For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
July 4, 2001
Remarks by the President
In Independence Day Celebration Independence Historic National Park Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
4:30 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Mayor, thank you
very much. I appreciate so much your
hospitality. Laura and I are honored to be here in
Philadelphia. It's the perfect place to celebrate our nation's
birthday. (Applause.)
I told the Mayor in front of the country when
I addressed the Congress that I was coming to Philadelphia to celebrate
the wonderful missions that take place in this grand
city. Mr. Mayor, thank you for allowing me to come, and
thank you for your gracious hospitality. Same to the
Governor of this great state, our close friend, Tom Ridge, and his
wife, Michelle. Thank you all very much for your hospitality.
It's an honor to be on the stage with the
senior Senator, who married quite well,
himself. (Laughter.) I appreciate you being here,
Senator, and the honorable. It's an honor to be on the stage
with leaders of the faith community in Philadelphia.
Distinguished guests, my fellow citizens,
thank you for your warm welcome. (Applause.)
And thank you, Mr. Mayor, for your lovely
gift. Laura and I will make a special place for it at the
White House.
Today we celebrate American independence, in
the place of America's birth, close to a symbol of American
liberty. As millions know, to see the Liberty Bell is a
moving experience. In America we set aside certain places
and treasures like this to protect them from the passing of the
years. We grant them special care to mark a moment in
time. Here in Philadelphia, these markers are all around us,
reminders of our history.
This is a dynamic and modern
city. Yet, if the founders, themselves were here, they would
know the place. Benjamin Franklin and his wife could still
find their way from here to the corner where they first saw each other,
at Market and 4th. John Adams could make his way to City
Tavern and show us the spot where he first shook the hand of George
Washington. Thomas Jefferson would still find waiting for him the room
where he drafted the Declaration of Independence.
And each of the founders, coming here, would
know the ring of the Liberty Bell. It rang to announce the
first public reading of the Declaration of Independence, 225 years
ago. Those new citizens of a nation just four days old heard
inspiring words, but not original thoughts. Our founders
considered themselves heirs to principles that were timeless and truths
that were self-evident.
When Jefferson sat down to write, he was
trying, he said, to place before mankind "the common sense of the
subject." The common sense of the subject was that we should
be free. And though great evils would linger, the world
would never be the same after July 4, 1776.
A wonderful country was born, and a
revolutionary idea sent forth to all mankind: Freedom, not
by the good graces of government, but as the birthright of every
individual. Equality, not as a theory of philosophers, but
by the design of our Creator. Natural rights, not for the
few, not even for a fortunate many, but for all people in all place, in
all times.
The world still echoes with the ideals of
America's Declaration. Our ideals have been accepted in many
countries, and bitterly opposed by tyrants. They are the
mighty rock on which we have built our nation. They are the
hope of all who are oppressed. They are the standard to
which we hold others, and the standard by which we measure ourselves.
Our greatest achievements have come when we
have lived up to these ideals. Our greatest tragedies have
come when we have failed to uphold them.
When Abraham Lincoln wondered whether civil
war was preferable to permanent slavery, he knew where to seek
guidance. Speaking in Independence Hall he said, "I have
never had a feeling, politically, that did not spring from the
sentiments embodied in the Declaration of Independence." The
Declaration, Lincoln said, gave promise that in due time the weight
would be lifted from the shoulders of all men and all should have an
equal chance.
From the ideals in the Declaration came the
laws and the Constitution, including the free exercise of
religion. The Liberty Bell was originally cast to mark the
50th anniversary of William Penn's Charter of Privileges, the first
guarantee of religious freedom in this commonwealth. Now,
exactly three centuries after William Penn's charter, the founders
would be pleased to see that we have respected this right of the people
and the limitation on the government. They knew what dangers
can follow when government either dictates or frustrates the exercise
of religion.
Our founders would also be pleased to walk
these streets again and to find, amid the problems of modern life, a
familiar American spirit of faith and good works. They would
see the signs of poverty and want, but also acts of great kindness and
charity. They would see addiction and the wreckage it
brings. But they would also see in the works of the religious groups
and charities throughout this city the power that can rescue abandoned
hopes and repair a broken life.
In a world very different from theirs they
would see different kinds of hardships, fears, and
suffering. Yet, they would also recognize the brotherly love
that gave this city its name.
