Sargent Shriver Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy the top 49 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Sargent Shriver.
Famous Quotes By Sargent Shriver

In the Peace Corps, the volunteer must be a fully developed, mature person. He must not join to run abroad or escape problems. — Sargent Shriver

Jews have suffered persecution from misguided Christians who tortured the Jews for their part in killing Christ. These Christians forgot that Christ died because of the sins of all men. — Sargent Shriver

It is precisely our job as Catholics to speak the truth as plainly and precisely as we can. — Sargent Shriver

If education does not create a need for the best in life, then we are stuck in an undemocratic, rigid caste society. — Sargent Shriver

My parents were second cousins. That is enough to explain all of my peculiarities. — Sargent Shriver

Peace requires the simple but powerful recognition that what we have in common as human beings is more important and crucial than what divides us. — Sargent Shriver

The Peace Corps would give thousands of young Americans a chance to see at first hand the conditions in remote areas of the world. — Sargent Shriver

I want to warn anyone who sees the Peace Corps as an alternative to the draft that life may well be easier at Fort Dix or at apost in Germany than it will be with us. — Sargent Shriver

The Peace Corps is guilty of enthusiasm and a crusading spirit. But we're not apologetic about it. — Sargent Shriver

Racists are irrational and illogical in their attempts to justify their prejudices. — Sargent Shriver

Racism cannot be cured solely by attacking some of the results it produces, like discrimination in housing or in education. — Sargent Shriver

I can remember at college, living on 30-cent meals. — Sargent Shriver

The Peace Corps represents some, if not all, of the best virtues in this society. It stands for everything that America has ever stood for. It stands for everything we believe in and hope to achieve in the world. — Sargent Shriver

When Roosevelt came along, I approved of his program, generally. I figured an economic system should work for people, not vice versa. — Sargent Shriver

Joe Kennedy isn't in the habit of having incompetents around. I wouldn't have lasted three months if I didn't have some ability. — Sargent Shriver

It is well to be prepared for life as it is, but it is better to be prepared to make life better than it is. — Sargent Shriver

As far as I was concerned, the Depression was an ill wind that blew some good. If it hadn't occurred, my parents would have given me my college education. As it was, I had to scrabble for it. — Sargent Shriver

We must treat the disease of racism. This means we must understand the disease. — Sargent Shriver

The natural idealism of youth is an idealism, alas, for which we do not always provide as many outlets as we should. — Sargent Shriver

Just to travel is rather boring, but to travel with a purpose is educational and exciting. — Sargent Shriver

The roots of racism lie deep in man's nature, wounded and bruised by original sin. — Sargent Shriver

The only genuine elite is the elite of those men and women who gave their lives to justice and charity. — Sargent Shriver

Working in an underdeveloped land for two or three years, the volunteer will often find that his work is routine and full of frustration. — Sargent Shriver

He who knows all things and believes nothing is damned. — Sargent Shriver

What can change the world today is the same thing that has changed it in the past-an idea and the service of dedicated, committed individuals to that idea. — Sargent Shriver

Respect for another man's opinion is worthy. It is the realization that any opinion is valuable, for it is the sign of a rational being. — Sargent Shriver

If a young person has any idealism at all, it's strongest about the time he finishes college. — Sargent Shriver

Does politics have to be injected into everything? — Sargent Shriver

It's the most rewarding thing to be a civil servant. — Sargent Shriver

I don't think the Gallup Poll technique is going to be very helpful in determining the goals of our educational system. — Sargent Shriver

Any idealist who tries to join the Peace Corps must realize he is not going to change the world overnight. — Sargent Shriver

I believe strongly in the Constitutional principle of separating church and state. Our founders were right in fearing that religious freedom would be threatened in the long run by a departure from governmental neutrality in spiritual matters. — Sargent Shriver

Shatter the glass. In our society that is so self-absorbed, begin to look less at yourself and more at each other. Learn more about the face of your neighbor and less about your own. — Sargent Shriver

My parents had always preached the virtues of hard work. But hard work is one thing; economic struggle is another. — Sargent Shriver

I do not think that the educational program of our schools should be determined by what the community thinks it needs. — Sargent Shriver

The most important thing that I know about living is love. Nothing surpasses the benefits received by a human being who makes compassion and love the objective of his or her life. For it is only by compassion and love that anyone fulfills successfully their own life's journey. Nothing equals love. — Sargent Shriver

I don't have to run the Peace Corps. I could live without seeing my picture in the newspapers and without being interviewed. — Sargent Shriver

A line has to be drawn somewhere between what is essential and what is peripheral. — Sargent Shriver

I never ride just to ride. I ride to catch a fox. I play baseball to make the team. — Sargent Shriver

It is not what you get out of life that counts. It's what you give and what is given from the heart. — Sargent Shriver

One of the things Mr. Kennedy taught me was that in laying out a new project, you shouldn't try to cope with every little problem. — Sargent Shriver

Do the job first. Worry about the clearance later. — Sargent Shriver

Do we talk about the dignity of work? Do we give our students any reason for believing it is worthwhile to sacrifice for their work because such sacrifices improve the psychological and mental health of the person who makes them? — Sargent Shriver

Serve, serve, serve. Because in the end, it will be the servants who save us all. — Sargent Shriver

The cure is care. Caring for others is the practice of peace. Caring becomes as important as curing. Caring produces the cure, not the reverse. Caring about nuclear war and its victims is the beginning of a cure for our obsession with war. Peace does not comes through strength. Quite the opposite: Strength comes through peace. The practices of peace strengthen us for every vicissitude ... The task is immense! — Sargent Shriver