April 13, 1984
Reverend Falwell, ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much, for there are no words to describe
a welcome such as you've given me here. It's a real pleasure to be with so many who firmly
believe that the answers to the world's problems can be found in the Word of God.
I'm only sorry I can't spend the entire evening with you, but I'm expected across town. [Laughter]
But tonight, believe me, I came here with some trepidation, and your warm welcome didn't
exactly make me feel any easier, because I'm going to do something that I haven't done before. I'm
not going to talk to you about some of the things we've talked about before and some of the
things that we've tried to accomplish and that we haven't yet. With regard to that, I will only say
let us all heed the words of an old Scotch ballad, ``For those defeats that we've had so far, we are
hurt; we are not slain. We'll lie us down and rest a bit, and then we'll fight again.''
What I'm going to do -- and I know you're not supposed to apologize any time you start speaking
for what you're going to say -- but I know that even you, whose calling it is to keep the rest of us,
if possible, on the right path, in these days of cynicism, in these days when there are people that in
the guise of separating church and state would go so far as to say we should not even have
chaplains in the military service -- I know that there are times when all of us wonder whether
we're being effective. And tonight, I'd like to share an account that I received that shows how
God works in our lives even in the darkest of hours.
This report concerns the marines in Beirut, brave men who believed that the goal we sought in
that place was worthy of their best and gave their best. In the end, hatred centuries old made it
impossible for Lebanon to achieve peace when we and so many others hoped it would. But while
they were there, those young men of ours prevented widespread killing in Beirut, and they added
luster, not tarnish to their motto, ``Semper Fidelis.''
I'm going to read to you another man's words. And they're words that, perhaps, answer what I
said a moment ago about whether we sometimes were shaken in our faith and in our beliefs. On
that October day when a terrorist truck bomb took the lives of 241 marines, soldiers, and sailors
at the airport in Beirut, one of the first to reach the tragic scene was a chaplain, the chaplain of
our 6th Fleet, Rabbi Arnold E. Resnicoff. And here is what he finally felt urged at the end of that
day to put down in writing of the experiences of that day.
He said, ``I along with Lieutenant Commander George `Pooch' Pucciarelli, the Catholic chaplain
attached to the marine unit, faced a scene almost too horrible to describe. Bodies and pieces of
bodies were everywhere. Screams of those injured or trapped were barely audible at first, as our
minds struggled to grapple with the reality before us -- a massive four-story building, reduced to a
pile of rubble; dust mixing with smoke and fire, obscuring our view of the little that was left.
``Because we'd thought that the sound of the explosion was still related to a single rocket or shell,
most of the marines had run toward the foxholes and bunkers while we, the chaplains, had gone to
the scene of the noise, just in case someone had been wounded. Now, as the news spread quickly
throughout the camp -- news of the magnitude of the tragedy, news of the need for others to run
to the aid of those comrades who still might be alive, marines came from all directions. There was
a sense of God's presence that day in the small miracles of life which we encountered in each body
that, despite all odds, still had a breath within. But there was more of His presence, more to keep
our faith alive, in the heroism and in the humanity of the men who responded to the cries for help.
We saw marines risk their own lives again and again as they went into the smoke and the fire to
try to pull someone out or as they worked to uncover friends, all the while knowing that further
collapse of huge pieces of concrete, precariously perched like dominos, could easily crush the
rescuers.
``There was humanity at its best that day and a reminder not to give up the hope and dreams of
what the world could be in the tears that could still be shed by these men, regardless of how
cynical they had pretended to be before, regardless of how much they might have seen before.
``Certain images will stay with me always,'' he writes. ``I remember a marine who found a wad of
money amidst the rubble. He held it at arm's length as if it were dirty and cried out for a match or
a lighter so that it could be burned. No one that day wanted to profit from the suffering of
catastrophe. Later the chaplains would put the word out that the money should be collected and
given to us, for we were sure that a fund for widows and orphans would ultimately be established.
But at that moment, I was hypnotized with the rest of the men and watched as the money was
burned.''
