WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Saturday told graduates of a leading historically Black university that American history “has not always been a fairy tale” and that “racism has long torn us apart.” But on the nation’s best days, he said, “enough of us have the guts and the heart to stand up for the best in us.”
As Biden spoke, more than a dozen cap-and-gowned Howard University students stood with their backs to him holding handmade signs in silent protest over what they said were many forms of white supremacist violence.
In his speech, Biden described the 2017 white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Va., which he has said helped compel him to run for president in 2020.
Hate “never goes away” and “silence is complicity,” he said.
“We know that American history has not always been a fairy tale,” Biden said, describing a constant “push and pull” between the idea that at all people are created equal and “the harsh reality that racism has long torn us apart.”