 Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States. Ladies and gentlemen, would you please rise once again for the presentation of the colors. Now please be seated for the ceremony of allegiance. The people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, ensure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America. We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Judge Farkens. I declare the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan now in session. God save the United States and this honorable court. And for the purpose of making an appropriate motion, I ask Mr. Montgomery, the Director of the Immigration and Naturalization Service to come forward. Mr. Montgomery. If it pleases the court, my name is James Montgomery, the District Director of the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service. Today in court, Your Honor, we have 1,391 adult applicants for citizenship and 157 children who are accompanied by their parents, the parents having filed petitions for citizenship on their behalf. They represent 82 countries. All of the adult applicants have met the literacy requirements of the Immigration and Nationality Act or are exempt therefrom. They have also demonstrated an understanding and knowledge of the United States government and history as well as local government and history. All of the applicants, including the children, have been thoroughly investigated and found to be attached to the principles of the United States Constitution. Having met all of the requirements, the Immigration and Naturalization Service moves for the administration of the oath of citizenship to the applicants. So they may be admitted to the United States citizenship at this time. Mr. Montgomery, I'm happy to grant your motion, and I will now ask that all new citizens to be please stand. Will you raise your right hands and repeat after me? I hereby declare on oath that I absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate state or sovereignty of whom or which I have here to forbidden a subject or citizen that I will support and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic, that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same, that I will bear arms on behalf of the United States when required by the law, that I will perform noncombatant service in the armed forces of the United States when required by the law, that I will perform work of national importance under civilian direction when required by the law, and that I take this obligation freely without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion. So help me God. I am honored to now declare both in fact and in law that you are citizens of the United States. And now as your first act of citizenship, and in this I ask all who are in this hall to join, I introduce Magistrate Comvies of our court so that he may lead us all in the Pledge of Allegiance to the flag. Mr. President, Judge Fikens, honored guests, ladies and gentlemen, if you would all join me and the new citizens in reciting the Pledge of Allegiance, I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible with liberty and justice for all. I now declare the proceedings of this court closed, but would you all please remain standing? My fellow citizens, the President of the United States. Thank you all very much and please be seated. Thank you very much, Judge Fikens. My fellow Americans, and I'm very proud to be the first to address you with those words, my fellow Americans, welcome to your country. Of all the things that a President does, nothing is as rewarding as events such as this. This is a ceremony of renewal. With you today, the American dream is reborn. As you were saying the Pledge of Allegiance, it was clear to me even from up here that you weren't just reciting words that you'd memorized. You spoke with belief and it was good to see, because the Pledge not only contains the best definition of our country, it contains our greatest hope, to always remain one nation under God, indivisible with liberty and justice for all. Today you've joined a people who are among the freest on the face of the earth. We're a nation greatly blessed. We were founded by men and women who wanted a set of our country here, the people rule. They created a philosophy of freedom that is expressed in the document by which our country was established, preamble of which was read to you, the Constitution. Now, I know that most Americans are immigrants from other countries and most of those countries have constitutions. I haven't read all the constitutions of all the nations of the world, but of all that I have read I've noticed a difference that is so subtle it almost escapes you and yet it is so tremendous it describes the difference. Those other constitutions give the people or grant the people in most instances many of the same rights that our Constitution says are yours, but those constitutions say the government grants you those rights. Our Constitution says we the people have those rights by grace of God, by our birth, and we the people will grant to the government the following rights. Our government, now your government, has no power or rights that we the people have not freely given to it. Now, this may seem a small distinction, but as I said, it is everything. You've joined a country that has been called the least exclusive club in the world with the highest dues. America was founded by men and women who understood that freedom doesn't come free. It has a cost, but I don't suppose anyone would know the cost of freedom, the price of freedom better than you who have taken this oath today. Some of you came from places that sadly have not known freedom or liberty. Some of you have come from places that don't offer opportunity. Some of you are probably here because you are by nature adventurous, and some of you have no doubt come here for a new start to wipe the slate clean and begin your life anew. These strike me as all good reasons, in fact that the very same reasons that our forefathers came here, and they did pretty well. So well, in fact, that two centuries after they invented this country, it is still what they intended it to be, a place where the oppressed, the lost, the adventurous can come for sanctuary and comfort and chance. It's long been my belief that America is a chosen place, a rich and fertile continent placed by some divine providence here between the two great oceans, and only those who really wanted to get here would get here. Only those who must yearn for freedom would make the terrible track that it took to get here. America has drawn the stoutest hearts from every corner of the world, from every nation of the world, and that was lucky for America. Because if it was going to endure and grow and protect its freedoms for 200 years, it was going to need stout hearts. 50 million immigrants came to this country in the last 200 years. Some of the most recent have crawled over walls and under barbed wire and through mine fields, and some of them risked their lives and makeshift boats. And I know that all of them felt as the immigrants of the early part of this century felt. So many of them steamed into New York, and as they would see the approaching skyline and the Statue of Liberty, they'd crowd to the side of the boat and say, America, America. And in that word, they heard the sound of a new world. In that word, they heard everything. And all of them have added to the sum total of what your new country is. They gave us their traditions. They gave us their words. They enlivened the national life with new ideas and new blood. And I urge you, you probably don't need to be urged, but I'll urge you anyway just for fun and I urge you to remember, as they did, the land of your birth. Bring to us its culture and its heritage. We don't reject them, we need them. They enrich us. You know, a man can take onto himself a wife, a wife can take onto herself a husband. That doesn't mean that they abandon their mothers and fathers and forget them. So, you know, every now and then, academics talk about assimilation and our various ethnic groups have, with time, dropped their ethnicity and become more American. Well, I don't know about that. It seems to me that America is constantly reinventing what America means. We adopt this country's phrases and that country's art, and I think it's really closer to the truth to say that America has assimilated as much as her immigrants have. It's made for a delightful diversity, it's made us a stronger and a more vital nation. But our diversity is not only ethnic. You'll find, if you haven't already, that this country is full of different and sometimes conflicting ideas and philosophies. Walk by a newspaper stand and you'll see scores of magazines and newspapers arguing this point and that. Listen to television and radio and you'll hear more than enough opinions with which to agree and disagree. In fact, if you don't, over the next several years, find one time at least when you feel like taking off your shoe and throwing it at a television screen, then you will have missed out on one of the great American movements. Arguing is something of a tradition here. We like to disagree, but it's usually pretty good natured arguing and it doesn't tear us apart. I think you'll find that for all our disagreeing, Americans remain united around certain shared ideas and shared dreams, which takes me back to where I began. All of us want one nation under God with liberty and justice for all. Most of the disagreeing just has to do with the best ways to secure liberty and justice and the best ways to protect them. And so today, you join a happy country that is happier for your presence. You're adding your voices to the chorus and in doing that, you've become part of a great unending song and I want as president to thank you for something before I leave. There have been times in our recent history when some of our citizens have doubted if America is still all she was meant to be. They've wondered if our nation still has meaning and then we see you today and it's an affirmation. You standing here reveal we all must still stand for something. I know that the eldest among you is 92 and the youngest among you is two and we thank you all for the compliment of your new citizenship. Thank you all and God bless you. And would you all remain standing and join in song with the Wayne State University Orchestra under the direction of Harold Arnoldi and God bless America. The President's here today with us. However, he must leave us now and I'd like to give him a browsing ovation as he departs.