Our country has had
the good fortune that at times of national trial a few great
personalities have emerged to remind us of our essential unity and
inspire us our sustaining values. John McCain was one of those gifts
of destiny.
I met John for the
first time in April, 1973 at a White House reception for prisoners
returned from captivity in Vietnam. He had been much on my mind
during the negotiation to end the Vietnam War, oddly also because his
father, then commander in chief of the Pacific command, when briefing
the president answered references to his son by saying only "I
pray for him."
In the McCain
family national service was its own reward that did not allow for
special treatment. I thought of that when his Vietnamese captors
during the final phase of negotiations offered to release John so
that he could return with me on the official plane that had brought
me to Hanoi. Against all my instincts, I thanked them for the offer
but refused it. I wondered what John would say when we finally met.
His greeting was both self effacing and moving. "Thank you for
saving my honor." He did not tell me then or ever that he had
had an opportunity to be freed years earlier but had refused, a
decision for which he had to endure additional periods of isolation
and hardship. nor did he ever speak of his captivity again during the
near half century of close friendship.
John's focus was on
creating a better future. As a senator, he supported the restoration
of relations with Vietnam, helped bring it about on a bipartisan
basis in the Clinton administration and became one of the advocates
of reconciliation with his erstwhile enemy. Honor
was John's loadstar.
It
is an intangible quality, It
is not obligatory. It has no
written
code. It reflects an inward compulsion, free of self interest. It
fulfills a cause, not a personal ambition. It represents what a
society lives for beyond the necessities of the moment. Law
makes life possible; honor ennobles
it. For John
it was a way of life.
John returned to
America divided over its presidency, divided over the war. Amidst all
of the turmoil and civic unrest, divided over the best way to protect
our country and over whether it should be respected for its power or
its ideals. John came back from the war and declared this is a false
choice. America owed it to itself to embrace both strengths and
ideals. In decades of congressional service, ultimately as chairman
of the Senate Armed Services Committee, John was an exponent of an
America strong enough to vindicate its purpose.
But John believed
also in a compassionate America, guided by core principles for which
American foreign policy must always stand. "With liberty and
justice for all" is not an empty sentiment he argued, it is the
foundation of our national consciousness. To John, American
advantages had universal applicability. "I do not believe", he said, "that
there is an Arab exception any more than there is a black exception or
an Asian or Latin exception." He warned against the temptation of
withdrawal from the world. “We will not thrive in the world”, he
warned, “when our leadership and ideals are absent. We would not
deserve it.” In this manner John McCain 's name became synonymous
with an America that reached out to oblige the powerful to be lawful
and give hope to the oppressed.
John was in the
front lines of all these battles for decency and freedom. He was an
engaged warrior fighting for his causes with ebullience, with
courage, and with humility. John was all about hope. In a
commencement speech at Ohio's Wesleyan University John summed up the
essence of his engagement of a lifetime. "No one of us, if they
have character, leaves behind a wasted life."
Like most people of my age I feel a longing for what is lost and cannot be restored. If the happy and casual beauty of youth prove ephemeral, something better can endure and endure until our last moment on Earth and that is the moment in our lives when we sacrifice for something greater than ourselves. Heroes inspire us by the matter-of-factness of their sacrifice and the elevation of the root vision.
Like most people of my age I feel a longing for what is lost and cannot be restored. If the happy and casual beauty of youth prove ephemeral, something better can endure and endure until our last moment on Earth and that is the moment in our lives when we sacrifice for something greater than ourselves. Heroes inspire us by the matter-of-factness of their sacrifice and the elevation of the root vision.
The world will be
lonelier without John McCain, his ebullience, his faith in America
and his instinctive sense of moral duty. None of us will ever forget
how even in his parting John has bestowed on us a much needed moment
of unity and renewed faith in the possibilities of America.
Henceforth, the country's honor is ours to sustain.
No comments:
Post a Comment