Dear List, A concise address. Besides the importance of the 1956 Revolution, we must also never forget Hungary's roll in initiating the end of the Cold War. Pay particular attention to the paragraph beginning "Though the Warsaw Pact, etc." I remember when this happened, I believe in May 1989 and it snowballed into a November 1989 tearing down of the Berlin Wall, and subsequently August 1991...the end of the Cold War. Marika Remarks by Secretary Rice on the 50th Anniversary Year of the Hungarian > Revolution > > Secretary Condoleezza Rice > Benjamin Franklin Room, Washington, DC > February 13, 2006 > > > SECRETARY RICE: Thank you very much. Welcome to the Department of State. We > are > here today to commemorate the Hungarian people's journey toward freedom, a > journey tested by great suffering and by great tragedy, but a journey that > could > not be deterred from its ultimate triumph. > > I am so grateful to be joined here by Ambassador Simonyi, by my great friend, > Congressman Tom Lantos. I see many friends here, of course, members of the > Diplomatic Corps. I see also the former Secretary of Defense, Bill Cohen, > also a > former senator from Maine. Thank you for joining us. > > > There are many, many friends here because we all want to celebrate the > triumph > that the Hungarian people ultimately had, but also to remember the tragedy > that > was endured. I'd like to recognize and welcome the religious leaders who are > here, His Eminence Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, Archbishop of Washington; > Rabbi > Arthur Schneier, the president of the Appeal for Conscience Foundation; and > the > Reverend G. Wilson Gunn, the General Presbyter of the National Capital > Presbytery. And you may know that I'm also a Presbyterian. Thank you for > being > here. > > > I'm especially honored that with us this afternoon are also many proud > Hungarians who witnessed and shaped the events of 1956. You imagined a free > and > democratic Hungary. You sacrificed and you've suffered for it. And I think > that > we owe, to each and every one of you, a round of applause and gratitude. > > > For 12 days in 1956, the Hungarian people caught a fleeting glimpse of their > independence. Armed with little more than a love of liberty, the impatient > patriots of Hungary rose up against the mighty Soviet empire. They stormed > the > jails and they freed political prisoners. They took back their country's > radio > waves and broadcast the censored sounds of Mozart and Beethoven. And they > imagined a new future for Hungary, where they and their fellow citizens would > determine their own future in freedom without facing foreign oppression or > fearing the midnight knock of the secret police. > > > For 12 days, there was hope, but then came the response and it was terrible > and > ferocious. Soviet troops and tanks rumbled into Hungary, killing tens of > thousands of people and condemning thousands of others to Siberian gulags. > > > A desperate exodus began. Two hundred thousand Hungarians, men, women and > children, fled the land of their birth and sought shelter in the West. The > United States opened its doors to the driven sons and daughters of Hungary. > In > time, these immigrants put down new roots and they started new businesses and > they added to the diverse and wonderful character of America. > > > 1956 was a year of unspeakable tragedy for the Hungarian people, but 50 years > later, from the vantage point of history, we see that 1956 was also the > beginning of something greater, something far more promising. In the > Hungarian > Revolution, the world saw that hope was alive behind the Iron Curtain. In 12 > days of freedom, impatient patriots throughout Eastern Europe drew > inspiration > for their own struggles and in the stories of oppression that Hungarian > refugees > told, free nations learned the true character of the Soviet regime and their > will to resist it grew stronger. > > > The hope for independence was never extinguished in the Hungarian people. > They > resisted Soviet imperialism to the very end and they were the first in their > region to make the transition to democracy. Immediately, Hungary's free > government began realizing the goals that all Hungarians had longed for > during > the dark days of communism: liberty and human rights, the rule of law and > equal > justice, free enterprise and growing wealth. > > > Today, the nation of Hungary is a model for all the world of the security and > the prosperity and the success that come with freedom and democracy. From its > earliest years, a young, democratic Hungary also worked for the freedom of > others. In 1989, as the Soviet Union tottered beneath the weight of its own > contradictions, East German citizens fled their country in large numbers and > sought sanctuary in Hungary. > > > Though the Warsaw Pact required the return of all refugees, the citizens of > Hungary refused to be Erich Honecker's border guards. They spurned imperial > commands and sheltered East Germans fleeing persecution. Through their > actions, > the Hungarian people added to the great momentum of freedom that finally > swept > away the Berlin Wall and helped reunite the German people and ultimately, > transformed Europe into a continent, whole, free and at peace. > > > Hungary's support for the freedom of others now stretches throughout the > world, > from the Balkans to Afghanistan to Iraq and beyond. In Budapest, the > Hungarian > Government has created the International Center for Democratic Transitions, > which pools the knowledge and experience of democratic nations to help > countries > across the world navigate their own transitions to democracy. These lessons > are > accelerating the march of freedom in our time, yet the lessons of Hungary's > history also point toward timeless principles that transcend the challenges > of > today. > > > In Hungary's journey toward freedom, we see that justice can be delayed, but > it > cannot be denied. In Hungary's experience of freedom, we see that liberty > unlocks the God-given potential of all people to rise as high as their > talents > will take them. And in the actions of the Hungarian democracy, we see that > liberty, once achieved, is not a scarce resource to be hoarded, saved > selfishly. > It is the universal right of all humanity summoning all free peoples to > service > and sacrifice on behalf of those still denied that liberty. > > > The United States values our Hungarian partners and we still have much work > to > do together. So, let us rededicate ourselves today to a common mission of > ensuring freedom at home and defending freedom abroad. The memories of the > fallen, the memories of the heroes, the memories of history demand no less of > us. > > > Thank you very much. > > > > >