THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release April 18, 2001 REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE UNITED STATES HOLOCAUST MUSEUM
Washington, D.C.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. (Applause and cheers.) This is a hallowed place. Please behave yourself.
It's an honor for us to be here. Laura and I have just come from a fantastic tour. I want to thank Rabbi Greenberg for his hospitality, and Ruth Mendel for her hospitality, and the Director, Sarah Bloomfield, for giving us such a special evening. Thank you all very much for your graciousness. I want to thank you all very much for coming. It's an honor for me to be here with members of my White House staff, friends of mine from all around the country.
It isn't like any other museum. It bears witness to the best and to the worst of the human heart. The images here stay with you. And only by confronting them can we begin to grasp the full enormity of the Holocaust. I urge Americans planning a visit to Washington to come here, themselves, and see what we have just seen.
History records many atrocities before and after the 1930s and 1940s. But it was the Holocaust that forced us to find a new term for horrors on such a scale — a crime against humanity. Human evil has never been so ambitious in scope, so systematic in execution, and so deliberate in its destruction.
In places like this, the evidence has been kept. Without it, we might forget the past, and we might neglect the future. And we must never forget. We must always remember both the cruelty of the guilty, and the courage and innocence of their victims.
So many stories from the concentration camps will never be told because many of the witnesses did not survive. The stories we have must be preserved forever: Stories of mothers sacrificing themselves to save their children. Stories of children trying to shield their parents. Stories of men and women praying and comforting one another in the last moments on this Earth.
These tell the greater truth of the Holocaust — the evil is real, but hope endures. Above all, this museum is a testament to hope.
Tomorrow I will have the honor of joining in the Days of Remembrance observances at the Capitol. I will convey America's commitment to the memory of 6 million who died in the Holocaust; our commitment to averting future tragedies; and our commitment to a friend, as a friend, to the Jewish people — to their cause and to the nation they built.
I hope to see many of you at the Capitol tomorrow. Thank you all for coming, and God bless. (Applause.)