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Quotes about Liberation

I'm not advocating a competition for who has it toughest. The caste systems of sex and race are interdependent and can only be uprooted together. It's time to take equal pride in breaking all the barriers.
— Gloria Steinem
I have always claimed America didn't want a drink as bad as they wanted the right to take a drink if they did happen to want one.
— Will Rogers
He who has conquered weakness, and has put away all selfish thoughts, belongs neither to oppressor nor oppressed. He is free.
— James Allen
cease to be a slave to self, and no man will have the power to enslave you. As
— James Allen
Relegating women to second-class citizenship was abolished when Jesus died on the cross.
— Tony Campolo
The hardness of God is kinder than the softness of men, and His compulsion is our liberation.
— CS Lewis
Without passion, men are not willing to pay any price or bear any burden to set the captives free.
— Joseph Campbell
The most noble cause known to man is the liberation of the human mind and spirit.
— Maya Angelou
We walked slowly along the road leading from the camp. Soon our legs hurt and threatened to buckle. But we limped on; we wanted to see the camp's surroundings for the first time with the eyes of free men. Freedom - we repeated to ourselves, and yet we could not grasp it. We had said this word so often during all the years we dreamed about it, that it had lost its meaning. Its reality did not penetrate into our consciousness; we could not grasp the fact that freedom was ours.
— Viktor E. Frankl
I do think that it is impossible to do Christian theology with integrity in America without asking the question, What has the gospel to do with the black struggle for liberation?
— James H. Cone
Luke's Gospel was clear: Jesus's ministry was essentially liberation on behalf of the poor and the oppressed. I didn't need a doctorate in theology to know that liberation defined the heart of Jesus's ministry. Black people had been preaching and singing about it for centuries.
— James H. Cone
Christian theology is for the liberation of all humanity, and it could never be neutral in the fight against oppression. That much I knew. And that was how A Black Theology of Liberation was born: with the spirit of Martin and Malcolm, Jimmy, and the black poets of the 1960s.
— James H. Cone