Read My Pins (13 page)

Read Read My Pins Online

Authors: Madeleine Albright

BOOK: Read My Pins
9.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

DAVID KARP
Speaking on Middle East peace at the National Press Club. My dove was flying, but I felt faint.

UPI
Dinner with Israeli Prime Minister Rabin, whose assassination in 1995 was a profound tragedy.

I wore the dove pin again when paying my respects to the victims of genocide in Rwanda, 1997.
Peace dove and necklace, Cécile et Jeanne.

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE/USIS

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE/USIS

Diplomatic negotiations often proceeded more slowly than hoped. I stocked up on turtles to signify my impatience and wore the crab when aggravated.
Crab, Vertige.

In the three years that followed, I devoted more time to the Middle East than to any other region, as did President Clinton. Although I often wore the dove, I found cause—when displeased with the pace of negotiations—to substitute a turtle, a snail, or, when truly aggravated, a crab. Sadly, none of the pins proved equal to their assigned task. Today, long after Mrs. Rabin’s hope-filled gesture, the dove remains in need of reinforcements.

The frustrations of Middle East diplomacy were a constant reminder of the responsibilities that come with the job of secretary of state. I loved representing the United States but never stopped wondering how well I would measure up; thus I never stopped working. This attitude was reflected in a pin I had bought in Paris, made of gilt metal and wrought into a stylized Atlas holding up the Earth. I felt that America’s duty was not to try to do everything itself, but to foster a sense of commitment that would bring out the best in every country. My intent in wearing the pin—which I took only to the most important meetings—was to indicate to my colleagues that, collectively, we had the weight of the world on our shoulders. As a joke, my diplomatic security team made up a T-shirt that portrayed me as Atlas, a role with which I would have been uncomfortable for two reasons: First, in most early depictions, Atlas appears naked; second, his actual task in Greek mythology was not to hold up the Earth—which was considered flat—but to hold up the heavens. Although my spirit would have been willing, I am much too short for that.

other designers unknown.

two purple, black, and gold turtles, Isabel Canovas;

two purple, black, and gold turtles, Isabel Canovas;

other designers unknown.

Black and white turtle, Lea Stein;

two purple, black, and gold turtles, Isabel Canovas;

Other books

Drawing Blood by C.D. Breadner
Tainted Blood by Sowles, Joann I. Martin
Finally My Forever by Brooke St. James
The Alien Years by Robert Silverberg
Power of Three by Diana Wynne Jones
The MacGregor's Lady by Grace Burrowes
Wild Within (Wild at Heart #1) by Christine Hartmann