``Working with the wounded -- sometimes comforting, simply letting them know help was on the
way; sometimes trying to pull and carry those whose injuries appeared less dangerous in an
immediate sense than the approaching fire or the smothering smoke -- my kippa was lost. That is
the little headgear that is worn by rabbis. The last I remember it, I'd used it to mop someone's
brow. Father Pucciarelli, the Catholic chaplain, cut a circle out of his cap -- a piece of
camouflaged cloth which would become my temporary headcovering. Somehow he wanted those
marines to know not just that we were chaplains, but that he was a Christian and that I was
Jewish. Somehow we both wanted to shout the message in a land where people were killing each
other -- at least partially based on the differences in religion among them -- that we, we
Americans still believed that we could be proud of our particular religions and yet work side by
side when the time came to help others, to comfort, and to ease pain.
``Father Pucciarelli and I worked that day as brothers. The words from the prophet Malachi kept
recurring to me -- words he'd uttered some 2,500 years ago as he had looked around at fighting
and cruelty and pain. `Have we not all one Father?' he had asked. `Has not one God created us
all?' It was painfully obvious, tragically obvious, that our world still could not show that we had
learned to answer, yes. Still, I thought, perhaps some of us can keep the question alive. Some of
us can cry out, as the marines did that day, that we believe the answer is yes.
``Before the bombing, Pooch -- that's his name for the other chaplain with him -- and I had been in
a building perhaps a hundred yards away. There'd been one other chaplain, Lieutenant Danny
Wheeler, a Protestant minister who'd spent the night in the building which was attacked. Pooch
and I were so sure that he was dead that we had promised each other that when the day came to
return to the States we would visit his wife together. Suddenly, Pooch noticed Danny's stole, what
he used to call his Protestant tallith. Because it was far from the area Danny was supposed to have
been in, there was cautious hope that perhaps he had been thrown clear, that perhaps he had
survived. Later, Danny would tell the story of his terror. He was under the rubble, alive, not
knowing what had happened and not knowing how badly he was hurt. Then he heard voices of
the marines searching near his stole. And his cry for help was answered with digging, which lasted
4 hours before he was dragged out alive.
``Danny told me later that I treated him like a newborn baby when he came out; that I counted his
fingers and toes, trying to see that he was whole. I didn't realize that I was so obvious, but the
truth is that we couldn't believe that he was in one piece. I hugged him as they brought over a
stretcher. I can still hear his first words. Wracked with pain, still unsure of his own condition, he
asked how his clerk was. Like so many of the men we would save that day, he asked first about
others.
``These men, the survivors, still had no idea of the extent of the damage. They still thought that
perhaps they'd been in the one area of the building hit by a rocket or mortar. We would wait until
later to sit with these men and tell them the truth, to share with them the magnitude of the
tragedy. After the living were taken out there was much more work to be done. With the
wounded, with those who had survived, there was the strange job of trying to ease a gnawing
feeling of guilt that would slowly surface, guilt that they -- -- ''
[At this point, the President was interrupted by persons chanting, ``Bread, not bombs!'']
Wouldn't it be nice if a little bit of that marine spirit would rub off, and they would listen about
brotherly love? [Applause]
[The chanting continued.]
I was talking about the guilt that was felt by the men who were alive; the guilt that they had
somehow let down their comrades by not dying with them. That is something that happens a great
deal in combat.
``So, our job,'' he said, ``was to tell them how every life saved was important to us; how their
survival was important to our faith and our hope. They had to give thanks with us that they still
had the gift and the responsibility of life which would go
on -- -- ''
[The chanting continued.]
I've got more decibels at work for me than they have. [Applause]
[At this point, there was some commotion in the audience.]
I think they're leaving. [Applause] Well, back to the chaplain. [Laughter]
``With others, the marines who stayed behind to continue the job of digging -- a terrible,
horrifying job of collecting human parts for identification and for eventual burial -- there was the
job of comforting them as they mourned.
``Thankfully, the self-defense mechanism within us took over from time to time and we were able
to work without reacting to each and every horror that we would encounter. But suddenly
something would trigger our emotions, something would touch our humanity in a way impossible
to avoid. For some it would be the finding of a friend's body, someone filled with life only days
before. For others, it would be a scrap of paper or a simple belonging, a birthday card or a picture
of someone's children which would remind them that this was no abstract body count of 240
military casualties. This was a tragedy of people where each was unique and each had a story.
Each had a past and each had been cheated of a future. As the Mishnah puts it, `Each was a
world.' We were not digging up 240. We were digging up one plus one plus one.
