[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 163 (Tuesday, December 18, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8098-S8099]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING DANIEL K. INOUYE
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I see my two colleagues from Connecticut
on the Senate floor. I know they are here to speak about the horrible
tragedy in Newtown last Friday. I will abbreviate my remarks on the
floor, and I commend both of them for extraordinary statements last
night at a memorial service. I will never forget some of the things
they shared with us about this terrible tragedy.
I come to the floor this morning for a few moments to pay tribute to
one of my great friends and one of my great colleagues, Danny Inouye,
who passed away yesterday. The majority leader has done such an
extraordinary job recounting his life, and I think back to what it must
have meant to him as he witnessed Pearl Harbor at the age of 20. He
said that he realized at the time that the pilots in those planes that
were bombing his family and others in Hawaii were people of the same
ancestry as his father, and it hurt him. It hurt him as well to be
branded as suspect because of his Japanese origin and to see literally
tens of thousands of Japanese Americans interned in camps because their
loyalty was questioned.
He took the opportunity to volunteer and serve our Nation to prove
his loyalty and that he was willing to risk his life for America. He
served in one of the most highly decorated units in all of World War
II, the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, which was comprised of Japanese
Americans who fought in the European theater. They recently came to
Washington to be honored. Senator Inouye was there, and it was a great
moment to see these men of the ``greatest generation'' who have proven
to America their love for this country, and none more so than Danny
Inouye.
Senator Reid has recounted in detail the incredible story of his
bravery that earned him the Congressional Medal of Honor, but he was
such a humble man. When we look back on his life, there were so many
aspects of it that were historic in nature, and one would never know it
in conversations with him or working with him.
Senator Reid had the same experience I did. I visited Senator
Inouye's office, and it was unusual by Senate standards. I looked
across the office, and there were no pictures of Danny Inouye on the
walls, and there were no awards for this man who served more than half
a century in Congress.
I said to him: It is interesting that your office has a lot of
artwork and photos but nothing about Danny Inouye.
He said: No, I didn't want to put those things up. I wanted everyone
to feel at ease coming in here. I didn't want to talk about my party
affiliation or what I had done. I want them to feel comfortable and to
know this is a welcoming office.
That is the kind of person he was. Time and again, he proved it.
He started off in the territorial House of Representatives in Hawaii.
When Hawaii became a State, he served in the Congress and later in the
U.S. Senate. He was there from the beginning, and what a dynamic leader
he was for his State of Hawaii. He did so many great things over the
years.
I was at the same Prayer Breakfast Senator Reid recounted. There was
one other story he told, which I will only refer to in the most
abbreviated form. He talked about his experience as a sniper and how he
still had in his mind the images of those enemy soldiers he shot down.
After 50, 60 years, he could not get those images out of his mind.
He talked about befriending one of his fellow veterans in the
Michigan veterans hospital. He told me this great story he shared at
the Prayer Breakfast. He said that when he was an officer, he would
spend his weekends in the great city of Chicago at the Knickerbocker
Hotel. He said that was the hotel for officers.
He said: I would come into Chicago and have a great time on the
weekends and head back to the veterans hospital.
Well, he finally talked one of his fellow Hawaiians--a man whose face
had been literally burned off--into joining him on one of his trips to
Chicago. The man was embarrassed by his appearance and didn't think
anybody would want to be around him or talk to him. Danny Inouye
prepared all of these different places where they would stop in during
their visit, and every one of them greeted Senator Inouye and his
friend in a warm fashion.
The story goes on from there, and I won't go into the details, but he
was a man who always looked to help someone else. He talked about how
this man who had been so brutally injured in the war returned to
Hawaii, raised a family, and was Danny Inouye's friend for life, as so
many of us were.
I think back as well to Senator Robert C. Byrd's funeral in West
Virginia. It was one of the hottest days I can remember. We were up
there baking in the sun at this memorial service for Robert C. Byrd. I
intentionally picked a seat next to Danny Inouye. I had to take off my
jacket. I was mopping the perspiration off, and I looked at him in his
dark suit without a bead of sweat.
I said: How do you do that?
He said: Well, you know, the Asian religions are very important in my
life, and they believe mind over matter can achieve great things. I can
visualize myself sitting in a deep freeze now, and I am not hot at all.
I thought, this man is amazing in so many different ways. When he is
done with his life, those stories--some serious, some lighthearted--
will reflect so well on this man and what he meant.
