[Congressional Record Volume 145, Number 94 (Tuesday, June 29, 1999)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E1425]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ARE YOU AN AMERICAN? THOUGHTS FOR INDEPENDENCE DAY
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HON. JIM McDERMOTT
of washington
in the house of representatives
Tuesday, June 29, 1999
Mr. McDERMOTT. Mr. Speaker, while participating in the recent
Memorial Day observance at Veterans Memorial Cemetery in my District, I
was privileged to hear an inspired essay about what it means to be an
American. This essay was composed and presented by Elizabeth [Liz]
Bokan, a student at Washington Middle School in Seattle. Many of us in
the audience were deeply moved by Ms. Bokan's eloquence. Her words lend
us confidence that our future as a nation is in the good hands of
enthusiastic and creative younger generations.
Mr. Speaker, many of us will celebrate Independence Day by
participating in naturalization ceremonies, helping to welcome new
citizens to our ranks. I proudly offer Ms. Bokan's essay to all my
colleagues as we return to our districts to renew the bonds that hold
us together as a nation this July 4th.
Are You an American?
Are you an American? Ask yourself this, and you come upon
the easy answer, well yes, I am an American, as I am a
citizen of America. But I ask you, is there not more to being
an American? And how does a true patriot respond to pressure
on one's beliefs, while maintaining the presence of mind that
is characteristic of being an American?
In my school, I have been taking a class on American
History. The truth will always hurt, no less in the sense of
what this country great. I have learned of battles fought,
and unnecessary blood spilled, and to what cause? Yet reading
these texts, and seeing these illustrations of great American
heroes, one thing seems to shine through. The pride
individuals appear to hold in their home, in their title, and
in their love for themselves and their people. Does that not
signify that these people were very much Americans? But does
each and every person have to measure up to the incredible
genius of Abraham Lincoln and Benjamin Franklin simply to be
called an American?
We are by name the country that accepts the unwanted of
other societies; the Statue of Liberty asks for the sick and
poor of the rest of the dismal world to travel to America,
the land of the free. It is said that we have lost our
charity, and our openness to the rest of the world's
outcasts, and yet do we not open our lives and hearts to the
immigrants that come to us searching for a better life, for
the ``American Dream''? One of the magics that is America is
the diversity of culture, accepting any and all customs, and
yet still adopting them as valid Americans.
We have known what it is like to be the underdog, we have
felt the ridicule of the rest of the world, and the pressures
of an often losing struggle to overcome all odds, against us,
and we continue to offer our support to those who feel the
stress we felt, and more. And each and every one of those
people we bring in as our own call themselves Americans, yet
are they believed by the majority? In our society today,
there is great conflict on every issue that could possibly be
argued over, and people speak of the destruction of the
American spirit. Yet the fact being overlooked is that the
basis of the American way of life is within discord; we have
the American right to disagree. But that discord brings about
a people of accord, does it not? Through the wars fought and
the policies enacted, we have always agreed to disagree in
one way or another, and that leads to a harmony of the
people.
But does an American necessarily have to be a hero, or a
recently discovered patriot? Think of the thousands of
soldiers whose names you've never heard, of the ones who have
died for this country in the last 200 or so years, and of
those who survived, who make sure these heroes can live on in
American hearts. Think of the average working citizens, those
who hold strict morals for themselves and those around them,
who live their lives maybe raising a farm and a family. These
people proudly call themselves Americans, and we believe
them. Why? The truth is, Americans are people who will die
for their country, who will stand up for their rights and
those of the oppressed. Sure, it may be done with fear in
their hearts, but is fear not also an American standard? We
thrive on it, and have never felt the need to deny ourselves
of it. The people we embrace and those who do the embracing
are Americans. It is a state of mind to be an American, it is
a love and joy in our freedom. I am an American, and if I
could, I would tell the world, but it is enough to know that
I can, I have the right to, and that absolutely no one can
stop my love of the American spirit which I call my own.
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