This is a must-read for EVERY parent. It is
more relevant now than ever...
********************************************
The Soft American
By John F. Kennedy
Beginning more than 2,500 years ago, from all quarters of
the Greek world men thronged every four years to the sacred
grove of Olympia, under the shadow of Mount Cronus, to
compete in the most famous athletic contests of history—the
Olympian games.
During the contest a sacred truce was observed among all the
states of Greece as the best athletes of the Western world
competed in boxing and foot races, wrestling and chariot
races for the wreath of wild olive which was the prize of
victory. When the winners returned to their home cities to
lay the Olympian crown in the chief temples they were
greeted as heroes and received rich rewards. For the Greeks
prized physical excellence and athletic skills among man's
greatest goals and among the prime foundations of a vigorous
state.
Thus the same civilizations which produced some of our
highest achievements of philosophy and drama, government and
art, also gave us a belief in the importance of physical
soundness which has become a part of Western tradition; from
the mens sana in corpore sano of the Romans to the British
belief that the playing fields of Eaton brought victory on
the battlefields of Europe. This knowledge, the knowledge
that the physical well-being of the citizen is an important
foundation for the vigor and vitality of all the activities
of the nation, is as old as Western civilization itself. But
it is a knowledge which today, in American, we are in danger
of forgetting.
The first indication of a decline in the physical strength
and ability of young Americans became apparent among United
States soldiers in the early stages of the Korean War. The
second came when figures were released showing that almost
one out of every two young American was being rejected by
Selective Service as mentally, morally or physically unfit.
But the most startling demonstration of the general physical
decline of American youth came when Dr. Hans Kraus and Dr.
Sonja Weber revealed the results of 15 years of research
centering in the Posture Clinic of New York's
Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital—results of physical fitness
tests given to 4,264 children in this country and 2,870
children in Austria, Italy and Switzerland.
The findings showed that despite our unparalleled standard
of living, despite our good food and our many playgrounds,
despite our emphasis on school athletics, American youth
lagged far behind Europeans in physical fitness. Six tests
for muscular strength and flexibility were given; 57.9% of
the American children failed one or more of these tests,
while only 8.7% of the European youngsters failed.
A Consistent Decline
Especially disheartening were the results of the five
strength tests: 35.7% of American children failed one or
more of these, while only 1.1% of the Europeans failed, and
among Austrian and Swiss youth the rate of failure was as
low as .5%.
As a result of the alarming Kraus-Weber findings President
Eisenhower created a Council on Youth Fitness at the Cabinet
level and appointed a Citizens Advisory Committee on the
Fitness of American Youth, composed of prominent citizens
interested in fitness. Over the past five years the physical
fitness of American youth has been discussed in forums, by
committees and in leading publications. A 10-point program
for physical fitness has been publicized and promoted. Our
schools have been urged to give increased attention to the
physical well-being of their students. Yet there has been no
noticeable improvement. Physical fitness tests conducted
last year in Britain and Japan showed that the youth of
those countries were considerably more fit than our own
children. And the annual physical fitness tests for freshman
at Yale University show a consistent decline in the prowess
of young American; 51& of the class of 1951 passed the
tests, 43% of the class of 1956 passed, and only 38%, a
little more than a third, of the class of 1960 succeeded, in
passing the not overly rigorous examination.
Of course, physical tests are not infallible. They can
distort the true health picture. There are undoubtedly many
American youths and adults whose physical fitness matches
and exceeds the best of other lands.
But the harsh fact of the matter is that there is also an
increasingly large number of young Americans who are
neglecting their bodies—whose physical fitness is not what
it should be—who are getting soft. And such softness on the
part of individual citizens can help to strip and destroy
the vitality of a nation.
For the physical vigor of our citizens is one of America's
most precious resources. If we waste and neglect this
resource, if we allow it to dwindle and grow soft then we
will destroy much of our ability to meet the great and vital
challenges which confront our people. We will be unable to
realize our full potential as a nation.
Throughout our history we have been challenged to armed
conflict by nations which sought to destroy our independence
or threatened our freedom. The young men of America have
risen to those occasions, giving themselves freely to the
rigors and hardships of warfare. But the stamina and
strength which the defense of liberty requires are not the
product of a few weeks' basic training or a month's
conditioning. These only come from bodies which have been
conditioned by a lifetime of participation in sports and
interest in physical activity. Our struggles against
aggressors throughout our history have been won on the
playgrounds and corner lots and fields of America.
Thus, in a very real and immediate sense, our growing
softness, our increasing lack of physical fitness, is a
menace to our security.
However, we do not, like the ancient Spartans, wish to train
the bodies of our youth to make them more effective
warriors. It is our profound hope and expectation that
Americans will never again have to expend their strength in
armed conflict.
