by Ken Blackwell and Bob Morrison
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Peace/2012/06/12/Reagans-Sign-of-the-Cross-Speech
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Peace/2012/06/12/Reagans-Sign-of-the-Cross-Speech
Every American high school student knows,
or should know, that President Ronald Reagan went to the Brandenburg Gate in
West Berlin on this date in 1987. The President said: “If you seek
liberalization, open this gate…Mr. Gorbachev,tear down this wall.”
(Yes, kids, there was a
West Berlin then.)
American journalists were enchanted by
Mikhail Gorbachev in those days. The young and charismatic Kremlin boss was “the
human face of Communism” that they’d been seeking. Leader of the CPSU (Communist
Party of the Soviet Union ), this dynamic man spoke of glasnost
(openness) and perestroika (re-structuring). His words were all the
rage then.
But when the Brandenburg Gate did finally
open, in 1989, and when the Berlin Wall was re-structured, as in,
torn down, the people in the Communist East German puppet state ran only one
way. They ran as far and as fast from Gorbachev and his “workers’
paradise” as they could. When Gorby ran for president of Russia in an open
election, he won just 12% of the vote.
As important as Reagan’s dramatic call to
“tear down this wall” was, we should not forget what else he said that memorable
day twenty-five years ago. His speech contained the most eloquent paean to
religious freedom we have heard.
Reagan was not afraid to point
to:
…the most fundamental distinction of
all between East and West. The totalitarian world produces backwardness because
it does such violence to the spirit, thwarting the human impulse to create, to
enjoy, to worship. The totalitarian world finds even symbols of love and of
worship an affront. Years ago, before the East Germans began rebuilding their
churches, they erected a secular structure: the television tower at Alexander
Platz. Virtually ever since, the authorities have been working to correct what
they view as the tower's one major flaw, treating the glass sphere at the top
with paints and chemicals of every kind. Yet even today when the sun strikes
that sphere--that sphere that towers over all Berlin--the light makes the sign
of the cross. There in Berlin, like the city itself, symbols of love, symbols of
worship, cannot be suppressed.
Reagan’s speech that day is known—if it is
taught at all—as his “Tear Down This Wall” speech. But it could as well be known
as his Sign of the Cross Speech. That’s because he was the first
President of the United States to invoke the Sign of the Cross in a public
address.
Reagan knew how strong those words would
echo in the Captive Nations, especially in Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Hungary,
with their large Catholic populations. That Reagan, an Evangelical Christian,
would be so attuned to the religious vocabulary of millions of Roman Catholics
and Orthodox Christians is itself a tribute to his open mind.
Churchill was certainly no churchgoer. But
he, too, recognized evil when he saw it. He knew that Nazi Germany was evil
because it sought to murder the Jews. Churchill had the courage to stand up
against the Nazis and their Judenhass (Jew hatred.) “Fear God,” he said,
“and dread nought.”
President Reagan carried to every summit
meeting with Gorbachev a list of Jewish refuseniks unjustly imprisoned in the
Evil Empire. He pressed Gorbachev to free those Jews from the Gulag and let them
emigrate to Israel.
Today, the Obama administration works with
regimes that threaten Jews with extinction and that persecute their Christian
minorities. This administration makes little effort to protect religious
freedom.
We have seen Coptic churches in Egypt
torched. Christian cemeteries in Libya are desecrated. Assyrian, Chaldean, and
Maronite Christians huddling in Syria await Assad’s fall.
We should remember this day. Twenty-five
years ago, Ronald Reagan had the courage to overrule his own State Department,
his own Pentagon, his own advisers. None of them wanted him to “provoke” the
Soviets with blunt talk about good and evil. No one wanted him to threaten what
they took to be stability. These advocates of realpolitik,
however, were proven to be politically unrealistic.
Ronald Reagan had a surer grasp of history
and power. What’s the good of having power if you don’t wield power for good?
Like Churchill, he would fear God and dread nought. Under the Sign of the Cross
that day a quarter century ago, Ronald Reagan took a bold stand for
freedom.
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