New Citizens Sworn In on Constitution Day
by Kerri Lawrence | ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ News
WASHINGTON, September 18, 2018 β Thirty-one new United States naturalized citizens took the oath of allegiance on Constitution Day yesterday at the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ Rotunda in Washington, DC. Sworn in just steps away from the Charters of Freedomβthe Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rightsβthe new Americans hail from 25 different countries: Australia, Cameroon, Chile, China, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Eritrea, Ethiopia, France, The Gambia, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Nepal, Peru, Philippines, Romania, Spain, Togo, United Kingdom, and Vietnam.
βToday marks the 231st anniversary of the ratification of the United States Constitution,β David S. Ferriero, Archivist of the United States said. βAnd there is no better place to become a citizen than here in this room.β Ferriero described each of the founding documents and the importance they hold for all American citizens.
He shared with them his own story of using passenger ship lists at the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ to learn more about his heritage and the immigration of his grandparents from Italy in the early 1900s.
βMany Americans have stories like mine, and now you, our newly naturalized citizens, will have your own journey to share,β Ferriero said. βWe have over 14 billion pages of records here at the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘. Becoming American citizens makes you part of the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ too. Your naturalization records will be part of our holdings. Someday your descendants will search our records to discover your history,β he added.
Guest speaker the Honorable Caroline Kennedy, former U.S. Ambassador to Japan, expressed her gratitude at being able to share the βspecial dayβ with the new citizens. Kennedy said, βEvery time I enter this Rotunda, I am overwhelmed with the privilege and the responsibility that comes with being an American.β
βAmerica is the only country founded on an ideal,β Kennedy added. βWe have no king, no official church or languageβwe are bound to each other by our shared commitment to the ideals and values of freedom, equality, opportunity, tolerance, diversity, and the rule of law. The fact that ours is the oldest written constitution still in use is a testament to the enduring power of those ideas, and to the skill with which the Founders framed them.β
Kennedy recalled the famous inaugural speech in which her father, President John F. Kennedy, challenged Americans to give back to a country that gives its citizens so much. βHis call to service transformed this country and inspired a generation who marched for civil rights, voting rights, and womenβs rights,β Kennedy said. βTheir children and grandchildren have continued to work for human rights, LGBT rights, and the rights of people with disabilities. Now it is our turnβbut we can only contribute if we are informed and engagedβif we understand our rights and our responsibilities.β
Kennedy further encouraged the new citizens to be involved and engaged. βYour perspective, your idealism, your energy will help America live up to her promises. . . . [T]he success of a country, like that of a life, is best judged by not how much we receive, but by how much we have given.β
The Honorable Beryl A. Howell, Chief Judge, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, administered the oath of citizenship. Students from Alice Deal Middle School, Washington, DC, Public Schools, recited the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution.
In her closing remarks, Judge Howell acknowledged the importance of naturalized citizens in making up the fabric of American society, encouraging each of them to get and stay involved in the country and their communities.
βAmerica is a richer place because of your stories and your experiences that you bring here with you,β Howell said. βAmericaβs strength is in the diversity of our people.β
Each year the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ hosts naturalization ceremonies in the Rotunda. See coverage of the 2017 Constitution Day ceremony, βΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ Welcomes New Citizensβ on ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ News. Constitution Day and Citizenship day, celebrated every year on September 17, marks the 1787 signing of the U.S. Constitution, which defines the U.S. Government and outlines the fundamental rights of all citizens.