Speech of President Corazon Aquino During The Joint Session of The U.S. Congress, September 18, 1986
Speech of President Corazon Aquino During The Joint Session of The U.S. Congress, September 18, 1986
Speech of President Corazon Aquino During The Joint Session of The U.S. Congress, September 18, 1986
VIDEO:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ZnnvbKyNCQ[/youtube]
TRANSCRIPT:
Speech
of
Her Excellency Corazon C. Aquino
President of the Philippines
During the Joint Session of the United States Congress
Three years ago, I left America in grief to bury my husband, Ninoy Aquino. I thought I had left it also to lay to
rest his restless dream of Philippine freedom. Today, I have returned as the president of a free people.
In burying Ninoy, a whole nation honored him. By that brave and selfless act of giving honor, a nation in
shame recovered its own. A country that had lost faith in its future found it in a faithless and brazen act of
murder. So in giving, we receive, in losing we find, and out of defeat, we snatched our victory.
For the nation, Ninoy became the pleasing sacrifice that answered their prayers for freedom. For myself and
our children, Ninoy was a loving husband and father. His loss, three times in our lives, was always a deep and
painful one.
Fourteen years ago this month was the first time we lost him. A president-turned-dictator, and traitor to his
oath, suspended the Constitution and shut down the Congress that was much like this one before which I am
honored to speak. He detained my husband along with thousands of others – senators, publishers and
anyone who had spoken up for the democracy as its end drew near. But for Ninoy, a long and cruel ordeal
was reserved. The dictator already knew that Ninoy was not a body merely to be imprisoned but a spirit he
must break. For even as the dictatorship demolished one by one the institutions of democracy – the press,
the Congress, the independence of the judiciary, the protection of the Bill of Rights – Ninoy kept their spirit
alive in himself.
The government sought to break him by indignities and terror. They locked him up in a tiny, nearly airless cell
in a military camp in the north. They stripped him naked and held the threat of sudden midnight execution
over his head. Ninoy held up manfully–all of it. I barely did as well. For 43 days, the authorities would not tell
me what had happened to him. This was the first time my children and I felt we had lost him.
When that didn’t work, they put him on trial for subversion, murder and a host of other crimes before a
military commission. Ninoy challenged its authority and went on a fast. If he survived it, then, he felt, God
intended him for another fate. We had lost him again. For nothing would hold him back from his
determination to see his fast through to the end. He stopped only when it dawned on him that the
government would keep his body alive after the fast had destroyed his brain. And so, with barely any life in
his body, he called off the fast on the fortieth day. God meant him for other things, he felt. He did not know
that an early death would still be his fate, that only the timing was wrong.
At any time during his long ordeal, Ninoy could have made a separate peace with the dictatorship, as so
many of his countrymen had done. But the spirit of democracy that inheres in our race and animates this
chamber could not be allowed to die. He held out, in the loneliness of his cell and the frustration of exile, the
democratic alternative to the insatiable greed and mindless cruelty of the right and the purging holocaust of
the left.
And then, we lost him, irrevocably and more painfully than in the past. The news came to us in Boston. It had
to be after the three happiest years of our lives together. But his death was my country’s resurrection in the
courage and faith by which alone they could be free again. The dictator had called him a nobody. Two million
people threw aside their passivity and escorted him to his grave. And so began the revolution that has
brought me to democracy’s most famous home, the Congress of the United States.
The task had fallen on my shoulders to continue offering the democratic alternative to our people.
Archibald Macleish had said that democracy must be defended by arms when it is attacked by arms and by
truth when it is attacked by lies. He failed to say how it shall be won.
I held fast to Ninoy’s conviction that it must be by the ways of democracy. I held out for participation in the
1984 election the dictatorship called, even if I knew it would be rigged. I was warned by the lawyers of the
opposition that I ran the grave risk of legitimizing the foregone results of elections that were clearly going to
be fraudulent. But I was not fighting for lawyers but for the people in whose intelligence I had implicit faith.
By the exercise of democracy, even in a dictatorship, they would be prepared for democracy when it came.
And then, also, it was the only way I knew by which we could measure our power even in the terms dictated
by the dictatorship.
The people vindicated me in an election shamefully marked by government thuggery and fraud. The
opposition swept the elections, garnering a clear majority of the votes, even if they ended up, thanks to a
corrupt Commission on Elections, with barely a third of the seats in parliament. Now, I knew our power.
Last year, in an excess of arrogance, the dictatorship called for its doom in a snap election. The people
obliged. With over a million signatures, they drafted me to challenge the dictatorship. And I obliged them. The
rest is the history that dramatically unfolded on your television screen and across the front pages of your
newspapers.
You saw a nation, armed with courage and integrity, stand fast by democracy against threats and corruption.
You saw women poll watchers break out in tears as armed goons crashed the polling places to steal the
ballots but, just the same, they tied themselves to the ballot boxes. You saw a people so committed to the
ways of democracy that they were prepared to give their lives for its pale imitation. At the end of the day,
before another wave of fraud could distort the results, I announced the people’s victory.
The distinguished co-chairman of the United States observer team in his report to your President described
that victory:
“I was witness to an extraordinary manifestation of democracy on the part of the Filipino people. The
ultimate result was the election of Mrs. Corazon C. Aquino as President and Mr. Salvador Laurel as Vice-
President of the Philippines.”