One of the most important things I have on my agenda is the passage
of the DREAM Act. I have worked on it for 11 years, and there was a
time on the floor of the Senate--September 21, 2010--when I could not
break the Republican filibuster on the DREAM Act, and I was pretty
despondent over it. Senator Reid came to the floor and said a few kind
words about my efforts, but then out of nowhere Senator Inouye sought
recognition. He knew that I was trying to get for millions of these
young people living in America a chance to serve their Nation, prove
their love, and become legal citizens in America. I will read what he
said because it touched me. He said:
Madam President, I wish to step back in history, if I may.
On December 7, 1941, something terrible happened in Hawaii--
Pearl Harbor was bombed by the Japanese. Three weeks later,
the Government of the United States declared that all
Japanese Americans, citizens born in the United States or of
Japanese ancestry, were considered to be enemy aliens. As a
result, like these undocumented people, they could not put on
the uniform of this land.
Senator Inouye went on to say:
Well, I was 17 at the time, and naturally I resented this
because I loved my country and I wanted to put on a
uniform to show where my heart stood. But we were denied.
So we petitioned the government, and a year later they
said: OK, if you wish to volunteer, go ahead.
Senator Inouye said:
Well, to make a long story short, the regiment I served in,
made up of Japanese Americans, had the highest casualties in
Europe but the most decorated in the history of the United
States.
He turned and said:
I think the beneficiaries of the Senator from Illinois--
And the DREAM Act--
will do the same.
It was the type of short statement that in a few words captured his
life, his sacrifice, and what he had proven by risking his life for
this country. There is a reason we honor him this morning.
I close by saying two things. First, Senator Akaka came to the floor
last night--his colleague of so many years--and put in a few words. He
said on the floor last night:
Tomorrow will be the first day since Hawaii became a State
in 1959 that Dan Inouye will not be representing us. He
really worked to shape Hawaii and this great country.
He went on to say:
You will be missed in Washington as much as you will be
missed in Hawaii. Rest in peace [Senator Inouye].
That was Danny Akaka's farewell tribute, and it summarizes how much
he meant to Hawaii and how much he meant to America. His last word:
[[Page S8099]]
``Aloha.'' As Senator Reid said, it is so appropriate that this kind
and gentle American hero would leave the message of love for everyone
else. That was his life.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from California.
Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I wish to associate myself with the
eloquent remarks made by my colleague Senator Durbin, Senator Reid, and
all those who have come to praise a one-of-a-kind Senator and
extraordinary human being, my friend Dan's Inouye.
I was telling Senator Lieberman that when the Senate put on a little
retirement dinner for our retiring Senators--including Senator
Lieberman--there was Senator Inouye. When we look back, it was only 2
weeks ago. We know he could not have been strong, he was not well, but
he came to that dinner and sat at that table because of the love and
respect for the individual Senators and for this institution.
As for me, I will miss Danny's sonorous voice, his big heart, his
self-effacing manner, his integrity, and his patriotism.
Over the years, so many of us have worked together on so many issues
with Dan. I worked on bringing a state-of-the-art, first ever
comprehensive casualty care center to my State to take care of the
wounded vets who were coming home without their limbs, post-traumatic
stress, and all the problems they had. There was no such place on the
west coast, and with Dan's help--and we worked with Senator Stevens--we
got it done. Now that facility really stands as a tribute to Dan's
Inouye.
In 2010 I had a very difficult campaign, as most of us did at that
time, and Dan's said: I am going to come out there and help you. I was
under fierce attack, and we had an event for veterans. Dan's was a
speaker, and I was a speaker. As I was speaking, we heard these voices
of screaming demonstrators yelling things that were not complimentary
toward me, let's put it that way. It was very loud, and I was so
humiliated and embarrassed. Here was this amazing patriot, and they
would keep screaming when Danny was speaking about my work and his work
for veterans. Sure enough, the demonstrators kept it up, and I was so
upset.
I went up to him and I put my arm around him when he was finished and
said: Dan, I am so embarrassed. I am so sorry.
He said: Barbara, they are not going to beat you by screaming. Don't
worry about it.
He went on to go to a couple of other events, and he took his wife to
them. He was extraordinary.
I loved Danny with all of my heart. Every time I looked at him, I
smiled because he was so good. He was such a good person, and I pay
tribute to him today. I don't think we will ever replace him. We will
never replace this remarkable American. He personified the meaning of
love and the meaning of country.
I send my love to his family.
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