a lot.

He had ulcers. He was really bad
for a long a time.

So she did that –

and not knowing anything,

but she knew she could make a sandwich.

She knew she could cook,

and she borrowed 600 dollars
from a brewery.

Can you imagine starting
a business today with 600 dollars

and no knowledge of what you’re doing?

And it always just amazed me
what she could do.

She was a good money manager.

That, I am not.

My husband used to call me
a bankrupt sister.

(Laughter)

“She’ll spend everything you got.”

And I would, you know.

PM: But you kept
the restaurant open, though,

even in those times of controversy,
when people were protesting

and almost boycotting.

I mean, it was a controversial move
that you and your husband made.

LC: It was, and I don’t
know how we did it,

but as I said, my mother-in-law
was a kind, kind person,

and you didn’t have any African-Americans
on the police force at that time.

They were all white.

But they would come around,

and she would say,

“Bebe, I’m gonna fix you
a little sandwich.”

So she would fix them a sandwich.

Today they would call that bribery.

(Laughter)

But she was just that kind of person.

She liked to do things for you.

She liked to give.

So she would do that,

and maybe that helped us out,

because nobody ever bothered us.

We had Jim Dombrowski, Albert Ben Smith,

who started all kinds of things
right in that restaurant,

and nobody ever bothered us.

So we just did it.

PM: Excuse me.

You talked to me that day

about the fact that people considered
the restaurant a safe haven

where they could come together,

particularly if they were working
on civil rights,

human rights,

working to change the laws.

LC: Well, because once
you got inside those doors,

nobody ever, ever bothered you.

The police would never come in

and bother our customers, never.

So they felt safe to come there.

They could eat, they could plan.

All the Freedom Riders,

that’s where they planned
all their meetings.

They would come and we would
serve them a bowl of gumbo

and fried chicken.

(Laughter)

So I said, we’d changed
the course of America

over a bowl of gumbo
and some fried chicken.

(Applause)

I would like to invite the leaders, now,

just come have a bowl of gumbo
and some fried chicken,

talk it over and we’d go
and we’d do what we have to do.

(Applause)

And that’s all we did.

PM: Could we send you a list
to invite to lunch?

(Laughter)

LC: Yeah, invite.

Because that’s what we’re not doing.

We’re not talking.

Come together.

I don’t care if you’re a Republican
or what you are – come together.

Talk.

And I know those old guys.

I was friends with those old guys,

like Tip O’Neill and all of those people.

They knew how to come together and talk,

and you would disagree maybe.

That’s OK.

But you would talk, and we would come
to a good thing and meet.

And so that’s what we did
in that restaurant.

They would plan the meeting,

Oretha’s mother, Oretha Haley’s mother.

She was big in CORE.

Her mother worked for me for 42 years.

And she was like me.

We didn’t understand the program.

Nobody our age understood this program,

and we sure didn’t want
our children to go to jail.

Oh, that was … oh God.

But these young people
were willing to go to jail

for what they believed.

We were working with Thurgood
and A.P. Tureaud and all those people

with the NAACP.

But that was a slow move.

We would still be out here trying
to get in the door, waiting for them.

(Laughter)

PM: Is that Thurgood Marshall
you’re talking about?

LC: Thurgood Marshall.
But I loved Thurgood.

He was a good movement.

They wanted to do this
without offending anybody.

I’ll never forget A.P. Tureaud:

“But you can’t offend the white people.

Don’t offend them.”

But these young people didn’t care.

They said, “We’re going.
Ready or not, we’re going to do this.”

And so we had to support them.

These were the children we knew,
righteous children.

We had to help them.

PM: And they brought the change.
LC: And they brought the change.

You know, it was hard,

but sometimes you do
hard things to make changes.

PM: And you’ve seen
so many of those changes.

The restaurant has been a bridge.

You have been a bridge
between the past and now,

but you don’t live in the past, do you?

You live very much in the present.

LC: And that’s what you have to tell
young people today.

OK, you can protest,

but put the past behind you.

