[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 163 (Tuesday, December 18, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8113-S8114]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING DANIEL K. INOUYE
Mr. REED. Mr. President, I rise, as so many of my colleagues have, to
mourn and pay tribute to Senator Daniel Inouye of Hawaii.
He was a giant of the Senate. He was an individual whose courage,
whose compassion, and whose commitment to this country has never been
exceeded by anyone who served here--indeed, by any American I can think
of.
A few years ago, I was asked to introduce the Senator at an event. I
wrote down some points on a card that I kept on my desk, and will
forever keep on my desk:
Second Lieutenant Daniel K. Inouye, E Company, 442nd
Regimental Combat Team, San Terenzo, Italy, April 21, 1945.
That was the day he was wounded leading his platoon against an enemy
pillbox, the day for which he would be ultimately awarded the
Congressional Medal of Honor for his actions.
Then I have another date: May 8, 1945. That was VE Day, the end of
the war. Seventeen days before the end of the war, when Berlin was
encircled and collapsing, when American forces were rushing and the end
was clear, and indeed every soldier recognized that the war was coming
to an end, Senator Inouye didn't stop serving, didn't stop sacrificing,
didn't stop giving his all to protect his soldiers and accomplish his
mission. Indeed, that spirit of never giving up, of never failing to do
his duty, animated his service in the Senate, animated his service to
this country, and to the State of Hawaii.
At the time I gave these remarks, he was 1 of 90 living holders of
the Congressional Medal of Honor. Today we mourn his passing, his
contributions to Hawaii, his contributions to this Senate which he held
in the highest esteem and which he personified so grandly.
I think one of the factors that led him to a career in public service
and led him to such distinguished service was the recognition--not
theoretically but practically--that despite his great suffering and
sacrifice, he was lucky because there were many other young men and
women who perished in that war and in subsequent wars; that he had
sacrificed much but had not given his life, although he very nearly
gave his life.
At the outset of the war, the Librarian of Congress Archibald
MacLeish, wrote:
They say, We were young. We have died. Remember us.
They say, We have done what we could but until it is
finished it is not done.
They say, We have given our lives but until it is finished
no one can know what our lives gave.
They say, Our deaths are not ours: they are yours: they
will mean what you make them.
They say, Whether our lives and our deaths were for peace
and a new hope or for nothing we cannot say: it is you who
must say this.
In everything Dan Inouye did, he spoke for those soldiers. He gave
their lives meaning by his selfless service and sacrifice to this
Nation. He gave it every day by making this place--this country--live
up to its highest ideals, a place of opportunity for all, a place of
fairness and decency. He did it as few did.
So those voices that were stilled in 1945, and in the Korean War and
in the war in Vietnam and subsequent wars, always had a voice here; and
it wasn't just words, it was actions. His life gave meaning, and that
might be one of the highest achievements anyone can reach in this life.
We all know his extraordinary service in so many different ways. We
know also, in one of the great coincidences, three young men were in an
Army hospital in Michigan: Dan Inouye, Phil Hart, and Bob Dole,
American heroes; and that later they would come to this Senate and
serve with distinction. I think it was particularly meaningful that
just a few days ago Senator Robert Dole--another great American--was on
the floor of this Senate, still serving, still emblematic of the
``greatest generation.''
We will miss Senator Inouye. There are few words and not enough
eloquence to describe the loss. I, too, particularly want to thank and
extend my condolences to his wife Irene, to his son Ken, to his
daughter-in-law Jessica, to his granddaughter Maggie, and to his
stepdaughter Jennifer Hirano. They have lost more than any of us
because they have lost a husband, a father, and a grandfather.
Let me just conclude with the words uttered centuries ago by
Thucydides:
The bravest are surely those who have the clearest vision
of what is before them, glory and danger alike, and yet
notwithstanding, go out to meet it.
Dan Inouye knew the dangers. Dan Inouye knew that the glory was
fleeting, and in fact combat wasn't particularly glorious at all. But
he knew it was honorable to serve. He knew it was honorable to
sacrifice for his soldiers and for his comrades. He knew it was
honorable and decent to serve his State and his Nation, and he never
failed to go forth to meet the challenges of his time.
Now it is our time. Now we must give words and meaning to the voices
that have been stilled in the service to this Nation. One of those
giants and one of those powerful voices was Senator Daniel Inouye. The
test will be whether we can measure up to what he did, and I hope for
the sake of this country we can.
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