Thank
you, Mr. President,
Before
I begin, I want to thank Ambassador Dapkiunas and the government of Belarus for
the special tree planting ceremony that took place earlier.
Seventy-five
years ago, at the dawn of the Second World War, Europe was locked in the grip
of tyranny. Hitler’s Reich had already conquered huge
swaths of Europe and the shadow of oppression grew day by day as the Nazis subjugated,
devastated, and exterminated anyone they deemed different and
inferior.
With
the forces of fascism advancing, the Allied forces knew they had no choice but to
liberate Europe from the grip of tyranny.
History and circumstance called for
bravery and a generation of men and women answered the call.
To paraphrase Winston Churchill, they fought on the beaches,
they fought on the landing grounds, they fought in the fields and in the
streets, they fought in the hills; they never surrendered.
We owe our freedom to the courage and determination of the
Allied armies - the United States, Great Britain, the Soviet Union, Canada,
France, and other countries - that fought to restore freedom to Europe.
The nations that joined together to defeat the Nazis did not
always agree, but despite their political differences they knew that evil had
to be stopped.
The losses were immense – the Russians alone lost over 20
million people. It was a terrible price
to pay. They stood up to the forces
of nature and stood up to the Nazi’s evil human nature. The people
of Israel will never ever forget the bravery and sacrifices made by the Russian
people.
Today we honor all those who made victory possible.
Some of those people - the veterans - are here with us today. We also mourn the
tens of millions of victims of history’s darkest hour.
Mr.
President,
For
Israel and the Jewish people, World War II is synonymous with the Holocaust. Families were torn apart, vibrant
communities destroyed, and one third of the Jewish people – including one
million children – were murdered.
We
are still haunted by the devastation. The
numbers tattooed on the arms of our parents and grandparents are an enduring reminder
of the horrors that they suffered – of a time when a person was a number rather
than someone’s father or brother or son.
The
hands of time now threaten to cloud the world’s memory. With every passing year, the number of
survivors, veterans, and witnesses left to recount their first-hand experiences
diminishes. And so the responsibility
falls to us to ensure that the lessons of history are passed to future
generations.
Mr.
President,
Freedom
is once again under attack. The radical Islamists marching across the Middle East
and North Africa are every bit as determined and dangerous as the Nazi forces
that marched across Europe.
Seventy-five years ago men, women, and children were rounded
up and murdered because of what they believed, where they came from, how they
looked, and whom they loved. The same
crimes are taking place in the Middle East.
Activists and political
opponents are being silenced, homosexuals are being hanged, and Christians are
being beheaded.
Make
no mistake, evil is alive and well – and not just in the Middle East. In the
heart of civilized Europe, angry mobs can be heard chanting “Gas the Jews,”
firebombs have been thrown at synagogues, young men are afraid to walk down the
street wearing a kippah, and a kosher grocery store is targeted for attack.
The
writing is on the wall. Former Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem Begin once said, “If an enemy…says he seeks to destroy
us, believe him. Don’t doubt him for a moment.”
History has
taught us that Jewish lives can never be entrusted to another people or another
nation. We must always be able to defend
ourselves by ourselves. The State of
Israel is the fulfillment of that promise.
Never again will Jews be rounded up like cattle
and marched to their death. Never again
will the world think that Jews can be targeted with impunity.
Mr.
President,
We
know the evil that man is capable of and we know that some things are worth
fighting for.
Freedom
is worth fighting for. Equality is worth
fighting for. Democracy is worth
fighting for.
Seventy
years ago, a generation of men and women sacrificed in war so that we would
inherit freedom, equality, and democracy.
We cannot allow those sacrifices to be in vain. With courage and conviction we must now fight
for the ideals for which they lived and died.
General
Douglas Macarthur once said: “We have known the bitterness of defeat and the
exultation of triumph, and from both we have learned there can be no turning
back. We must go forward to preserve in peace what we won in war.”
The
time has come for us to be united in purpose, united in valor, and united as
nations – so that we too may pass the gifts of freedom, equality, and democracy
to our children and grandchildren.
Thank you, Mr. President.