I can’t make you responsible
for what your grandfather did.

That’s your grandfather.

I have to build on that.

I have to make changes.

I can’t stay there and say,

“Oh, well, look what they did to us then.

Look what they do to us now.”

No, you remember that,

but that makes you keep going on,

but you don’t harp on it every day.

You move,

and you move to make a difference,

and everybody should be involved.

My children said,

“Mother, don’t get political,” you know.

(Laughter)

“Don’t get political, because you know
we don’t like that.”

But you have to be political today.

You have to be involved.

Be a part of the system.

Look how it was when we couldn’t be
a part of the system.

When Dutch Morial became the mayor,

it was a different feeling
in the African-American community.

We felt a part of things.

Now we’ve got a mayor.

We feel like we belong.

Moon tried before Dutch came.

PM: Mayor Landrieu’s father,
Moon Landrieu.

LC: Mayor Landrieu’s father,
he took great, great risks

by putting African-Americans in city hall.

He took a whipping for that
for a long time,

but he was a visionary,

and he did those things that he knew
was going to help the city.

He knew we had to get involved.

So that’s what we have to do.

We don’t harp on that.

We just keep moving,

and Mitch, you know,
I tell Moon all the time,

“You did a good thing,”

but Mitch did one bigger than you
and better than you.

When he pulled those statues down,

I said, “Boy, you’re crazy!”

(Applause)

You’re crazy.

But it was a good political move.

You know, when I saw
P.T. Beauregard come down,

I was sitting looking at the news,

and it just hit me
what this was all about.

To me, it wasn’t about race;
it was a political move.

And I got so furious,

I got back on that kitchen
the next morning,

and I said, come on, pick up
your pants, and let’s go to work,

because you’re going to get left behind.

And that’s what you have to do.

You have to move on people,

move on what they do.

It was going to bring
visibility to the city.

So you got that visibility –
move on it, uplift yourself,

do what you have to do,

and do it well.

And that’s all we do.

That’s all I try to do.

PM: But you just gave
the formula for resilience. Right?

So you are clearly the best example
we could find anywhere of resilience,

so there must be something you think –

LC: I like emotional strength.

I like people with emotional
and physical strength,

and maybe that’s bad for me.

My favorite all-time general
was George Patton.

You know, that wasn’t too cool.

(Laughter)

PM: It’s surprising.

LC: I’ve got George Patton
hanging in my dining room

because I want to remember.

He set goals for himself,

and he was going to set out
to reach those goals.

He never stopped.

And I always remember his words:

“Lead, follow, or get out of the way.”

Now, I can’t lead –

(Applause)

I can’t be a leader,

but I can follow a good leader,

but I am not getting out of the way.

(Applause)

But that’s just what you have to do.

(Applause)

If you can’t lead –

leaders need followers,

so if I help you up there,
I’m going to ride on your coattails,

and I can’t count
the coattails I’ve ridden upon.

(Laughter)

Feed you good. You’ll help me out.

(Laughter)

And that’s what life is all about.

Everybody can do something,

but please get involved.

Do something.

The thing we have to do
in this city, in all cities –

mommas have to start being mommas today.

You know?

They have to start understanding –

when you bring this child in the world,

you have to make a man out of it,

you have to make a woman out of it,

and it takes some doing.

It takes sacrifice.

Maybe you won’t have the long fingernails,
maybe you won’t have the pretty hair.

But that child will be on the move,

and that’s what you have to do.

We have to concentrate on educating

and making these children understand
what it’s all about.

And I hate to tell you, gentlemen,

it’s going to take
a good woman to do that.

It’s going to take
a good woman to do that.

(Applause)

Men can do their part.

The other part is to just do
what you have to do

and bring it home,

but we can handle the rest,

and we will handle the rest.

If you’re a good woman, you can do that.

PM: You heard that first here.

We can handle the rest.

LC: We can handle the rest.

Mrs. Chase, thank you so much –

LC: Thank you.

PM: for taking time out from the work
you do every day in this community.

