[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 30, Number 6 (Monday, February 14, 1994)]
[Pages 250-252]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks to the World Jewish Congress

February 9, 1994

    The President.  Thank you very much. Edgar Bronfman and Mr. Vice 
President and ladies and gentlemen, I'm delighted to be here with you 
today. It's a great honor for us to have you here at the White House. 
For 55 years, you have struggled in behalf of the Jewish people but also 
in behalf of all humanity. I thank you for that, and I thank you for 
your presence.
    I'd also like to say a special word of appreciation for the example, 
for the vision, and the leadership of Edgar Bronfman. I know you know 
this, but I would also like to point out in this crowd that I am 
especially proud of the partnership I have enjoyed with the Vice 
President who has spoken out against bigotry and anti-Semitism not only 
in the United States but all over the world in the last year.
    For all the good things that have happened in the last 10 years that 
the Vice President mentioned, we know a lot of very painful things have 
occurred also. We are everywhere reminded of the fragility of civilized 
life, of how easily people can fall back into the kinds of hatreds that 
lead to the blind actions that dehumanize all of us. That was brought 
home to me on my trip to Europe last month in many ways, perhaps most 
poignantly when I visited the Jewish cemetery in Prague.
    I wish that bigotry were not all around us. I wish people still did 
not prefer killing and hating each other based on religious and ethnic 
differences anywhere, but it is a fact. It is also a fact that the 
insecurity and intolerance that we see tends to feed on itself so that 
after a while we look at places of conflict in the world and we wonder 
why people are still killing each other over what may seem to be a very 
small piece of ground or a principle not worth the life of a single 
child. I think it is clear it is because of the accumulated impact of 
intolerance and hatred. Somehow all of us have to find a way in this 
world after the cold war, when we are not burdened by but also not as 
disciplined by conflicting ideologies, to get people to realize that 
they must move beyond these ancient, indeed antiquated, intolerances.
    The Vice President told me a fascinating story today. We rode out to 
a place to announce the new drug policy of the administration, and we 
were talking about a lot of scientific subjects, which means that he 
mostly talked and I mostly listened, since he knows so much more about 
it than I do. But we started talking about the disappearance of 
Neanderthals and the various theories that exist about how Neanderthals 
disappeared and Homo sapiens emerged. And there are some who believe 
that, according to the Vice President, that the Neanderthals disappeared 
in what may be history's first instance of genocide.
    There is something about human nature which causes us to hold fast 
to people we think are like us and sometimes be afraid of and want to be 
separate from people who are not. If it means a religious community 
living together in harmony with one another and respect for our 
neighbors, then it is a very positive and good and wholesome thing. If 
it gives cultures the chance to keep their families together and raise 
their children

