[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 170 (Wednesday, November 18, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H8292]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DEADLY ATTACKS IN PARIS
(Mrs. DAVIS of California asked and was given permission to address
the House for 1 minute.)
Mrs. DAVIS of California. Mr. Speaker, this past Friday, the world
watched in horror the unfolding of the deadliest attack on French soil
since World War II.
The attacks in Paris killed 129 people from 26 countries, including
one American, a young student from California. To all those affected by
these terrible acts, I offer my deepest sympathies.
Around the world, tragedies of this scale have become distressingly
familiar, but to see one happen in a country at peace, a country with
which the United States has shared such a special relationship since
our founding days, hits particularly hard.
Those who carried out these horrific attacks want us to react with
divisiveness and hate; in fact, they depend on it. They know they
cannot survive in a world that stands united against them.
We must, of course, respond to this threat with strength. But we
cannot forget our compassion toward those in France and those in the
Middle East fleeing the very same dangers.
As Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., once said: ``Darkness cannot drive
out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only
love can do that.''
____________________