Your Mayor and I have just come from an
Independence Day celebration in North Philadelphia, organized by a
great American named Herbert Lusk. (Applause.) Herb first
came into prominence as an athlete. Today he is pastor of
Greater Exodus Baptist Church. (Applause.) And
its parishioners still like him. (Laughter and
applause.) Herb's church is one of the hundreds of churches
and synagogues and mosques in this city where worship of the Almighty
is expressed in service to neighbors in need.
In every part of Philadelphia, caring people
are doing the work of compassion. They teach boys and girls
to read, as in a program called Youth Education for Tomorrow, where
more than 20 faith-based literacy centers are producing great results
for your city's children.
At the Jesus School in North Philadelphia,
little Aneeisha Graham came a year ago, not knowing any letters of the
alphabet. Today, at age 7, she reads at the 4th grade
level. (Applause.) Aneeisha is with us today.
It's great to see you, darling. Thank you for
coming. (Applause.)
Other faith-based groups in this city operate
shelters for the destitute and the homeless. They bring
kindness and understanding to young women facing domestic violence or
crisis pregnancies. They give time and attention to the
children of prisoners. These are the kinds of citizens every
society needs -- citizens who speak for the
voiceless and feed the hungry and protect the weak and comfort the
afflicted.
America's founding documents give us religious
liberty in principle; these Americans show us religious liberty in
action. Religious liberty is more than the right to believe
in God's love; it is the right to be an instrument of God's
love. (Applause.)
Such work is beyond the reach of government,
and beyond the role of government. And those who hold
positions of power should not be wary or hostile toward faith-based
charities, or other community groups which perform important and good
works. We should welcome their conviction and contribution
in all its diversity.
So today I call on the United States Congress
to pass laws promoting and encouraging faith-based and community groups
in their important public work, and to never discriminate against
them. (Applause.)
These soldiers in the armies of compassion
deserve our support. They often need our support, and by
taking their side we act in the best interests and tradition of our
country. Without churches and charities, many of our
citizens who have lost hope would be left to their own struggles and
their own faith. And as I well know, they are not the only
ones whose lives can be changed and uplifted by the influence of faith
in God.
The founding generation discerned in that
faith the source of our own rights -- a divine gift of dignity, found
equally in every human life. Our nation has always been
guided by a moral compass. In every generation men and women
have protested terrible wrongs and worked for justice -- for the
abolition of slavery, the triumph of civil rights; for the end of child
labor, the equal treatment of women, and the protection of innocent
life.
Not every reformer in our history has been
religious, but many have been motivated by a scriptural vision in which
"justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like an ever-flowing
stream."
We welcome religion in our common life because
it leads millions of Americans to serve their neighbor, and because it
leads countless others to speak for justice -- from African American
churches to Catholic bishops. Religious people said Dr. Martin Luther
King should not be the servant of the state, nor the master of the
state, but the conscience of the state.
In my inaugural address, I asked Americans to
seek a common good beyond their comfort; to serve their nation,
beginning with their neighbor. Today I urge Americans to consider what
contributions we all can make -- and there's plenty work for us
all. Every person can find another to help. Nearly every
community of conscience and faith has more to share, and corporate and
foundation America can give more and give wiser.
In this way, we all become more responsible
citizens. And by extending to all the promise of America, we
show an important kind of patriotism. Seventy-five years
ago, our 30th President, the only President born on Independence Day,
spoke words that apply to our time. Calvin Coolidge said,
"We live in an age of science and of abounding accumulation of material
things. These did not create our Declaration. Our
Declaration created them. The things of the spirit come
first." (Applause.)
On this 4th of July, 2001, a great anniversary
of our nation's birth, and a great anniversary of religious liberty, we
remember the ideals of America and the things of the spirit that
sustain them.
The Liberty Bell has been mostly silent for
two centuries. And during the Revolution, it was unseen,
hidden under the floorboards of a church in Allentown. Yet,
even in silence, it has always borne one message, cast for the ages
with the words of the Old Testament: Proclaim liberty
throughout all the land, unto all the inhabitants thereof."
In this place of history, we honor the first
generation of Americans who followed those words. And we
give thanks to the God who watched over our country then, and who
watches to this very day.
Thank you, all. And may God bless
America. (Applause.)
END 4:45
P.M. EDT
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