Remembered in a column by Don Feder
ON THE DAY when we memorialize those who gave their lives so
America would endure, we should ask what it means a citizen of this
republic.
Here are the thoughts of one American, a credo for the coming
millennia.
I am an American. I was conceived at Plymouth, born in Lexington
and Concord, and reached maturity at Philadelphia.
I went through the fires of Shiloh, Gualdacanal, the Chosin
Resovoir, Khe Sanh and a thousand other battlefields, and emerged
rededicated to the ideals on which America was founded.
I am an American. Ever ready to defend my liberty and
independence, to make any sacrifice and bear any burden - still, I
seek no quarrel.
I march to the sound of the guns out of necessity alone. I fight
not for glory or territory, or to make others bend to my will, but
to vindicate my rights and preserve my freedom.
I am an American. I'm proud of my past. Words like Valley Forge,
Gettysburg Address and Pearl Harbor -- names like Washington,
Jackson, Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt -- make my blood stir.
Glancing behind me, I see generations of men and women who
labored and struggled, lived and died to let me stand where I am
today -- who cleared the land, planted the crops, built the
factories, raised the cities and made the discoveries that created a
civilization which all the silent, suffering ranks of slaves, serfs
and subjects who came before them could never imagine.
I am an American. While recognizing the errors that were made in
nation-building (has a nation ever been built exclusively on
light?), I proclaim America's past glorious indeed, a boon to
humanity, and consider myself among the blessed of the earth to
share this nation's destiny.
I am an American. Liberty is my birthright. To speak my mind,
choose my leaders and legislators, defend my home and family, and
worship the Creator in my fashion -- these are not privileges, but
G-d-given rights. Governments can respect or deny them; they cannot
change them.
I am an American. I have no rulers. Those who make, interpret and
enforce our laws are servants. When they no longer recognize that
verity, their authority loses legitimacy.
I am an American. My rights are a sacred trust to be exercised in
the cause of justice and virtue. They are not the playthings of a
spoiled child or mechanisms of self-indulgence.
I am an American. English is my language. Our ancestors arrived
on these shores speaking everything from Chinese to Yiddish. It was
English that united us, that allowed us to overcome age-old
antagonisms.
From the Mayflower Compact to the latest piece of legislation
introduced in Congress, our history and heritage are written in the
tongue of the Magna Carta and the King James Bible.
I am an American. I have no distinctive race, religion or
ethnicity. I am black, white, yellow, brown and red -- Catholic,
Protestant, Jew and Hindu. I came here from the hamlets of Old
England, the bogs of Ireland, Napoli's sunny shore, the Pale of
Settlement and the villages of Vietnam. American isn't a color or
creed, but a state of mind.
I am an American. I welcome immigrants who are here to work and
build, who identify with our past and ideals, who were spiritual
Americans before they landed. Broken English is fine, as long as
faith remains unbroken. An American speaks with the heart as much as
the lips.
I am an American. My ism is Americanism. I reject all dogmas and
ideologies. Collectivism, racism, militarism and imperialism have no
place here. The rot that's eaten away at the soul of so many nations
and cultures must be fiercely resisted.
I am an American. I recognize only one loyalty higher than
allegiance to our flag -- faith in G-d. I acknowledge that America
and G-d, the physical and the spiritual, are inseparable. America
was founded by people of faith and grew to greatness by His grace. I
pray that we will always be the instruments of His will.
I am an American. I weep over the fact that American history is
no longer taught in our schools. In its place is a worldly, cynical
skepticism inculcated by authors and educators at war with our basic
values.
I am an American. I cringe at the collection of connivers,
cowards, clowns and quacks that passes for our political leadership.
I wonder that so many of my compatriots have no idea what America
means and show no gratitude for the blessings that are theirs.
I am an American. My ranks grow thin; the night closes in.
Whether I will be the last of my kind or the vanguard of their
resurgence, only time will tell.
Darrell Scott writes: Thanks for featuring the poem I spoke
(before) the judiciary committee.
No, Thank you,
Darrell.
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