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with strong values and with the opportunity to be what God meant for 
them to be, then it is a good and strong thing. But how easily these 
differences spill over into hatreds that lead to bloodshed, and how 
difficult it is to put the world back together again once these things 
begin.
    Since I have been President, we have tried to do what we could, 
consistent with our first obligation to rebuild the fabric of life in 
this country and the sense of harmony and community and respect for 
diversity in this country, to also deal with those problems around the 
world.
    We have worked very hard to achieve a just and lasting peace in the 
Middle East, one that enhances Israel's security and offers the 
acceptance of normal life which has been too long denied to the citizens 
of that troubled region.
    The first pillar of that approach is strengthening the relationship 
between the United States and Israel. When I first met Prime Minister 
Rabin last year, almost a year ago this week, he said that he would be 
willing to take risks for peace, and certainly he has been. Sometimes 
the opposition that he faces at home reminds me of the opposition I face 
from time to time. But clearly, he has been willing to take risks for 
peace. I told him if he should be willing to take those risks, then it 
was my responsibility as the President of the United States to minimize 
those risks. And I have tried to do that. The Prime Minister is 
fulfilling his commitment, and we are keeping ours. Our commitment to 
maintaining and enhancing the security of Israel is ironclad. And it is 
the precondition of a just and lasting peace in the Middle East.
    The second pillar of our approach is to ensure the successful 
implementation of the Israel-Palestinian Declaration of Principles. Both 
sides now have to begin to implement the agreement on the ground, and we 
are working hard to support that without interfering with it. 
Implementing the agreement on the ground is the only way to show the 
Israelis the agreement can enhance their security while providing a more 
normal life of more self-government for their Palestinian neighbors.
    The third pillar of our approach is to get other negotiations back 
on track. The biggest challenge this year is to help Israel and Syria 
make peace. My meeting in Geneva with President Asad was designed to 
help to achieve that goal. As he said after the meeting, Syria has made 
a strategic decision for peace and wants now, for the first time, 
normal, peaceful relations with Israel.
    We have welcomed these statements, for they break new ground. We've 
also welcomed the Syrian decision to grant exit permits to all Syrian 
Jews who wish to leave. I understand the process of issuing visas is now 
virtually completed. But more will be required. Syria must demonstrate 
that it wants a full and meaningful peace to achieve the confidence of 
the people of Israel to make such a peace possible.
    Finally, to achieve our goal of a comprehensive settlement, we are 
insisting that the Arab boycott of Israel end now. There must be a 
commitment to a new era of peace and prosperity which sees in the Middle 
East partnership with Israel. Israel must be the partner of these 
nations, no longer a pariah. And we are making progress on that.
    Let me, if I might, speak briefly about the tragedy in Bosnia. I 
have been meeting with my national security team, and as I am sure most 
of you know, we have had urgent consultations which continue at this 
moment with our NATO allies in the wake of the atrocities last Saturday 
in Sarajevo.
    Before I go forward, let me, as the Vice President did, note the 
presence of the president of the Jewish community of Sarajevo here, Mr. 
Ivan Ceresnjes, with whom I had a brief moment of conversation. We're 
glad to have you here, sir.
    I expect that today, momentarily, NATO will agree on a firm response 
to the shelling of Sarajevo by the Serbs. But I also think that today we 
will begin to reinvigorate the negotiations to try to help to bring a 
permanent end to the bloodshed and aggression. Somehow the people of 
Bosnia must decide that it is not worth the continuation of killing each 
other. We are quite close, if you listen to what the parties say they 
want, to an agreement that all might be able to live with. Surely, 
surely in the wake of the horror last weekend, the parties will be able 
to, with a little support from the rest of us, reach an agreement that 
all can live with and honor.

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    Finally, let me say that here at home we need to retain our 
religious faith and our religious freedom as a source of our common 
community and strength and not as a source of division. The spiritual 
richness of our society was visible to many Americans and perhaps some 
of you in this room who attended a ceremony at the White House in 
November in which I signed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. It was 
a very important bill for Americans because it restored what the law was 
in our country before a decision of the Supreme Court. The law now says 
that in our country, the presumption is that people of any religious 
faith should be able to practice their faith and that the law should 
bend over backwards to let them do it, unless there is some serious and 
substantial damage to the public interest in so doing.
    We had Jewish leaders here, the U.S. Catholic Conference, the 
National Association of Evangelicals, the National Islamic Prison 
Foundation. You wouldn't have believed all these people would stand 
together, arm in arm, to support a law. I hope that those groups in our 
country will not only support that law but will support its spirit. That 
is, we can't bend over backwards to respect each other's religious 
practices unless we actually do it in fact as well as in law. And we 
cannot use this power of political argument to beat down other people's 
religious convictions just because on occasion they conflict with our 
own. We are trying to do that in this country. I hope you will wish us 
well.
    One of our counties, just one of our counties, Los Angeles County, 
has people from 150 different racial and ethnic groups. We believe this 
diversity can make America the greatest country in the world into the 
21st century. But we have to find a way to take the guns out of the 
hands of our children, to restore peace and security to our streets and 
to our schools, to meet the basic needs of our people so that they will 
be able to live with security and in comfort, not physical comfort but 
emotional comfort, the comfort that comes from believing you live in a 
just society where you are respected not only for your shared values but 
for the differences you have embraced.
    That is the world we are working for. It may be that we will never 
achieve it, but it is certain that if we work together we will get much 
closer to our common goal.
    Thank you very much.

Bosnia

    Q. Mr. President, will there be air strikes against the Serbs?
    The President. Just a moment, I have an announcement.
    I just was informed--I was hoping to announce this before we 
talked--that as I was speaking, in Cairo Foreign Minister Peres and 
Yasser Arafat announced an agreement on self-rule and on the terms of 
withdrawal from Gaza and Jericho. So I think another big milestone has 
been achieved today.
    Thank you.
    And from the questions in the back on Bosnia, we simply have not 
completed the NATO meeting yet. I thought we would have by now, but as 
soon as we have I will be glad to comment on that also. But the meeting 
is not over.
    Thank you.

Note: The President spoke at 4:07 p.m. in Room 450 of the Old Executive 
Office Building. In his remarks, he referred to Edgar Bronfman, 
president, World Jewish Congress.