LC: But you don’t know
what this does for me.

When I see all of these people,
and come together –

people come to my kitchen
from all over the world.

I had people come from London,

now twice this happened to me.

First a man came, and I don’t know
why he came to this –

Every year, the chefs do something
called “Chef’s Charity.”

Well, it so happened
I was the only woman there,

and the only African-American there

on that stage doing these demonstrations,

and I would not leave until I saw
another woman come up there, too.

I’m not going up – they’re going
to carry me up there

until you bring another woman up here.

(Laughter)

So they have another one now,
so I could step down.

But this man was from London.

So after that, I found the man
in my kitchen.

He came to my kitchen,

and he said, “I want
to ask you one question.”

OK, I thought I was going to ask
something about food.

“Why do all these white men
hang around you?”

(Laughter)

What?

(Laughter)

I couldn’t understand.

He couldn’t understand that.

I said, “We work together.

This is the way we live in this city.

I may never go to your house,
you may never come to my house.

But when it comes to working,

like raising money
for this special school,

we come together.

That’s what we do.

And still here comes another, a woman,

elegantly dressed,

about a month ago in my kitchen.

She said, “I don’t understand
what I see in your dining room.”

I said, “What do you see?”

She saw whites and blacks together.

That’s what we do.

We meet. We talk.

And we work together,

and that’s what we have to do.

You don’t have to be my best friend
to work to better your city,

to better your country.

We just have to come together and work,
and that’s what we do in this city.

We’re a weird bunch down here.

(Laughter)

Nobody understands us,

but we feed you well.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

(Cheering)

Thank you.

(Applause)

Leah Chase:哦,这很漂亮。

哦,天哪,我从未见过像我现在看到的那样的房间

、美丽和力量

真漂亮。 它是。

这是一个漂亮的房间。

Pat Mitchell:我差点说出你的年龄,
因为你允许我,

但我意识到
我要让你大一岁。

你才 94 岁。

(笑声)

(掌声)

LC:是的,我只有 94 岁。

(掌声)

我的意思是,你老了
,零件开始磨损。

你的腿开始磨损。

我的孩子们总是说的一件事:

“但你的嘴什么也没发生。”

(笑声)

所以你必须有一些事情发生,
所以我已经开始说话了。

(笑声)

PM:所以蔡斯夫人
,我们第一次去那里时,

我带了一群
在 TED 和我们一起工作的年轻女性

进入厨房

,我们都站着
,你已经

为数百人做了午餐 人,
就像你每天做的那样

,你抬头看着他们。

你必须与这些听众分享
你对那些年轻女性说的话。

LC:嗯,你知道,
我一直在和年轻女性交谈

,这开始困扰我,

因为看看我走了多远。

我会和
那些必须真正忙碌和努力工作的女性一起来

,她们知道如何成为女性。

他们没有贬低那个人。

而且,好吧,
我们没有今天的教育

,上帝,

当我看到那些
受过所有教育的女性时,我感到非常自豪。

这就是为什么我努力工作,

试图让每个人
都使用这些资源。

所以他们只是不知道自己的力量

,我总是告诉他们,
看看我的母亲,

在她生男孩之前有 12 个女孩。

(笑声)

所以你知道我是怎么出来的。

(笑声)

现在,她有 14 个孩子。

她抚养了我们 14 个人中的 11 个

,直到去年,
我们都还活着,

一群老投标人,
但我们还在这里。

(笑声

) 有时我们可能只是脾气暴躁
,胡说八道,

但我们还是会去。

我喜欢看女人。

你不知道

看到女性处于
你今天的位置对我有什么影响。

我从没想过我会看到那个。

我从没想过我会看到女性

能够
担任我们今天所拥有的职位和职位。

这只是一个强大的东西。

我有一个年轻的女人来找我。

她是一位非裔美国妇女。

我说,“好吧,你是做什么的,亲爱的?”

