[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 21 (Thursday, February 4, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S648-S649]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ANNUAL NATIONAL PRAYER BREAKFAST
Mr. NELSON. Madam President, I want to chronicle for the Senate and
to make a part of the Congressional Record that nearly 5,000 people
gathered this morning for the annual National Prayer Breakfast with the
President, members of the Cabinet, members of the Joint Chiefs, most of
the Diplomatic Corps, and a lot of the Members of Congress.
The national breakfast is sponsored by the Senate prayer group that
meets on Wednesday morning and the House
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prayer group that meets on Thursday morning. This year it was the
House's turn to be the cochairs. We do have cochairs in the House and
the Senate prayer group, one from each party. In the case of the Senate
prayer group, we were ably represented, as they spoke from the podium,
by Senator Boozman of Arkansas and Senator Kaine of Virginia. They will
be the cochairmen of the breakfast next year.
It was the eighth time that President Obama has spoken. This Senator
feels it was the best speech at the Prayer Breakfast I have heard
President Obama give. It was one of the best speeches that this
Senator, after attending Prayer Breakfasts for over three decades, has
ever heard. He quoted the Scriptures from the writings of Paul which
say that our faith can keep us from fear. The President illustrated
that throughout so much of his remarks.
During his closing remarks, he told a story that he had heard a week
or so ago, and I wish to share that story here on the Senate floor. It
was about a U.S. Army sergeant whose entire unit had been captured by
the Nazis during World War II. While he was in the POW camp, a Nazi
colonel told the sergeant, who was the senior official: I want the
names of the Jewish soldiers in this unit, and I want them to report to
me. The sergeant refused.
The Nazi colonel then decided to assemble all 200 of the sergeant's
troops in the POW camp in formation, with the sergeant at the head of
the formation. As the colonel approached him again, obviously trying to
single out and take and probably try to annihilate the Jewish-American
soldiers, he again said, as all the troops were standing there in
formation: Sergeant, I want to know who the Jews are. The sergeant
replied: Sir, we are all Jews. The colonel then took his pistol out of
the holster, cocked it, and put it to the head of the sergeant and made
the same demand again. The faith of that Christian sergeant overcame
his fear for he was looking out for his troops, and he repeated again:
Sir, we are all Jews. The Nazis backed down in that POW camp. The
Jewish soldiers were not revealed and, therefore, protected.
That was just one of the many stories that were recounted as the
President gave what was an extraordinary conclusion for his last
National Prayer Breakfast as President. It is an occasion that so many
of us join in on every Wednesday here as we come together and put aside
our partisan, regional and any other differences that we have and are
unified and joined in prayer. So I thought it fitting, the National
Prayer Breakfast having just concluded, that I share this story with
the Senate.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. NELSON. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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