Proclamation 5840 -- Captive
Nations Week, 1988
July 13, 1988
By the President of the United States of America
A
Proclamation
During
Captive Nations Week, we honor the courage, faith, and aspirations of the
millions of people the world over who suffer under Soviet domination. They
desire, seek, and deserve, as the common heritage of humanity, the liberty,
justice, self-determination, and independence we Americans and all free peoples
cherish. The citizens of the captive nations daily hear the mighty call of
freedom and answer it boldly, sending an echo around the globe to remind
totalitarians and all mankind that their voices cannot be quelled -- because
they are the voices of the human spirit.
Across
the continents and seas, the cry for freedom rings out and the struggle for its
blessings continues, in the republics of the Soviet Union, in the Baltic States and throughout Eastern Europe, in Cuba and Nicaragua, in Ethiopia and Angola, and in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. It also continues in Afghanistan, despite initial Soviet
withdrawal, because the Najibullah regime imposes its
will upon the Afghan people. We in America, who have held high the
torch of liberty for 2 centuries and more, pause during Captive Nations Week to
express our solidarity with those who strive at great personal risk and
sacrifice to win justice for their nations. We commemorate as well the many
freedom fighters and individuals such as Polish Father Jerzy
Popieluszko and Ukrainian poet Vasyl
Stus who have given their lives in the imperishable cause
of liberty. We cannot and will not shirk our duty and responsibility to insist
on the speediest end to subjugation, persecution, and discrimination in the
captive nations. We repeat our call for all governments to respect and honor
the letter and the spirit of the United Nations Charter and the Helsinki
Accords.
Last
year's Captive Nations Week Proclamation mentioned four people in the Soviet Union imprisoned for their
struggle for national rights. Now, 1 year later, two of them, both Helsinki human rights monitors,
remain in internal exile -- Viktoras Petkus, a Lithuanian, and Lev Lukyanenko,
a Ukrainian. Another, Helsinki monitor Mart Niklus, an Estonian, is still in a labor camp. The last, Gunars Astra, Latvia's highly respected
national rights activist, was released in poor health earlier this year after
19 years in Soviet labor camps. He died several months ago at 56 years of age.
America is keenly aware of, and
will continue to encourage, the great tide of democratic ideas that now sweeps
the globe. We cannot forget decades of tragedy, the tens of millions of lives
lost, or the enormity of the suffering inflicted on the innocent. We applaud
the courage and faith that have sustained countless people and kept alive the
dream of freedom against unthinkable odds. Despite starvation, torture, and
murder, the indomitable human spirit will outlast all oppression. We continue
to stand ready to cooperate in meeting the just aspirations of the oppressed
and needy of the world. We will remain forever steadfast in our commitment to
speak out for those who cannot, to seek justice for those to whom it is denied,
and to assist freedom-seeking peoples everywhere.
The
Congress, by joint resolution approved July 17,
1959
(73 Stat. 212), has authorized and requested the President to issue a
proclamation designating the third week in July of each year as ``Captive
Nations Week.''
Now,
Therefore, I, Ronald Reagan, President of the United States of
America, do hereby proclaim the week beginning July
17, 1988,
as Captive Nations Week. I call upon the people of the United States to observe this week
with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and activities, and I urge them to
reaffirm their devotion to the aspirations of all peoples for justice,
self-determination, and liberty.
In
Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this thirteenth day of July, in
the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and eighty-eight, and of the Independence of the United States of
America the two hundred and
thirteenth.
Ronald
Reagan
[Filed with the Office
of the Federal Register, 11:37 a.m., July 14, 1988]