她说:“我是一名退休的海军飞行员。”

哦,上帝,这让我融化了,

因为我知道
整合那支海军是多么困难。

你知道,海军是最后
一个真正被整合的

东西,富兰克林罗斯福这样

做是为了帮助

一个我非常了解的非裔美国人莱斯特格兰杰。

他是那里的全国城市联盟的负责人

,当罗斯福问他时,

他想任命莱斯特
作为他的内阁成员之一。

莱斯特说:“不,我不想那样

。我要你做的
就是整合那支海军。”

这就是富兰克林所做的。

好吧,富兰克林并没有活着这样做,

但杜鲁门做到了。

但是当这个女人告诉我,

“我已经飞过了所有可以飞的东西”,

轰炸机,各种飞机,

它让我融化了,你知道,

只是想看看女人走了多远。

我告诉她,我说,

“好吧,你可以
进入太空计划。”

她说:“可是蔡斯女士,我太老了。”

她已经 60 多岁了,

而且,你知道,那时你已经过山了。

(笑声)

他们不想让你
在 60 多岁的时候飞上天空。

留在地上。

当我遇到女人时

,今天每个人都来到我的厨房

,你知道的

,这让我的女儿斯黛拉感到不安。

她不喜欢有人
进厨房。

但这就是我所在

的地方,那是你会
在厨房看到我的地方。

所以当他们来的时候,
我遇到了各种各样的人。

那是
真正让我振奋的事情,

就是当我遇到移动中的女性时。

当我在旅途中遇到女性时,
这对我有好处。

现在,我不是这些
挥舞旗帜的女性之一。

你不会看到我在
外面挥手。

不,我不那样做。

(笑声)

不,我不那样做,我也不希望
你们中的任何人那样做。

做个好女人就好。

你知道,我妈妈教过我们……

她对我们很严厉

,她说,“你知道,莉亚,”

她给了我们这块牌匾,

“要成为一个好女人,
首先你必须看起来像个女孩 。”

嗯,我觉得我看起来像个女孩。

“表现得像个淑女。”

那,我从来没有学会做。

(笑声)

“像男人一样思考。”

现在不要像那个人那样行事;
像男人一样思考。

并且“像狗一样工作”。

(笑声)

所以我们很难学到这一点。

他们教你的。

他们教你女人该做什么。

我们被告知女性
控制着男性的行为。

你怎么做,他们就怎么做。

所以你必须这样做
,我一直告诉你。

你知道,不要小看这个人。

当你的丈夫

可能没有你受过那么多
教育,

但你仍然不能轻视他时,这让我感到不安。

你必须不断地把他举起来,

因为你不想
和老鼠一起生活。

所以你希望那个人成为一个男人
,做他必须做的事。

不管怎样,永远记住,

他靠的是廉价汽油。

(笑声)

所以用便宜的汽油给他加满-

(笑声)

然后,你得到了他。

就是这样——

(笑声

)只是——

PM:你得给我们
一点时间来理解。

(笑声)

LC:当我
在我出来之前听到这位年轻女士说话时——

她是如此美丽,

而且 我希望我能成为那样,

而我的丈夫,可怜的宝贝——我们结婚 70 年

后我失去了他
——

在一件事上意见不一致,

从来没有,什么都没有,

但我们相处得很好,

因为他学会了理解 我

,这很难,

因为他是如此不同。

那位女士提醒了我。

我说,“如果我能
像她一样,

Dooky 会非常喜欢它。”

(笑声)

但我不是。

我总是咄咄逼人,总是移动,

总是这样做

,他过去总是来找
我,他说,

“亲爱的,上帝会惩罚你的。”

(笑声)

“你——你只是不感恩。”

但这并不是我不感激,

而是我认为,只要你还活着,
你就必须继续前进,

你必须继续努力站起来

,做你必须做的事 做。

(掌声)

你不能坐下。

你必须继续前进,

每天努力做一点。

每一天,你都做一点点,

努力让它变得更好。

这就是我的一生。

好吧,我
来到乡下,小镇,

必须做所有事情,
必须拖水,

必须洗衣服,这样做,这样做,

采摘愚蠢的草莓,
诸如此类。

(笑声)

