Mr. President, Mr. Minister:
I want to express on behalf
of the people of the United States our great satisfaction at your visit
here. As President of your country, I think you must realize that Finland
and the Finnish people are identified in the minds of the people of the
United States with those qualities of courage and fortitude and perseverance
which have made the reputation of your country and people second to none
here in the United States.
They are the qualities which
we have found in those Finns who have come among us and raised their families,
and it is a source of personal pleasure to us all that during your visit
here you will, in Michigan, have a chance to visit one of those families
who are related to you.
In addition, throughout the
long history of the Finnish people, and especially today, we have come
to recognize in the actions of her people her outlook on life, her determination
to maintain her own freedom, her own integrity.
So, Mr. President, no visitor
could be more welcome. We are delighted to have you here personally. Your
last visit to the United States was when you led the Olympic Team from
Finland to Los Angeles in 1932. Much has changed in this country
since then, and much has changed in your own country. But I am confident
that the same warm ties which were in existence then, many years ago in
other days, are strengthened today.
Mr. President, though you have
come from a far north country here to the United States to Washington,
you have come to a country which is warm in its welcome to you and in our
admiration for your people.
"Mr. President and Mrs. Kennedy:
"I wish to express my very sincere
thanks for the friendly and warm welcome with which you have received me
and my wife. The invitation you extended to us has been greatly appreciated
in Finland as an expression of friendship toward the Finnish people.
"We have both very much looked
forward to this visit to the United States, and to this opportunity of
meeting you personally, Mr. President and Mrs. Kennedy. It is at the same
time a great pleasure for us to be able to see your beautiful Capital and
to visit also other parts of your great country and to meet with American
people. Our attention will be directed especially to your powerful economy,
your splendid scientific achievements and the progress you have made in
the social sphere.
"This moment when I step on
American soil gives me occasion to remember those hundreds of thousands
of Finns who have settled in this country and who with their toil and labor
have made themselves a place in the American community. They are a living
bond between our two peoples.
"Mr. President, we Finns are
keenly aware of the friendship of the people of the United States towards
the people of Finland. I hope that my visit to the United States will further
develop and strengthen the good and friendly relations which have always
existed between our two countries."
In his opening words the President
referred to Ahti Karjalainen, Finland's Minister of Foreign Affairs.