[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 34, Number 39 (Monday, September 28, 1998)]
[Pages 1865-1866]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks on Presenting the Congressional Gold Medal to President Nelson 
Mandela of         South Africa

September 23, 1998

    Thank you. Mr. Speaker, Senator Thurmond, Senator Daschle, 
Congressman Gephardt. Representative Houghton, thank you for what you 
have done to make this day come to pass. We are all in your debt. 
Congresswoman Waters, Senator Moseley-Braun, Senator D'Amato. 
Congressman Dellums, thank you. To the Members of Congress here present 
in both parties, members of the Cabinet, administration; to Graca 
Machel, and all our friends from South Africa who are here.
    To my friend, President Mandela, Americans as one today, across all 
the lines that divide us, pay tribute to your struggle, to your 
achievement, and to the inspiration you have given us to do better.
    Others have said with profound conviction and eloquence what it is 
that we love and admire. Today we offer a man who has received the Nobel 
Prize, the highest honor within the gift of this country. But if this 
day is to be more than a day in which we bask in his reflected glory, we 
should ask ourselves, what gift can we really give Nelson Mandela in 
return for 10,000 long days in jail? How can we truly redeem the life of 
Amy Biehl? How can we honor all of those who marched and worked with 
Nelson Mandela, who are no longer standing by his side?
    After the President was released and began his public career he 
said, and I quote,

[[Page 1866]]

``The true test of our devotion to freedom is just beginning.'' Whenever 
we are together he always talks about unfinished business. He thanked me 
again yesterday for saying something that, to be honest, I didn't even 
think about consciously. He said that the United States had now said not 
what can we do for South Africa, but what can we do with South Africa to 
build a common future. So I ask all of you to think about just two or 
three things.
    The work of our common struggle with people with whom we share a 
common past and with whom we must build a common future in South Africa 
and throughout the African continent has only begun. President Mandela 
says that he has now gotten old and is leaving the scene. The truth is, 
he has gotten married and he feels young, and he is tired of his public 
responsibilities, and he wants to go forward into a brighter life.
    Those of us who share his vision and lift him up in honor today owe 
it to him to build a permanent partnership between Americans and 
Africans, for the education of our children, for the solution of our 
problems, for the resolution of our differences, for the elevation of 
what is best about us all. That is what we owe to Nelson Mandela, to Amy 
Biehl and her family, and to all of those who have sacrificed.
    We also owe, for those 10,000 long days and the shining example 
since, the clear understanding that a man who has given up so much of 
his life can give us that--even more important than the sacrifice 
yesterday is what you are doing with today and what you will do with 
tomorrow. For that is the thing that always humbles me when I am with 
Nelson Mandela, the sense of serenity and peace and engagement in the 
moment. And so I say to all of you, we should not waste our days; we 
should make more of our days.
    Mr. Mandela waited a very long time to actually do something for his 
people, rather than just to be something to keep their hearts and hopes 
alive. And every day I watch him, that is what he does. So should we.
    And finally, in forgiving those who imprisoned him, he reminded us 
of the most fundamental lesson of all, that in the end apartheid was a 
defeat of the heart, the mind, the spirit. It was not just a structure 
outside and jailhouses within which people were kept; it was a division 
of the mind and soul against itself. We owe it to Nelson Mandela not 
simply to give him this award but to live by the lesson he taught us and 
to tear down every last vestige of apartheid in our own hearts, 
everything that divides us, one from another.
    For those of us who have been privileged to know this remarkable 
man, no medal, no award, no fortune, nothing we could give him could 
possibly compare to the gift he has given to us and to the world. The 
only gift that is true recompense is to continue his mission and to live 
by the power of his profound and wonderful example.
    Now, as prescribed by the law, it is my privilege to present the 
Congressional Gold Medal to President Nelson Mandela.
    Mr. President.

Note: The President spoke at 11:10 a.m. in the Rotunda at the Capitol. 
In his remarks, he referred to President Mandela's wife, Graca Machel. 
The transcript made available by the Office of the Press Secretary also 
included the remarks of President Mandela.