但是,我爸爸还是坚持
要我们表现得很好,

我们要善良。

就这样。

当我听到这个年轻的女人——

哦,她听起来真漂亮——

我说,“我希望我能像那样。”

PM:蔡斯夫人,我们不希望你和
你有任何不同。

毫无疑问。

让我问问你。

这就是为什么

和一个有着如此长远眼光的人交谈是如此美妙的原因——

LC:很长一段时间。

PM:记住罗斯福

和他为之效劳的人。

你脑子里想的

是什么,你所看到和目睹的……

一件值得
永远记住的事情

是,当你开那家餐馆时,

白人和黑人不能
在这个城市一起吃饭。

这是违法的。

然而他们做到了,在 Dooky Chase。
告诉我那件事。

LC:他们在那里。

嗯,我的岳母首先开始了这个

,她开始的原因是,

因为她的丈夫病了
,他会出去 -

来自芝加哥
和所有地方的人,

你会称他的工作是数字跑步者。

但是在新奥尔良,
我们非常老练——

(笑声)

所以它不是一个数字跑者,

它是一个彩票供应商。

(笑声)

所以你看,我们把课放在那个上面。

但他就是这样做的。

而且他不能
挨家挨户接他的客户等等,

因为他病了,

所以她开了
这家小三明治店,

所以她要记下这些数字,

因为他病得很厉害。

他有溃疡。 他真的
坏了很久。

所以她就这么做了——她

什么都不知道,

但她知道她可以做三明治。

她知道自己会做饭,

于是从一家啤酒厂借了 600 美元

你能想象
今天用 600 美元创业,却不

知道自己在做什么吗?

她能做什么总是让我感到惊讶

她是一位出色的理财经理。

那,我不是。

我丈夫以前叫
我破产姐妹。

(笑声)

“她会花掉你得到的一切。”

我会的,你知道的。

PM:但是

即使在那些充满争议的时期,
当人们抗议

和几乎抵制时,你仍然保持餐厅营业。

我的意思是,这
是你和你丈夫做出的一个有争议的举动。

LC:是的,我不
知道我们是怎么做到的,

但正如我所说,我的岳母
是一个善良、善良的人,

那时警察部队中没有任何非裔
美国人 时间。

他们都是白人。

但他们会过来

,她会说,

“贝贝,我要给你做
一个小三明治。”

所以她会给他们准备一个三明治。

今天他们会称之为贿赂。

(笑声)

但她就是那样的人。

她喜欢为你做事。

她喜欢给予。

所以她会这样做

,也许这对我们有帮助,

因为没有人打扰过我们。

我们有 Jim Dombrowski、Albert Ben Smith,

他们在那家餐厅开始了各种各样的事情

,从来没有人打扰过我们。

所以我们就这么做了。

下午:对不起。

那天你跟我

谈到人们
认为餐厅是

他们可以聚在一起的避风港,

特别是如果他们
致力于民权、

人权

、改变法律。

LC:嗯,因为一旦
你进入那些门

,就没有人打扰过你。

警察永远不会

进来打扰我们的客户,永远不会。

所以他们觉得来那里很安全。

他们可以吃饭,他们可以计划。

所有的自由骑士,

那是他们计划
所有会议的地方。

他们会来,我们会
为他们端上一碗秋葵汤

和炸鸡。

(笑声)

所以我说,我们
改变了美国的路线

,只吃一碗秋葵汤
和炸鸡。

(鼓掌)

我想请各位领导,现在

,来一碗秋葵汤
和炸鸡,

谈一谈,我们就走
,我们做我们该做的。

(掌声)

这就是我们所做的一切。

PM:我们可以给你发
一份邀请吃午饭的名单吗?

