[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 26 (Tuesday, February 14, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H1134-H1135]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BRING HADAR HOME
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Florida (Mr. Mast) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MAST. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to share the story of Hadar
Goldin.
Hadar was born in the Galilee region of Israel in 1991. He was a
gifted young man--a happy person with a lively personality. He was an
accomplished painter and, I am told, an inspiration to everybody that
knew him. He served as a lieutenant in the Givati Brigade of the IDF.
Mr. Speaker, I did not know Hadar personally, but, during my time
serving alongside the IDF, I knew so many who were just like him. I met
some of the most humble and compassionate people that I have ever
known. I chose to serve alongside the IDF because our friends in Israel
fight for the same values that we fight to protect in our country:
human dignity, freedom, and liberty.
I can tell you from experience that we soldiers often label our
uniforms with sentiments that are important to us. Hadar had his rifle
belt embroidered
[[Page H1135]]
with the words ``strength and humility.'' He fought not out of hatred
for his enemy but to protect his homeland and his family. He used the
embroidery as a reminder that a soldier has the courage to use his
weapon when needed, but even more importantly, has the humility to
restrain from its use in the name of peace.
But on August 1, 2014, when Hadar was only 23 years old, he was
killed by Hamas terrorists, just 2 hours after a ceasefire had been
declared in the Operation Protective Edge war in Gaza. Hamas terrorists
maliciously dragged his body away from his home and into an underground
tunnel. They stripped and left his clothing and have held his corpse
ever since.
Americans are no strangers to the term ``missing in action,'' as we
still have, shamefully, thousands unaccounted for in Southeast Asia.
This is a painful and uncertain future that no family deserves. This
should never, ever be condoned.
Last week, I had the opportunity to meet with Hadar's family. They
are unable to give their son the proper burial because Hamas is holding
his body hostage.
Mr. Speaker, we know that Hamas does not value human life. They seek
to destroy all that Israel and the United States hold dear. Even the
last administration called for the condemning of this action in the
strongest possible terms. They called it barbaric. We must now enter
into a new chapter--one where we support our Israeli allies and stand
side by side with them in the fight for freedom.
This was a ceasefire that Israel entered into at the urging of former
Secretary of State John Kerry and the United Nations. They should bear
some responsibility for ensuring his body is returned home.
Mr. Speaker, I urge the United Nations to step up for what is right.
Show some spine, show some resolve, and stand against Hamas. Do not be
a rug that Palestinians trounce across as they shop the United Nations
to fulfill their agenda while never being held accountable for their
acts of terrorism and their acts against basic human dignity.
I urge the new administration to take the necessary steps to help
bring Hadar home and ensure his family can finally give him a proper
burial--the kind of burial that every soldier, regardless of their
uniform, deserves.
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