
This June 7, 2012 file photo shows director Steven Spielberg at the AFI Life Achievement Award Honoring Shirley MacLaine at Sony Studios in Culver City, Calif. Spielberg will make the keynote remarks at the 149th commemoration of “The Gettysburg Address,” while his new movie about President Abraham Lincoln is in theaters. Spielberg's speech on Monday, Nov. 19, at Soldier's National Cemetery in Gettysburg will be accompanied by a recitation of the famous speech by a Lincoln re-enactor. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP, file)
"I’ve never stood anyplace on earth where it’s easier to be humbled than here," said Spielberg, whose biopic about the 16th president is currently in theaters.
His remarks were made at the annual event at the Soldier’s National Cemetery in Gettysburg, near the site where Lincoln gave the famous oration amid the American Civil War in 1863, four months after the battle in which the Union turned back an invasion of the North by Confederate troops under Gen. Robert E. Lee.
After spending seven years working his new movie "Lincoln," Spielberg said the president came to feel like one of his oldest and dearest friends, and he sensed he was living in the presence of what he called Lincoln’s "eloquent ghost."
"Lincoln wanted us to understand that equality was a small ‘D’ democratic essential," Spielberg said, describing Lincoln’s three-minute speech as "his best and truest voice" and the single "most perfect prose poem ever penned by an American."
Carl Sandberg, in his biography of Lincoln, described it as a speech about how democracy is worth fighting for.
"It had the dream touch of vast and furious events epitomized for any foreteller to read what was to come," Sandberg wrote. "His cadences sang the ancient song that where there is freedom men have fought and sacrificed for it, and that freedom is worth men’s dying for."
As part of the event, 16 newly minted Americans from 11 countries took the oath of allegiance to become U.S. citizens.
Spielberg spoke of the interplay between history and memory, and between memory and justice.
"It’s the hunger we feel for coherence, it’s the hunger we feel for progress for a better world," he said. "I think justice and memory are inseparable."
The crowd, estimated at 9,000, gave him a standing ovation.
Penn State film major Alison Golanoski, 19, from Gettysburg, said afterward that Spielberg’s passion for Lincoln came through.
"He was very invested in Lincoln as a person, and his personality," Golanoski said. "I loved all of it."
The 150th year since the battle will be marked in 2013, particularly around the battle’s anniversary in early July.
"Lincoln," which stars Daniel Day-Lewis in the title role, concentrates on the period leading up to the president’s assassination in 1865.










-----'mysteriously overlooking'-----
the 200th Anniversary of teh defeat of Napoleonic Globalism
at Moscow
----the 100th Anniversary of the Jekyl Island banking coup
against teh American Republic
----thew 40th Anniversary of the Rockefeller-Nixon---MAO
handover summit
----and the -------60th Anniversary--------- of the
RED China, Globalism, mind control and EUGENICS
'unfriendly'
-----------------KOREAN WAR------------------
LOOK at what's unfoldign all around you.
STEER CLEAR the PC moral alibis of Spielberg and
franchise slum Hollywood generally.
This is the 11th hour. . .