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1:00 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: We are here in the middle hour of our grief. So
many have suffered so great a loss, and today we express our nation's
sorrow. We come before God to pray for the missing and the dead,
and for those who love them.
On Tuesday, our country was attacked with deliberate and massive
cruelty. We have seen the images of fire and ashes, and bent steel.
Now come the names, the list of casualties we are only beginning
to read. They are the names of men and women who began their day
at a desk or in an airport, busy with life.
They are the names of people who faced death, and in their last
moments called home to say, be brave, and I love you.
They are the names of passengers who defied their murderers, and
prevented the murder of others on the ground. They are the names
of men and women who wore the uniform of the United States, and
died at their posts.
They are the names of rescuers, the ones whom death found running
up the stairs and into the fires to help others. We will read all
these names. We will linger over them, and learn their stories,
and many Americans will weep.
To the children and parents and spouses and families and friends
of the lost, we offer the deepest sympathy of the nation. And I
assure you, you are not alone.
Just three days removed from these events, Americans do not yet
have the distance of history. But our responsibility to history
is already clear: to answer these attacks and rid the world of evil.
War has been waged against us by stealth and deceit and murder.
This nation is peaceful, but fierce when stirred to anger. This
conflict was begun on the timing and terms of others. It will end
in a way, and at an hour, of our choosing.
Our purpose as a nation is firm. Yet our wounds as a people are
recent and unhealed, and lead us to pray. In many of our prayers
this week, there is a searching, and an honesty. At St. Patrick's
Cathedral in New York on Tuesday, a woman said, "I prayed to God
to give us a sign that He is still here." Others have prayed for
the same, searching hospital to hospital, carrying pictures of those
still missing.
God's signs are not always the ones we look for. We learn in tragedy
that his purposes are not always our own. Yet the prayers of private
suffering, whether in our homes or in this great cathedral, are
known and heard, and understood.
There are prayers that help us last through the day, or endure
the night. There are prayers of friends and strangers, that give
us strength for the journey. And there are prayers that yield our
will to a will greater than our own.
This world He created is of moral design. Grief and tragedy and
hatred are only for a time. Goodness, remembrance, and love have
no end. And the Lord of life holds all who die, and all who mourn.
It is said that adversity introduces us to ourselves. This is true
of a nation as well. In this trial, we have been reminded, and the
world has seen, that our fellow Americans are generous and kind,
resourceful and brave. We see our national character in rescuers
working past exhaustion; in long lines of blood donors; in thousands
of citizens who have asked to work and serve in any way possible.
And we have seen our national character in eloquent acts of sacrifice.
Inside the World Trade Center, one man who could have saved himself
stayed until the end at the side of his quadriplegic friend. A beloved
priest died giving the last rites to a firefighter. Two office workers,
finding a disabled stranger, carried her down sixty-eight floors
to safety. A group of men drove through the night from Dallas to
Washington to bring skin grafts for burn victims.
In these acts, and in many others, Americans showed a deep commitment
to one another, and an abiding love for our country. Today, we feel
what Franklin Roosevelt called the warm courage of national unity.
This is a unity of every faith, and every background.
It has joined together political parties in both houses of Congress.
It is evident in services of prayer and candlelight vigils, and
American flags, which are displayed in pride, and wave in defiance.
Our unity is a kinship of grief, and a steadfast resolve to prevail
against our enemies. And this unity against terror is now extending
across the world.
America is a nation full of good fortune, with so much to be grateful
for. But we are not spared from suffering. In every generation,
the world has produced enemies of human freedom. They have attacked
America, because we are freedom's home and defender. And the commitment
of our fathers is now the calling of our time.
On this national day of prayer and remembrance, we ask almighty
God to watch over our nation, and grant us patience and resolve
in all that is to come. We pray that He will comfort and console
those who now walk in sorrow. We thank Him for each life we now
must mourn, and the promise of a life to come.
As we have been assured, neither death nor life, nor angels nor
principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come,
nor height nor depth, can separate us from God's love. May He bless
the souls of the departed. May He comfort our own. And may He always
guide our country.
God bless America.
by George Walker Bush,
President - United States of America
END 1:07 P.M. EDT 9/14/2001
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