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EASTER
Prof. Dr. Ing. Libor Brom
Scientists claim that man is nothing but an accidental accumulation of odd material put together during a very brief fragment
of time, doomed ultimately to disintegrate. The human body, they say, is composed of one octillion atoms, and three trillion
of such atoms would form the period at the end of this sentence. They add that an atom is not actual material. If enlarged
to one hundred meters in diameter, its contents would amount to waves moving with the speed of light, or faster, and the socalled
material in such an extended atom would be no more than a pinhead.
Scientists do not tell us what man is. Jesus Christ does. And He tells us how to live. That our thoughts and deeds must follow
the example He gave during His short Journey on earth. That as children of God we have been given eternal life through His
death and resurrection.
Christ could have saved the octillion atoms found in His human form. He could have made a compromise with Satan. He could
have retracted His teachings and denied His heritage before Pilate. He could have surrendered to the momentary doubts on the
Cross and shown Himself to be another ordinary bewildered mortal. But Jesus chose to do otherwise. He accepted the Cross and
left it as an example of Manhood.
There is no greater Love than the Cross. There is no greater Holy Day than the Resurrection.
Freely translated from:
Libor Brom. Utokem. Mnichov-Hartford-Melbourne: Komenskeho Svetova Rada, l9B3.
Prof. Dr. Ing. Libor Brom
Commitment or Holocaust
Prof. Dr. Ing. Libor Brom
From speach on the Woodlands Conference on Capital Preservation - A Discussion on the Economy, Politics and Defence of a Free
Society in Woodlands Inn and Country Club, Houston, Texas in August 30, 1980, titled: "From Liberalism to Authoritarianism;
Empirico-Ethical Parameters" and from "Where is your America?" by IMPRIMIS of Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, Michigan, 49242
Vol 11, No. 8., August 1982
We ask ourselves who has caused the protracted holocaust in the world. Could it be that for evil to win only one thing is
necessary‹good people who do nothing? Or that the hottest places in hell are reserved for those who, at the time of
moral crisis, retain their neutrality?
True, there are people in our world who have lost their moral perspective. Human knowledge has become vast and unmanageable.
Astronomy has revealed a world beyond the imagination of man, physics a universe in the atom, biology a microcosm in every
cell, physiology mysteries in every organ, and psychology dark secrets in every dream. Theology has crumbled, technology has
exploded, economics has shattered, and politics has inflamed the world. The scientific specialist knows more and more about
less and less, the philosophic generalist knows less and less about more and more, and both have put their blinders on to
shut out any moral decision. The door is opened wide for a lasting holocaust.
Knowledge has to be man's prime instrument for action and survival.
Introductions that enumerate the institutions of learning where I have earned my degrees amuse me. They miss the most important
school and the most influential teachers I have ever had‹my home and my parents. They were simple, hard-working people
who had little time and very few luxuries to give. They did give me, however, their personal example and a firm springboard
from which to jump into the world of confusion, terror, and war which followed. They professed one simple basic belief: Something
is either good or bad, it is either decent or indecent, it serves either God or the devil, and most important they believed
that it was my duty to find out what is right and what is wrong. This was what their education was all about.
Yes, education is a stratified totality. First, education is facts. Second, it is concepts based upon these facts. Third,
it is a decision based upon facts and concepts‹a personal decision as to what is right or wrong. Without this moral
decision education is worthless.
When we fail to make decisions, someone else will make them for us. In times of intimidation, revolution, and war this "someone''
is more apt to be the mobs in the streets who care little for facts or concepts. The result is tyranny.
If freedom and democracy are to survive, it will take a miracle‹a miracle that only dedication and commitment can bring
about. After the technological and intellectual revolutions, a moral revolution is necessary.
When trapped in a world of indolence, incompetence and impotence, when challenged by ambivalence, arrogance and aggression,
when you feel insignificant, you can and must do your duty!
You know the needs of your family, your neighbor, your town, your state and your community. You have here a duty to perform.
lt is not important that others are bad, lazy, and dishonest. It is important that you are good, diligent, and honest. It
is not important that others lie, scheme, and destroy. It is important that you are hard at work to maintain our democracy,
justice, and peace.
There is no time to waste. The revolutionary forces shaking the earth have converged upon us, presenting us with difficult
choices‹with a need for action, for ideas, for concerted and sustained commitment as a nation and as individuals.
We must meet the challenge with the conviction of our beliefs. We must remember that as Americans‹by birth or by choice‹we
are heirs to a permanent, continuing, liberating revolution. Our great ancestors left us an unparalleled moral and political
weapon that we must share with the suffering peoples of the world.
In April 1945, the Second World War was coming to an end. In Central Europe great numbers of people were still dying. In our
village fifty hostages had been taken by Nazi soldiers. I was among them. orders had been given for ten of us to be executed
each time one of their retreating soldiers was killed by our guerrillas. Being first in the alphabet, I found myself in a
courtyard facing two soldiers armed with machine guns, not knowing if I had one minute, ten seconds, five seconds to live.
Almost unknowingly, I began to pray, a prayer of thanksgiving to God, that if I had not lived for a noble cause He was now
giving me the opportunity at least to die for a noble cause‹to die in resistance to the tyranny and misery represented
in those two Nazi soldiers. Happiness momentarily filled my being‹ finally my life made some sense.
Without any advance warning, the guards were ordered to take me back to jail. Eventually we were released. From that moment
on I have believed in miracles.
Only those who are willing to die for a noble cause are fit to live.
I believe there is a great difference between Americans and the people of other countries. Whenever I travel I recognize this
difference. These people have a dream, a sense that there exists a powerful force capable of leading the world to justice
and peace. They are aware that there is a unique society in the world where God has put together all nationalities' races,
and interests of the globe for one purpose‹to show the rest of the world how to live. The dream around the world, in
spite of all contrary propaganda, is America.
I ask you, where is your America?
Prof. Dr. Ing. Libor Brom
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