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Remarks by John Hoover, Chargé d’Affaires of the Embassy of the United States of America On the Occasion of the 238th Anniversary of the American Declaration of Independence Asmara, Eritrea, July 3, 2014

Remarks by John Hoover, Chargé d’Affaires of the Embassy of the United States of America On the Occasion of the 238th Anniversary of the American Declaration of Independence Asmara, Eritrea, July 3, 2014 Ministers and officials of the Government

Remarks by John Hoover, Chargé d’Affaires of the Embassy of the United States of America

On the Occasion of the 238th Anniversary of the American Declaration of Independence

Asmara, Eritrea, July 3, 2014

  • Ministers and officials of the Government of the State of Eritrea;
  • Members of the Diplomatic Corps;
  • Fellow Americans;
  • U.S. Embassy colleagues;
  • Ladies and gentlemen:

Good afternoon and welcome to the U.S. Embassy on the eve of the 238th anniversary of the American Declaration of Independence!

I want to thank all of you for coming to our national day event today.

But I need to first apologize.  As your invitations indicate, your principal host today was meant to be our incoming, permanent Chargé d’Affaires, Mr. Lou Mazel.

Unfortunately, because of a glitch we will conveniently blame on our travel agent in Washington, he was unable to arrive yesterday as planned.

He will be arriving next week, however.

I do hope you will give offer Lou Mazel the same warm welcome and friendship that so many of you here today gave me when I arrived as the temporary Chargé in mid-April.   I thank you all now, because I know you will.

I also want to thank those parts of the Eritrean Government, including especially the Police and the Foreign Ministry, for their invaluable support for the U.S. Embassy here, both on an ongoing basis and in helping to organize today’s event.

And as I get ready to depart Asmara, I want to thank the staff of our Embassy – both American and Eritrean colleagues, every one of you – for the very good and important work you do every day under difficult circumstances, and for the great job you have all done in organizing today’s big event.

Tomorrow is the 238th anniversary of the day in 1776 when a group of American colonists gathered in Philadelphia and declared the independence of the 13 colonies, and the formation of a new nation, the United States of America.

In the Preamble of that Declaration, they said “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

The Preamble goes on to say, in so many words, that the people have the right to change any government that becomes destructive of these rights in order to institute a new one that will foster and protect them.

That, in essence, is the meaning of our Declaration of Independence – it declares a new nation whose government should respect and protect the rights and freedoms of its citizens.  And it also calls for democratic governance — the right of the people to change their government in the pursuit of these rights and freedoms.

But on that hot day in July, 1776, the Declaration was just that, a declaration – words on a piece of paper, with little immediate, practical effect.

It would be another five years before the American colonists, rebels in the eyes of the world at the time, achieved the military victory that made independence a practical reality, at considerable cost in American blood, sweat and tears.

And it would another 13 years before the people of the United States adopted the U.S. Constitution as a means of organizing a government capable of supporting and safeguarding those “certain unalienable Rights.”

Our new Constitution, however, still did not enumerate the specific rights of the people.

So it was another two years, or 15 years after the Declaration, that the Bill of Rights was added to the Constitution.  Among others, the Bill of Rights proclaimed that the new U.S. Government must ensure its citizens:

  • Freedom of religion;
  • Freedom of speech;
  • Freedom of the press;
  • Freedom of assembly, and;
  • The freedom not to be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.

It would be 36 years after we fought and won our independence that we had to fight another war with our previous colonial master – a war in which Washington, DC was occupied and much of the city set on fire and burned by our foes.

And it would be another 89 years – more than three generations of Americans since the Declaration in 1776 – before the end of a horrifically bloody civil war, a struggle that nearly destroyed the United States, but which eliminated the evil of human slavery.

The point of this U.S. history lesson is that independence, and the building of a nation that lives up to its ideals, are not a one-time event.  They are an unending process, a never-ending struggle.

Building a nation that is true to its own principles and values is a process that at times requires vigilance; at times patience, tolerance, and compromise.  And at times, it requires immense struggle and sacrifice, as our own War for Independence and Civil War remind Americans.

And let’s not forget: sometimes nation-building also means, almost by necessity, making mistakes and having failures.  We in the U.S. have made mistakes, at home and abroad.  And we have failed at different times in our history, at times miserably, to uphold the very ideals and values that define us as a nation and a people.

But with each mistake, with each failure, and also with each sacrifice and success, we hope we get closer to fulfilling and making a practical reality those original rights and values found in our Declaration of Independence, our Constitution, and our Bill of Rights.

I would argue that it is precisely those political ideals first captured in our Declaration of Independence – the promotion and protection of individual rights and freedoms, and democratic governance – that have made American success possible.

Our experience is unique; it is not something that can or should be emulated or replicated by other countries.

But the underlying ideals articulated in our founding documents like the Declaration of Independence are not unique.

We believe they are universal, and much of the rest of the world agrees.

The vision and specific rights enshrined in the American Declaration of Independence and Bill of Rights are echoed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the member states of the United Nations in 1948, and in numerous other UN covenants since then.

