Address of U.S. Congressman Thaddeus G. McCotter
My friends, it
is the duty and the honor of every child of the American
revolution to stand as one with his fellow human beings
abroad who are striving to break the yoke of tyranny
and, finally, rightfully, breath free; thus, I extend my
deepest gratitude for the privilege of addressing you
amidst these heady days of Lebanon’s resurrection from
Syrian domination.
Yet, precisely
because these are enticing times for all who’ve dreamt
to once again see the brilliantine glean of the “pearl
of the Middle East’s” homeland, I am compelled issue a
clarion caution: amidst their cries for liberty, the
Lebanese people must never forget their tears of misery,
which while dried by the passing of time, must ever be
etched in their hearts to inform their history and
ennoble their actions. For make no mistake: all of
evil’s heinous minions opposed to human emancipation
want you to fail.
These vile
tools of totalitarianism well know Lebanese liberty
threatens their own hegemony over their regimes’
oppressed peoples for, truly, the roots of Lebanon’s
“Cedar Revolution” can only continue to reach deep into
the hearts of every haunted, hunted human being and
inspire them to hunger and reach for freedom’s
fulfillment.
To date,
thankfully, these despots’ moves to obstruct
sovereignty’s steps have met with no success; but, even
as the Syrian menace retreats before the triumphal tide
of human hope, the despots obdurately harbor a hideous
hope – a hideous hope these oppressors and their
appeasers and apologists spit forth in the face of the
Revolution’s wake:
Specifically,
for Lebanon they raise the grisly specter of a
post-Syrian civil war.
At bottom, the
central tenet of their cynical calculation is this: if,
in fact, nothing brings a divided people together faster
than the presence of a common enemy, then nothing will
divide a united people faster than the absence of a
common enemy. Oh, how often we been forced to endure
the oppressors’, appeasers’ and apologists’
mealy-mouthed renditions of this pernicious proposition
throughout these early days of the Cedar Revolution!
How often we have wondered why these oppressors,
appeasers and apologists can have eyes and still be
blind to the sight of Christian and Shi’a, Sunni and
Druze, arm in arm in the streets of Beirut crying out in
common cause for their common country!
Too often, too
agonizingly often, have we so done; and too often, too
agonizingly often, must we continue to so do. For, I
again caution this is but the birth of the Cedar
Revolution – the time when the incipient stirrings of
sovereignty’s sapling strain to break the hoary bonds of
a despotic earth. And though the sprout may pierce the
soil to touch a new day’s nurturing sun, we may not - we
must not – consider, nor conclude, freedom’s Cedar has
arisen until we are assured its divergent roots work as
one beneath it.
My friends,
this is difficult to say, but again – as an American,
and especially as an Irish-American descended from
Ulster Catholics – I am compelled to say it: throughout
the Cedar Revolution, the courageous Lebanese people
must not shrink from their most formidable task. The
courageous Lebanese people must honestly accept their
anguished history as a once united, once divided, and
once more united people; and, rather than succumb to the
all too human temptations to resent or to forget and, in
so doing tragically foster anew, the seeds of dissension
which once separated Lebanon’s sons and daughters in
Civil War, the courageous Lebanese people must humanely
embrace their shared suffering and, thus, transcend
themselves and transform their times into one emboldened
and blessed by the charitable bonds of liberty. Only
thus can be crushed the despots’ final designs for
dominion; only thus can be flush the fledgling blossom
of your nation.
And let there
be no doubt: an imperative step in this imperative
process of national reconciliation, resurrection, and
redemption is the just and prompt emancipation of Dr.
Samir Geagea. As Nelson Mandela before him, for over a
decade Dr. Geagea has cradled freedom’s spark within his
enlightened soul while trapped in the darkened depths of
a Syrian-dictated, subterranean detention; now, as his
country emerges toward the torch of liberty from beneath
a benighted Syrian-occupation, none better than Dr.
Geagea embodies the unimaginable suffering and unerring
strength of the Cedar Revolution; and, in consequence,
Dr. Geagea’s profound personal experience of persecution
accords him the singular opportunity to inspire each
Lebanese to forgive the sins of the past and forge the
sinews of a united people. Truly, what can help better
bind the wounds of a beleaguered people than the healing
hands of this tortured doctor?
Indeed, does
not the poet’s ghost agree and illume our course? Did
not Kahlil Gibran write a lifetime ago: “You may forget
the one with whom you have laughed, but never the one
with whom you have wept.” Does not the meter of the
poet and the habits of our hearts guide us to one
sublime, ineluctable truth: We are never nearer God’s
goodness than when we forgive?
In closing
then, my friends, throughout the long life of the Cedar
Revolution, no matter how hard or hurtful, I beseech the
Lebanese people to recall the tribulations of their
divisions as they rise to their triumph of their
destiny:
Weep for past
war’s widows when you cry out for your unity;
Weep for past
war’s orphans when you cry out for your liberty;
Weep for past
war’s childless sires when you cry out for your
sovereignty;
Yes, weep for
all the martyrs murdered by fear and greed and hatred
when you cry out for these birthrights of liberty,
sovereignty, and unity;
And, soon,
forgiving and forgiven, free and sovereign, you children
of the Cedar will find yourselves weeping the grateful
tears of a resplendent and renewed people crying out to
reclaim and redeem the despot-muted freedom of all
God’s children.
Thank you.