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Reagan,
Ronald (1981-89)
Proclamation 4838 of April 22, 1981
Days of Remembrance of Victims of the Holocaust
by the President of the United States of America
The Congress of the United States established
the United States Holocaust Memorial Council to create a living
memorial to the victims of the Nazi Holocaust. Its purpose: So mankind
will never lose memory of that terrible moment in time when the
awful specter of death camps stained the history of our world.
When America and its allies liberated those haunting
places of terror and sick destructiveness, the world came to a vivid
and tragic understanding of the evil it faced in those years of
the Second World War. Each of those names — Auschwitz, Buchenwald,
Dachau, Treblinka and so many others — became synonymous with horror.
The millions of death, the gas chambers, the
inhuman crematoria, and the thousands of people who somehow survived
with lifetime scars are all now part of the conscience of history.
Forever must we remember just how precious is civilization, how
important is liberty, and how heroic is the human spirit.
Like the genocide of the Armenians before it,
and the genocide of the Cambodians which followed it — and like
too many other such persecutions of too many other peoples — the
lessons of the Holocaust must never be forgotten.
As part of its mandate, the Holocaust Memorial
Council has been directed to designate annual Day of Remembrance
as a national, civic commemoration of the Holocaust, and to encourage
and sponsor appropriate observances throughout the United States.
This year, the national Days of Remembrance will be observed on
April 26 through May 3.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, RONALD REAGAN, President of
the United States of America, do hereby ask the people of the United
States to observe this solemn anniversary of the liberation of the
Nazi death camps, with appropriate study, prayers and commemoration,
as a tribute to the spirit of freedom and justice which Americans
fought so hard and well to preserve.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand
this 22nd day of April, in the year of our Lord Nineteen hundred
and eight-one, and of the Independence of the United States of America
the two hundred and fifth.
Ronald Reagan
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