Many of you here today played a part in changing the policy of your country towards us. We, Filipinos, thank
each of you for what you did: for, balancing America’s strategic interest against human concerns, illuminates
the American vision of the world.
When a subservient parliament announced my opponent’s victory, the people turned out in the streets and
proclaimed me President. And true to their word, when a handful of military leaders declared themselves
against the dictatorship, the people rallied to their protection. Surely, the people take care of their own. It is
on that faith and the obligation it entails, that I assumed the presidency.
As I came to power peacefully, so shall I keep it. That is my contract with my people and my commitment to
God. He had willed that the blood drawn with the lash shall not, in my country, be paid by blood drawn by the
sword but by the tearful joy of reconciliation.
We have swept away absolute power by a limited revolution that respected the life and freedom of every
Filipino. Now, we are restoring full constitutional government. Again, as we restored democracy by the ways
of democracy, so are we completing the constitutional structures of our new democracy under a constitution
that already gives full respect to the Bill of Rights. A jealously independent Constitutional Commission is
completing its draft which will be submitted later this year to a popular referendum. When it is approved,
there will be congressional elections. So within about a year from a peaceful but national upheaval that
overturned a dictatorship, we shall have returned to full constitutional government. Given the polarization
and breakdown we inherited, this is no small achievement.
My predecessor set aside democracy to save it from a communist insurgency that numbered less than 500.
Unhampered by respect for human rights, he went at it hammer and tongs. By the time he fled, that
insurgency had grown to more than 16,000. I think there is a lesson here to be learned about trying to stifle a
thing with the means by which it grows.
I don’t think anybody, in or outside our country, concerned for a democratic and open Philippines, doubts
what must be done. Through political initiatives and local reintegration programs, we must seek to bring the
insurgents down from the hills and, by economic progress and justice, show them that for which the best
intentioned among them fight.
As President, I will not betray the cause of peace by which I came to power. Yet equally, and again no friend
of Filipino democracy will challenge this, I will not stand by and allow an insurgent leadership to spurn our
offer of peace and kill our young soldiers, and threaten our new freedom.
Yet, I must explore the path of peace to the utmost for at its end, whatever disappointment I meet there, is
the moral basis for laying down the olive branch of peace and taking up the sword of war. Still, should it
come to that, I will not waver from the course laid down by your great liberator: “With malice towards none,
with charity for all, with firmness in the rights as God gives us to see the rights, let us finish the work we are
in, to bind up the nation’s wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and for
his orphans, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all
nations.”
Like Lincoln, I understand that force may be necessary before mercy. Like Lincoln, I don’t relish it. Yet, I will
do whatever it takes to defend the integrity and freedom of my country.
Finally, may I turn to that other slavery: our $26 billion foreign debt. I have said that we shall honor it. Yet
must the means by which we shall be able to do so be kept from us? Many conditions imposed on the
previous government that stole this debt continue to be imposed on us who never benefited from it. And no
assistance or liberality commensurate with the calamity that was visited on us has been extended. Yet ours
must have been the cheapest revolution ever. With little help from others, we Filipinos fulfilled the first and
most difficult conditions of the debt negotiation the full restoration of democracy and responsible
government. Elsewhere, and in other times of more stringent world economic conditions, Marshall plans and
their like were felt to be necessary companions of returning democracy.
When I met with President Reagan yesterday, we began an important dialogue about cooperation and the
strengthening of the friendship between our two countries. That meeting was both a confirmation and a new
beginning and should lead to positive results in all areas of common concern.
Today, we face the aspirations of a people who had known so much poverty and massive unemployment for
the past 14 years and yet offered their lives for the abstraction of democracy. Wherever I went in the
campaign, slum area or impoverished village, they came to me with one cry: democracy! Not food, although
they clearly needed it, but democracy. Not work, although they surely wanted it, but democracy. Not money,
for they gave what little they had to my campaign. They didn’t expect me to work a miracle that would
instantly put food into their mouths, clothes on their back, education in their children, and work that will put
dignity in their lives. But I feel the pressing obligation to respond quickly as the leader of a people so
deserving of all these things.
We face a communist insurgency that feeds on economic deterioration, even as we carry a great share of the
free world defenses in the Pacific. These are only two of the many burdens my people carry even as they try
to build a worthy and enduring house for their new democracy, that may serve as well as a redoubt for
freedom in Asia. Yet, no sooner is one stone laid than two are taken away. Half our export earnings, $2 billion
out of $4 billion, which was all we could earn in the restrictive markets of the world, went to pay just the
interest on a debt whose benefit the Filipino people never received.
Still, we fought for honor, and, if only for honor, we shall pay. And yet, should we have to wring the payments
from the sweat of our men’s faces and sink all the wealth piled up by the bondsman’s two hundred fifty years
of unrequited toil?
Yet to all Americans, as the leader of a proud and free people, I address this question: has there been a
greater test of national commitment to the ideals you hold dear than that my people have gone through? You
have spent many lives and much treasure to bring freedom to many lands that were reluctant to receive it.
And here you have a people who won it by themselves and need only the help to preserve it.
Three years ago, I said thank you, America, for the haven from oppression, and the home you gave Ninoy,
myself and our children, and for the three happiest years of our lives together. Today, I say, join us, America,
as we build a new home for democracy, another haven for the oppressed, so it may stand as a shining
testament of our two nation’s commitment to freedom.
________________________
Read in Filipino
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