And I believe the record around the world shows that those nations that strive to promote and protect individual rights, and the right of their people to peacefully and democratically change their governments, have done much better over the course of recent history in consistently generating peace and prosperity, within their own societies and in relations with their neighbors.

In short, they have been more successful in pursuing the happiness of their peoples.

With that, I want to thank all of you again for coming today.

And I would ask everyone to please raise your glasses in a toast, in both English and in very bad Tigrinya:

Wishing peace and prosperity to Eritrea:  Ni-Ertra Selamn Biltsignan Imne!

And wishing Eritrea a bountiful rainy season! Tilul Kiramat!

Cheers everyone!

Thank you all again and enjoy the rest of the afternoon.

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
18 COMMENTS
  • hawileito July 28, 2014

    A Very great speach.

  • Genet-orginal July 28, 2014

    Mr John Hoover
    Said, “That in essence, it the meaning of our declaration of independence- it declares a new nation whose government should respect the right and freedom of its citizens and it also calls for democratic governance the right of the people to change their government in the pursuit of these rights and freedoms” (John Hoover)Embassy of USA in Asmara Eritrea July 3, 2014.

    WOW! Tell that to the PFDJ’s officials, Isayas and the blind PFDJ followers. When the Eritrean people paid their children’s precious lives, they didn’t have the current Eritrean dictatorial regime in mind. If they knew Isayas’s and his few secret party members’ plan to make Eritrea another North Korea, Eritrean people could have take care of them for good. Why would one declares Independence,if he/she has no intention to give the Eritrean people what they earned:
    Freedom of Speech or freedom to breath
    Freedom of Assembly
    Freedom of Religion
    Freedom of not to be deprived of life liberty or property without due process.

    For 53 years Isayas and his group deprived the Eritrean people their basic human right. Books about close encounters, eye witness are coming out now with many horror stories. The heinous crimes by Isayas and his group, against our freedom fighters is almost identical to what is happening to the Eritrean civil society. For many of us who weren’t old enough or born yet, what happened during the struggle is what is happening right now. During the struggle for our Independence, our freedom fighters did not have the means to fight an evil man Isayas who is a master of manipulation. With the eye witness stories coming out daily and with our observation the past 23 years Isayas’s performance of pure evil, we should be able see the obvious fact. We have been allowing a serial killer walking free to kill, torture the Eritrean people, young and old in broad daylight. What kind of people tolerate this kind of deed from an evil man? When are we going to say with one voice, this is too much? Something is terribly wrong with our mentality to allow an evil man to do his evil deed for half a century.
    God help the Eritrean people.

    • silent July 28, 2014

      Wow, wow and wow!
      The same lofty slogans used by the ‘democracy’ searching mobs prior to the downfall of Saddam in Iraq and Gadafi in Libya.
      In Iraq, the top leader behind the scene was Ahmed Chalabi and in Libya many like Chalgem but the real man was an ex Gadafi renegade general living in exile who returned to Libya in 2011 to lead the revolution against the ‘tyrant’, now a known figure called Khalifa Haftar.
      The story of Iraq and Libya afterwards or today does not require a book or an almanac but a simple question: Did the lofty Western slogans serve the majority of the people?

      • Genet-orginal July 28, 2014

        Silent
        Your slogan seems to be “silent”, So why are you talking? I see, you are engaged in scare-tactics. Don’s forget, everything has limit, no matter what.

    • Abraham August 4, 2014

      And how many years did it take for the black US population to gain those freedoms? Did they ever?!!By the way, God is helping the Eritrean people. You and the likes who serve the US agenda tried to anihiliate the people but God did help the Eritrean people by giving it this leadership. Long live President Isayas Aforki!!
      Awet nihafash.

  • Genet-orginal August 5, 2014

    Abraham

    Say what!, “this leadership” What leadership are you talking about?
    You can worship Mr Isayas all you want, but that has nothing to do with the Eritrean people or Eritrea. Mr Isayas never been elected by the Eritrean people directly or by their represents. Stop hallucinating about other forces annihilating Eritreans and its people, rather start to pay attention what Isayas and his few friends are doing to Eritrean people and the Nation. They are forcing the Eritrean people out of their country. They invited groups from Ethiopia, who are known to be against the Eritrean independent and giving them VIP treatment. What do you think about the Demhit presence in Eritrea? How do you think the Eritrean people feel about them? You can fool yourself by saying “the US agenda tried to annihilate the people” but What do you think Isayas the Ethiopian is doing? He is not building a nation. He even can tell that you himself, there is noting he can do any more. I am not making this up. Go listen to his interviews. If there is Eritrean annihilation, it will undoubtedly be done by Isayas and all the Ethiopians within Eritrea. The Eritrea people are aware it.

    Death for anyone who cont to betray the Eritrean people and our Nation!
    Awet for the Eritrean people who are oppressed, starved tortured, jailed and denied their basic human right by a ruthless dictator and his few supporters

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