(笑声)

LC:是的,邀请。

因为那是我们没有做的。

我们不说话。

一起来。

我不在乎你是共和党人
还是你是什么人——聚在一起。

讲话。

我认识那些老家伙。

我和那些老家伙是朋友,

比如 Tip O’Neill 和所有这些人。

他们知道如何聚在一起交谈

,你也许会不同意。

没关系。

但是你会说话,我们会
找到一件好事并见面。

这就是我们
在那家餐厅所做的。

他们将计划会议,

奥雷莎的母亲,奥雷莎海莉的母亲。

她的核心很重要。

她的母亲为我工作了 42 年。

她和我一样。

我们不明白这个程序。

我们这个年纪的人都不懂这个计划

,我们当然不希望
我们的孩子进监狱。

哦,那是……哦,上帝。

但是这些
年轻人愿意

因为他们的信仰而坐牢。

我们正在与瑟古德
和 A.P. Tureaud 以及所有

与全国有色人种协进会的人合作。

但这是一个缓慢的举动。

我们仍然会在这里
试图进入大门,等待他们。

(笑声)

PM:你说的是瑟古德·马歇尔
吗?

LC:瑟古德·马歇尔。
但我爱瑟古德。

他是一个很好的运动。

他们想在
不冒犯任何人的情况下这样做。

我永远不会忘记 A.P. Tureaud:

“但你不能冒犯白人。

不要冒犯他们。”

但这些年轻人并不在意。

他们说,“我们要去。
准备好与否,我们要这样做。”

所以我们必须支持他们。

这些是我们认识的孩子,
正义的孩子。

我们不得不帮助他们。

PM:他们带来了改变。
LC:他们带来了改变。

你知道,这很难,

但有时你会做一些
艰难的事情来做出改变。

PM:你已经看到
了很多这样的变化。

餐厅是一座桥梁。

你一直是
过去和现在之间的桥梁,

但你不活在过去,对吗?

你非常活在当下。

LC:这就是你今天要告诉
年轻人的话。

好吧,你可以抗议,

但把过去抛在脑后。

我不能让你
为你祖父的所作所为负责。

那是你的祖父。

我必须在此基础上再接再厉。

我必须做出改变。

我不能呆在那里说,

“哦,好吧,看看他们当时对我们

做了什么。看看他们现在对我们做了什么。”

不,你记得,

但这会让你继续前进,

但你不会每天都在竖琴。

你移动

,你移动是为了改变

,每个人都应该参与。

我的孩子们说,

“妈妈,不要搞政治,”你知道。

(笑声)

“不要搞政治,因为你知道
我们不喜欢那样。”

但是你今天必须是政治的。

你必须参与其中。

成为系统的一部分。

看看当我们不能
成为系统的一部分时是怎样的。

当达奇莫里亚尔成为市长时,

非裔美国人社区的感受就不同了。

我们感受到了事物的一部分。

现在我们有了一个市长。

我们觉得我们属于。

Moon在Dutch来之前就尝试过了。

PM:Landrieu 市长的父亲
Moon Landrieu。

LC:兰德里厄市长的父亲,
他冒着巨大的

风险将非裔美国人安置在市政厅。


为此受了很长时间的鞭挞,

但他是一个有远见的人

,他做了那些他
知道会帮助这座城市的事情。

他知道我们必须参与进来。

所以这就是我们必须做的。

我们不强调这一点。

我们只是继续前进

,米奇,你知道,
我一直告诉穆恩,

“你做了一件好事,”

但米奇做了一件比你更大、
比你更好的事。

当他把那些雕像拉下来时,

我说:“孩子,你疯了!”

(掌声)

你疯了。

但这是一个很好的政治举措。

你知道,当我看到
P.T. Beauregard 下来,

我正坐着看新闻

,这让
我很震惊。

对我来说,这与种族无关。
这是一个政治举措。

我非常愤怒,第二天早上

我回到那个厨房

,我说,来吧,拿起
你的裤子,我们去上班,

因为你会被抛在后面。

这就是你必须做的。

你必须改变人们,

改变他们所做的事情。

它将
为这座城市带来可见度。

所以你得到了那种可见性——
继续前进,提升自己,

做你必须做的事,

并且把它做好。

这就是我们所做的一切。

这就是我尝试做的所有事情。

PM:但你刚刚给出
了弹性的公式。 对?

