Speech
by Dr. Li Ka-shing
At the Dedication Ceremony of the Li Ka Shing Building
Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy,
National University of Singapore
September 4, 2007
Minister Mentor Lee, Distinguished Guests, School
Officials, Faculty and Students:
It is an honour to be here - to join with you in celebrating
the mission of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy.
I believe in the future of this institution and in its mission
to be a centre of excellence for research and education in the field
of public policy and public management. I am pleased to be part
of this noble endeavor. Success here will be defined by the influence
of those who learn here. It will be defined by their service to
others. It will be defined by their influence in their communities
and nations.
To choose to serve your people as their best friend and devoted
servant is a most noble and conscious choice; it requires the very
best you have to give. To be a leader, your life, your energy -
the gifts you have been given are dedicated to others. And this
is no easy task. It is humbling. It is fatiguing. But it could also
be rewarding in your enduring influence.
Now, what will that influence be? Will you be known for your honesty?
Will you be known for your dedication to justice? Will you be known
for your efforts to promote peace and opportunity? Will you be an
influence for hope? Will you be a champion of freedom and a voice
for the silent? Will you have the courage to stand for what is right
even if that is not what is popular? Will you be incorruptible and
strong enough to stare down the temptation of ambition and unprincipled
wealth?
Your life will become a monument to your vision. It will endure
and be inscribed in history in the same way that the life of Pericles,
the honest Athenian statesman, is remembered. Pericles said that
great leaders have their vision of what to do and know how to articulate
it. And they are incorruptible. He said, "What you leave behind
is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into
the lives of others."
This is more than a principle for me. It is a life well lived.
And achieving it is the objective of this school - a school
which takes the name of a man who is internationally respected and
has dedicated his own life to serving others, to building a nation
of peace, opportunity, and promise.
Finally I like to share with you this: in my own life, the observance
of the purist principle of self governance is to do more than is
required and less than is allowed. It has always held me in good
stead. I believe it will for everyone as well.
Thank you.
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