The lands of the Vikings - Norway, Sweden,
Denmark, and Iceland - have given the world men who have pushed forward
the frontiers both of geography and government.
Almost a thousand years ago, the great Scandinavian
explorer, Leif Ericson, sailed into unknown seas, and he and his brave
band became the first Europeans to set foot in America.
To our immigrants from Ericson's land the
United States is indebted for tens of thousands of citizens, who by their
industry have built up our fisheries and made the fertile plains of the
West a source of food for the would. They have, through industry and sturdy
self-reliance, contributed immeasurably to the greatness of our country,
and their sons have provided wise counsel and guidance as Congressmen,
Governors, Senators, and in other high offices.
In its state of trouble and division today
the world has again turned to the land of Leif Erieson for leadership in
charting the seas of world politics, in an endeavor to find ways in which
mankind might live together in peace all over the globe. It was by no accident
that the United Nations turned to Norway for its first Secretary General,
Trygve Lie, and to Sweden for the great statesman who presently fills that
post, Dag Hammarskjold.
Just as Ericson was the first to lead the
way across the great ocean, so these two statesmen have been our leaders
in the greatest exploration of all - the search for world peace.
For all of these things we are indebted to
the ancient countries of the north. One of them, Iceland, proudly claims
the oldest parliament in the world. The peoples of these lands have always
believed in liberty, and have also possessed the wisdom and determination
needed for maintaining the institutions of democracy. For all of this,
we salute them today.