所以你显然是
我们在任何地方都能找到韧性的最好例子,

所以你一定有什么想法——

LC:我喜欢情感力量。

我喜欢有情感
和体力的人

,也许这对我不利。

我最喜欢的将军
是乔治巴顿。

你知道,那不是太酷。

(笑声)

PM:令人惊讶。

LC:我把乔治巴顿
挂在我的餐厅里,

因为我想记住。

他为自己设定了目标

,他将
着手实现这些目标。

他从未停止过。

我一直记得他的话:

“领导,跟随,或者让开。”

现在,我不能领导——

(掌声)

我不能成为领导,

但我可以跟随一个好的领导,

但我不会让路。

(掌声)

但这正是你必须做的。

(掌声)

如果你不能领导,

领导需要追随者,

所以如果我在上面帮助你,
我会骑你的燕尾服,

我骑过的燕尾服我数不清。

(笑声)

喂饱你。 你会帮助我的。

(笑声)

这就是生活的意义所在。

每个人都可以做一些事情,

但请参与进来。

做一点事。

我们必须
在这个城市,在所有城市做的事情——

妈妈们今天必须开始做妈妈。

你懂?

他们必须开始理解——

当你把这个孩子带到这个世界上时,

你必须把它变成一个男人,

你必须把它变成一个女人

,这需要一些努力。

这需要牺牲。

也许你不会有长指甲,
也许你不会有漂亮的头发。

但是那个孩子会在移动

,这就是你必须做的。

我们必须集中精力

教育这些孩子,让他们
了解这一切。

我不想告诉你们,先生们,

这需要
一个好女人才能做到。

要做到这一点,需要一个好女人。

(掌声)

男人可以尽自己的一份力。

另一部分是只做
你必须做的事情

并把它带回家,

但我们可以处理剩下的

,我们会处理剩下的。

如果你是一个好女人,你可以做到这一点。

PM:你首先在这里听到的。

我们可以处理剩下的。

LC:我们可以处理剩下的事情。

蔡斯夫人,非常感谢你——

LC:谢谢。

PM:感谢
你从你每天在这个社区所做的工作中抽出时间。

LC:但你
不知道这对我有什么作用。

当我看到所有这些人
并聚在一起时——

人们从世界各地来到我的厨房

我有人来自伦敦,

现在这种情况发生在我身上两次。

首先来了一个人,我不知道
他为什么来这里——

每年,厨师们都会做一个
叫做“厨师慈善”的活动。

好吧,碰巧
我是那里唯一的女人,

也是

那个舞台上唯一一个做这些示威的非裔美国人,在

我看到
另一个女人也上来之前我不会离开。

我不会上去——他们
会把我带到那里,

直到你把另一个女人带到这里。

(笑声)

所以他们现在又多了一个,
这样我就可以下台了。

但这个人来自伦敦。

所以在那之后,我
在我的厨房里找到了那个人。

他来到我的厨房

,说:“我
想问你一个问题。”

好吧,我以为我要问
一些关于食物的问题。

“为什么所有这些白人都
在你身边?”

(笑声)

什么?

(笑声)

我无法理解。

他无法理解这一点。

我说:“我们一起工作。

这就是我们在这个城市的生活方式。

我可能永远不会去你家,
你可能永远不会来我家。

但说到工作,

比如
为这所特殊学校筹集资金,

我们 聚在一起。

这就是我们要做的。

还有另一个女人,一个穿着优雅的女人,

大约一个月前在我的厨房里。

她说,“我不
明白我在你的餐厅里看到了什么。”

我说,“ 你看到了

什么 改善你的城市

,改善你的国家。

我们只需要团结起来工作
,这就是我们在这个城市所做的事情。

我们在这里是一群奇怪的人。

(笑声)

没有人了解我们,

但我们很好地养活了你。

( 笑声)

(掌声)

(欢呼声)

谢谢。

(掌声)