But physical fitness is as vital to the activities of peace
as to those of war, especially when our success in those
activities may well determine the future of freedom in the
years to come. We face in the Soviet Union a powerful and
implacable adversary determined to show the world that only
the Communist system possesses the vigor and determination
necessary to satisfy awakening aspirations for progress and
the elimination of poverty and want. To meet the challenge
of this enemy will require determination and will and effort
on the part of all American. Only if our citizens are
physically fit will they be fully capable of such an effort.
For physical fitness is not only one of the most important
keys to a healthy body; it is the basis of dynamic and
creative intellectual activity. The relationship between the
soundness of the body and the activities of the mind is
subtle and complex. Much is not yet understood. But we do
know what the Greeks knew: that intelligence and skill can
only function at the peak of their capacity when the body is
healthy and strong; that hardy spirits and tough minds
usually inhabit sound bodies.
In this sense, physical fitness is the basis of all the
activities of our society. And if our bodies grow soft and
inactive, if we fail to encourage physical development and
prowess, we will undermine our capacity for thought, for
work and for the use of those skills vital to an expanding
and complex America.
Thus the physical fitness of our citizens is a vital
prerequisite to America's realization of its full potential
as a nation, and to the opportunity of each individual
citizen to make full and fruitful use of his capacities.
It is ironic that at a time when the magnitude of our
dangers makes the physical fitness of our citizens a matter
of increasing importance, it takes greater effort and
determination than ever before to build the strength of our
bodies. The age of leisure and abundance can destroy vigor
and muscle tone as effortlessly as it can gain time. Today
human activity, the labor of the human body, is rapidly
being engineered out of working life. By the 1970's,
according to many economists, the man who works with his
hands will be almost extinct.
Many of the routine physical activities which earlier
Americans took for granted are no longer part of our daily
life. A single look at the packed parking lot of the average
high school will tell us what has happened to the
traditional hike to school that helped to build young
bodies. The television set, the movies and the myriad
conveniences and distractions of modern life all lure our
young people away from the strenuous physical activity that
is the basis of fitness in youth and in later life.
Now is the Time
Of course, modern advances and increasing leisure can add
greatly to the comfort and enjoyment of life. But they must
not be confused with indolence, with, in the words of
Theodore Roosevelt, "slothful-ease," with an increasing
deterioration of our physical strength. For the strength of
our youth and the fitness of our adults are among our most
important assets, and this growing decline is a matter of
urgent concern to thoughtful Americans.
This is a national problem, and requires national action.
President Eisenhower helped show the way through his own
interest and by calling national attention to our
deteriorating standards of physical fitness. Now it is time
for the United States to move forward with a national
program to improve the fitness of all Americans.
First: We must establish a White House /Committee on Health
and Fitness to formulate and carry out a program to improve
the physical condition of the nation. This committee will
include the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare and
the Secretary of the Interior. The executive order creating
this committee will clearly state its purpose, and
coordinate its activities with the many federal programs
which bear a direct relation to the problem of physical
fitness.
Second: The physical fitness of our youth should be made a
direct responsibility of the Department of Health, Education
and Welfare. This department should conduct—through its
Office of Education and the National Institutes of
Health—research into the development of a physical fitness
program for the nation's public schools. The results of this
research shall be made freely available to all who are
interested. In addition, the Department of Health, Education
and Welfare should use all its existing facilities to attach
the lack of youth fitness as a major health problem.
Third: The governor of each state will be invited to attend
the annual National Youth Fitness Congress. This congress
will examine the progress which has been made in physical
fitness during the preceding year, exchange suggestions for
improving existing programs and provide an opportunity to
encourage the states to implement the physical fitness
program drawn up by the Department of Health, Education and
Welfare. Our states are anxious to participate in such
programs, to make sure that their youth have the opportunity
for full development of their bodies as well as their minds.
Fourth: The President and all departments of government must
make it clearly understood that the promotion of sports
participation and physical fitness is a basic and continuing
policy of the United States. By providing such leadership,
by keeping physical fitness in the forefront of the nation's
concerns, the federal government can make a substantial
contribution toward improving the health and vigor of our
citizens.
But no matter how vigorous the leadership of government, we
can fully restore the physical soundness of our nation only
if every American is willing to assume responsibility for
his own fitness and the fitness of his children. We do not
live in a regimented society where men are forced to live
their lives in the interest of the state. We are, all of us,
as free to direct the activities of our bodies as we are to
pursue the objects of our thought. But if we are to retain
this freedom, for ourselves and for generations to come,
then we must also be willing to work for the physical
toughness on which the courage and intelligence and skill of
man so largely depend.
All of us must consider our own responsibilities for the
physical vigor of our children and of the young men and
women of our community. We do not want our children to
become a generation of spectators. Rather, we want each of
them to be a participant in the vigorous life.