[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 161 (Wednesday, December 8, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8635-S8636]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WELCOMING HIS EXCELLENCY BRONISLAW KOMOROWSKI
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, on April 10, 2010, as word spread of the
tragic plane crash that killed President Lech Kaczynski, First Lady
Maria Kaczynski, and scores of other Polish patriots, Poles gathered by
the thousands outside St. John's Church in Warsaw, grieving for their
terrible loss. That loss was also felt around the world. On that
unspeakably sad day, I visited the Polish Consulate in Chicago to pay
my respects. People were streaming to the consulate from all over
Chicago and throughout the Midwest. They drove with Polish flags
proudly displayed on their cars and waited in long lines to sign the
condolence book, leave flowers, or simply whisper a prayer.
Days later, the U.S. Senate observed a moment of silence for all
those who lost their lives in the Katyn Forest in Smolensk and for the
heartbroken people of Poland. Some asked then: How will Poland survive
such a devastating loss?
The people of Poland did so by relying, as they always have, on
faith, family and freedom. On July 4, the Polish people chose their
fourth democratically elected leader. Today, that leader, President
Bronislaw Komorowski, is making his first visit as President of Poland
to the United States. We are honored he is here.
[[Page S8636]]
Mr. Komorowski is a descendent of Polish nobility, a historian by
training, and a lifelong freedom fighter. He took part in his first
anti-Communist protests as a high school student in 1968. As a young
man, he defied communist authorities by lighting candles and posting
banners at the Katyn section of the historic Powazki Cemetery in
Warsaw, the resting place of many Polish heroes. He served as Poland's
defense minister in 2000 and 2001 and became Speaker of the Sejm,
Poland's House of Representatives, in 2007. The day after he was
elected President, President Obama invited him to visit the United
States. The two Presidents are meeting in the White House today.
As a boy growing up in East St. Louis, IL, I knew without a doubt
that the greatest man on Earth was the son of a Polish Immigrant to
America. He was born Stanis5aw Franciszek Musia5, but America came to
know and love him as Stan ``The Man'' Musial. He was the heart and soul
of the St. Louis Cardinals of my youth and one of the best outfielders
in baseball history.
In school, I learned that American history is, in fact, filled with
Polish and Polish-American heroes--men and women who helped lift this
country into what it is today.
Polish craftsmen were already hard at work helping to build the
colony of Jamestown when the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. In 1619
when the Virginia House of Burgesses refused to extend to the Polish
workers the ``rights of the Englishmen,'' including the right to vote,
the Polish people began and won the first recorded strike in the New
World.
More than a century and a half later, two valiant sons of Poland
stepped forward and joined America in our effort to gain independence.
Thaddeus Kosciuszko landed shortly after the signing of the Declaration
of Independence and, upon learning of the document, decided that he
must meet the author. He and Thomas Jefferson became friends. He built
the United States Military Academy at West Point and helped lead
American troops in their improbable and crucial early victories at the
Battles of Saratoga and Ticonderoga. Years later, Thomas Jefferson
called him ``as pure a son of liberty as I have ever known,'' and
statues of him stand today at West Point and in Lafayette Square across
from the White House.
Casimir Pulaski was drawn to the same idea of freedom and became a
brigadier general in the Continental Army. He was the ``father of the
US Cavalry,'' saved George Washington's Army at the Battle of
Brandywine and gave his life for American independence at the Battle of
Savannah. He has a statue in his honor here in Washington, DC, and is
held in such high regard by my home State of Illinois that there is a
statewide holiday so that all residents may pay their respects.
And when the time came for Poland to seek its freedom in 1989, the
United States was at its side. It is astonishing to consider the
changes that took place over these two decades. Poland today is a major
force in Europe and a brave and indispensible leader in the effort to
finish the work of making Europe whole, free and at peace with itself.
Poland stood with its Baltic neighbors--including Lithuania, the land
of my mother's birth--as they, too, have reached for democracy and
freedom.
Poland's historic entry into NATO in 1999 has led to invaluable
Polish contributions to peace and stability--not only in Europe, but
around our world. Polish soldiers fought side-by-side with Americans in
Iraq, standing with us even during the darkest days of that war. Today,
more than 2,500 Polish soldiers are serving in Afghanistan, and Poland
is leading a Provisional Reconstruction Team in one of the most
dangerous and challenging areas in that nation. Poland has also agreed
to allow a US missile defense base on its territory in order to help
defend Europe from new security threats from those who may not share
our values.
In 2004, Poland joined the European Union, symbolically ending the
long and unjust Cold War division of Europe. As a member of the EU,
Poland has also shown great leadership in its transition to a free
market economy. Indeed, it is the only nation in Europe to have avoided
a recession during the financial crisis, and its economy is growing
faster than almost any other nation in Europe. Thirty years after the
birth of Solidarity in the shipyards of Gdansk, Poland today is at the
forefront of efforts to build a new cooperative relationship with
Russia, while also helping other Central and Eastern European nations
build up their own democratic institutions and market economies and
find their rightful place in the new Europe.
The United States and Poland are connected by strong bonds of shared
history and shared values. We are more than allies; we are family. More
than 9 million Americans trace their roots to Poland. I am proud to
represent Chicago, the most Polish city outside of Poland. Even today,
there are neighborhoods in Chicago where you can scarcely walk a block
without hearing someone speaking Polish. I am proud to welcome the
President Komorowski, and I hope for the continued strong relationship
between Poland and the United States for many years to come.
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