``I have a personal memory of two things which brought to my mind images of life, images which
haunt me still. One was a packet of three envelopes tied together with a rubber band. On top,
under the band, was a note which read, `To be mailed in case of death.' The other was a Red
Cross message delivered the next morning. The American Red Cross is the agency used by many
Navy families to communicate medical news from home. This message was a birth announcement.
A baby had been born, and we were to deliver the good news. Only now, there was no father
whom we could congratulate, no father to whom the news could be conveyed. That message
stayed on the chaplains' desk for days. Somehow we couldn't throw it away, so it stayed on the
desk and without mentioning it, we all seemed to avoid that desk.
``I stayed in Beirut for 4 more days before finally returning to Italy and to my family. During
those days, as the work went on, a marine here or there would send a silent signal that he wanted
me, that is, a chaplain, near. Sometimes it was to talk. Sometimes it was so that he could shrug his
shoulders or lift his eyes in despair. Sometimes it was just to feel that I was near. For despite the
struggles I might be feeling on a personal level, I was a chaplain and, therefore, a symbol that
there was room for hope and for dreams, even at the worst of times.
``In our tradition, of course, when we visit the home of a mourner during Shiva, the first week
following the death of a loved one, visitors follow a simple rule: If the mourner initiates the
conversation, the visitor responds. Otherwise, you sit in silence, communicating concern through
your very presence, even without words. Somehow I applied those rules during those days of
digging. When a soldier or sailor said something, I responded. Otherwise, I stood by.
``During all of my visits to Beirut, I, along with the other chaplains, spent much time simply
speaking with the men. Informal discussions, whether going on while crouched in a foxhole or
strolling toward the tents set up for chow, were just as important as anything formal we might set
up.
``I remember the first time I jumped in a foxhole, the first time the shells actually fell within the
U.S. area. Looking around at the others in there with me, I made the remark that we probably had
the only interfaith foxholes in Beirut. The Druze, the Muslims, Christians, all had theirs. The
Jewish forces in the Israeli Army had theirs. But we were together. I made the comment then that
perhaps if the world had more interfaith foxholes, there might be less of a need for foxholes
altogether.
``To understand the role of the chaplain -- Jewish, Catholic, or Protestant -- is to understand that
we try to remind others, and perhaps ourselves as well, to cling to our humanity even in the worst
of times. We bring with us the wisdom of men and women whose faith has kept alive their dreams
in ages past. We bring with us the images of what the world could be, of what we ourselves might
be, drawn from the visions of prophets and the promises of our holy books. We bring with us the
truth that faith not only reminds us of the holy in heaven, but also of the holiness we can create
here on Earth. It brings not only a message of what is divine, but also of what it means to be truly
human.
``It's too easy to give in to despair in a world sometimes seemingly filled with cruelty and
brutality. But we must remember not just the depths to which humans might sink, but also the
heights to which they may aspire.
``That October day in Beirut saw men reach heroic heights -- indeed, heights of physical
endurance and courage to be sure, but heights of sacrifice, of compassion, of kindness, and of
simple human decency as well, and, even if the admission might bring a blush to the cheeks of a
few of the marines, heights of love.
``Long ago the rabbis offered one interpretation of the Biblical verse which tells us that we're
created in the image of God. It does not refer to physical likeness, they explained, but to spiritual
potential. We have within us the power to reflect as God's creatures the highest values of our
Creator. As God is forgiving and merciful, so can we be; as He is caring and kind, so must we
strive to be; as He is filled with love, so must we be.
``Because of the actions I witnessed during that hell in Beirut, I glimpsed at least a fleeting image
of heaven, for in the hearts and hands of men who chose to act as brothers, I glimpsed God's hand
as well. I did not stand alone to face a world forsaken by God. I felt I was part of one created
with infinite care and wonderful, awesome potential.
``We live in a world where it's not hard to find cause for despair. The chaplain has the challenge
to bring to those who often see terror at its worst, some reason for hope. We need to keep faith
and to keep searching, even in the worst of times. Only then may we find strength enough to keep
believing that the best of times might still be.''
These were the words of Lieutenant Commander Resnicoff. I read them because I just felt that all
of us -- and I know how much you do of this -- let us strive to live up to the vision of faith that
Chaplain Resnicoff saw that day, and let us never stop praying and working for peace.
Thank God, and thank you, and God bless you all.
Note: The President spoke at 6:50 p.m. at the District of Columbia Convention Center. He was
introduced by the Rev. Jerry Falwell.