[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1996, Book II)]
[July 10, 1996]
[Pages 1100-1101]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks on Signing the Church Arson Prevention Act of 1996
July 10, 1996

    Thank you very much and good morning, ladies and gentlemen. I want 
to join first with the Vice President in thanking Senator Kennedy, 
Senator Faircloth, Congressman Hyde, and Congressman Conyers and all the 
Members of Congress for supporting this legislation in such a vigorous 
and such a prompt way.
    I think all of you know that we are here today to emphasize publicly 
our solidarity with this cause and with this piece of legislation. 
Ordinarily we would be here at a signing ceremony, and I want to say a 
special word of appreciation to the Members of Congress, especially to 
the sponsors, because this bill came down to the White House while the 
Congress was out of session, and every Member we discussed this issue 
with said, ``Go on and sign the bill, Mr. President, because we don't 
want to lose a single day when this bill will not be a law of the 
land.'' And I thought it was important for you to come down here so that 
America could see the breadth and depth of support in the Congress, 
among religious leaders who are here, and community leaders for this 
legislation and for this cause.
    This act makes destructive hate crimes against houses of worship a 
Federal crime. It doubles the maximum sentence for these crimes that 
cause injury to people. It increases the statute of limitations from 5 
to 7 years. It passed unanimously, and that is a great tribute to the 
depth of conviction in the Congress about this issue.
    We all know that burning churches is an outrage. Since January of 
'95--listen to this--more than 190 incidents of fire or desecration of 
houses of worship have been reported in the United States. While many 
have been targeted at black churches in the South, there have also been 
attacks on synagogues, mosques, and white churches in all parts of this 
country. When these attacks are motivated by hate, they are an affront 
to our basic commitment to religious liberty and racial tolerance, and 
in so doing they pose a challenge not just to those whose houses of 
worship are desecrated or burned but to the entire Nation and to our 
future as a common community.
    These attacks, as the Vice President said, may be intended to divide 
Americans, but they have just the opposite effect. We all know when 
someone burns a house of worship it must mean that the person committing 
the crime views the people who worship in that house as somehow 
fundamentally less human. And that is wrong. We know it's wrong, and we 
know it violates everything that this country was founded upon. We see a 
spirit today with Republicans and Democrats here that rejects that and 
says America is better than that.
    The National Church Arson Task Force which we have created is 
mobilizing the forces of the Departments of Justice and Treasury, the 
Federal Emergency Management Agency, and other Federal agencies, working 
with communities all over our country to catch and to prosecute 
arsonists, to prevent further burnings, and to help communities to 
rebuild. I have directed FEMA to coordinate a prevention effort, and we 
have taken steps to provide $6 million through the Bureau of Justice 
Assistance to law enforcement and other community efforts in 13 targeted 
States.
    It's also important to know that arrests are being made. In the last 
3 weeks, arrests have been made in connection with fires in North 
Carolina, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia, Washington, and Missouri. 
Tomorrow Vice President Gore is meeting with leaders of the insurance 
industry here at the White House to build on their pledge to work in 
partnership with all of us to prevent these crimes.
    And while, I say again, not all these crimes are racially motivated, 
a significant number of them are. We have to continue our struggle

[[Page 1101]]

against racism and religious bigotry. I want to compliment all the 
religious organizations and other groups in this country that have 
agreed to come together to help to rebuild these churches, showing that 
we can reach across lines of race and religion and region to bring all 
law-abiding Americans together in this rebuilding effort.
    Recently I declared this month of July National Month of Unity, 
calling on religious leaders of all faiths and citizens from all walks 
of life to reach out to one another to strengthen the ideals that light 
our way as Americans and keep us strong. In recent days, here on the 
lawn of the White House, we have seen another sort of flame in America, 
the Olympic flame, which symbolizes the best of the human spirit. The 
other flames of these awful church burnings symbolize the worst 
instincts of those who would take us back to a time of terrible division 
and hatred. But it's the Olympic flame, carried by American citizen 
heroes all over our country, which is now burning throughout the South, 
making its way to its final destination in Atlanta.
    As the world looks to our Nation as the host country of the 100th 
Olympic games, let us resolve anew to extinguish the flames of bigotry 
and intolerance and keep the flame of religious freedom and ethnic 
diversity and respect for all Americans burning brightly in this Olympic 
season.
    Thank you all for your contribution to that effort, and God bless 
you.

Note: The President spoke at 9:20 a.m. in the Rose Garden at the White 
House. H.R. 3525, approved July 3, was assigned Public Law No. 104-155.