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Address: Honoring the 70th Anniversary of V-E Day
The White House
May 8, 2015
Hello, everybody. Today marks an historic anniversary – 70
years since the Allied victory in Europe during World War II. On V-E Day after the Nazi surrender, people swarmed
the streets of London and Paris and Moscow, and the cloud of fear that had hung
for so many years finally lifted. Here
at home, from small towns to Times Square, crowds gathered in celebration,
singing and dancing with joy. There
would still be three more months of deadly fighting in the Pacific. But for a few hours, the world rejoiced in
the hope of peace.
General Eisenhower announced the
news with little fanfare. “The Mission of this Allied Force,” he said, “was
fulfilled.” But his simple message
belied the extraordinary nature of the Allied victory – and the staggering
human loss. For over five years, brutal
fighting laid waste to an entire continent.
Mothers, fathers, children were murdered in concentration camps. By the time the guns fell silent in Europe,
some 40 million people on the continent had lost their lives.
Today, we pay tribute to all who
served. They were patriots, like my
grandfather who served in Patton’s Army – soldiers, sailors, airmen, marines,
coast guard, merchant marines – and the women of the WACs and the WAVES and
every branch. They risked their lives,
and gave their lives so that we, the people the world over, could live
free. They were women who stepped up in
unprecedented numbers, manning the home front, and – like my grandmother – building
bombers on assembly lines.
This was the generation that
literally saved the world – that ended the war and laid a foundation for peace.
This was the generation that
traded in their uniforms for a college education so they could marry their
sweethearts, buy homes, raise children and build the strongest middle class the
world has ever known.
This was the generation that
included heroes like the Tuskegee Airmen, the Navajo Code Talkers and the
Japanese-Americans of the 442nd Regiment – and who continued the fight for
freedom here at home, expanding equality and opportunity and justice for
minorities and women.
We will be forever grateful for
what these remarkable men and women did, for the selfless grace they showed in
one of our darkest hours. But as we mark
this 70th anniversary, let’s not simply commemorate history. Let’s rededicate ourselves to the freedoms
for which they fought.
Let’s make sure that we keep
striving to fulfill our founding ideals – that we’re a country where no matter
who we are or where we’re from or what we look like or who we love, if we work
hard and take responsibility, every American will have the opportunity to make
of our lives what we will.
Let’s stand united with our
allies, in Europe and beyond, on behalf of our common values – freedom,
security, democracy, human rights, and the rule of law around the world – and
against bigotry and hatred in all their forms so that we give meaning to that
pledge: “Never forget. Never again.” |
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