THE PRESIDENT: Thanks a lot for the warm welcome. It's a pleasure
to be back in Philadelphia, a city known for the history that was made
here and the spirit of compassion which is found here.
I'm honored to spend the time with you all. I thank you for your
interest in our country. You love God with all your heart and all your
soul and all your strength. (Applause.) You love your neighbor.
(Applause.) And by the works that come from your faith, you are
building a more just and generous nation. And we are grateful for your
efforts. (Applause.)
I appreciate the tremendous turnout for this White House Conference
on Faith-based and Community Initiatives. I think it's a really
important conference. Many faiths and many traditions are represented
here. Yet we share the same belief that every person in need is a
worthy child of God. (Applause.) And we share the same goal: We must
bring the hope and healing of faith-based services to more and more
Americans.
Government has often been slow to recognize the importance of
faith-based and community efforts. That's changing. And more changes
are needed. So today, I'm announcing a series of actions to stop the
unfair treatment of religious charities by the federal government.
(Applause.)
If a charity is helping the needy, it should not matter if there is
a rabbi on the board, or a cross or a crescent on the wall, or a
religious commitment in the charter. The days of discriminating
against religious groups just because they are religious are coming to
an end. (Applause.)
And I want to thank the members of my Cabinet who have traveled
here today, Mel Martinez and Ann Veneman. I appreciate the fact that
two fine United States Senators from Pennsylvania are here, Rick
Santorum and Arlen Specter. I'm honored they have traveled with me to
this fine event. (Applause.) I see Congressman Greenwood is with us,
as well. Thank you for coming. Anybody else from the Congress?
They'll get the message. (Applause.)
I want to thank Mike Brown, who's the Deputy Director of FEMA, who
is here. Of course, I want to thank your Mayor, John Street. I
appreciate the fact -- (applause) -- I appreciate the very fact
that the Mayor understands the importance of encouraging faith-based
programs to change the neighborhoods and the lives of the good people
of Philadelphia.
I want to thank Cardinal Bevilacqua for coming. Your Eminence,
it's good to see you, sir. I want to thank Franklin Graham. I want to
thank all the leaders, the generals, the soldiers in the armies of
compassion who are here with us today. (Applause.)
Today, I landed Air Force One -- one of the things I try to do is
herald the heroes of our society. I met Gary Hobbs, the USA Freedom
Corps greeter. He's a former NFL player for, of course, the Eagles,
who volunteers as a mentor for disadvantaged children. I want to thank
Gary for his support and his service. (Applause.)
Every generation of Americans must rise to its own challenges, and
the challenges facing this generation are very clear. We must overcome
great dangers to our country, wherever they gather. We're waging a
war -- we're waging an unrelenting effort in this war to dismantle a
terrorist network which has attacked America.
I have no greater obligation than to protect our country and to
defend our freedoms. We will confront outlaw regimes which hate our
country and arm to threaten civilization, itself. We have that
obligation, to recognize the world changed for America on September the
11th, 2001. Before that date, it seemed like we could use the oceans
to protect us from gathering dangers. We could be confident that
nobody could possibly hurt America -- hurt Americans on America
soil. And that changed. And, therefore, our government and your
leadership must have a realistic assessment of the dangers we have
faced and we will face. We have acted, and we will act again, to
protect the American people and to keep the peace. (Applause.)
We must also rise to a second challenge facing our country. This
great and prosperous land must become a single nation of justice and
opportunity. We must continue our advance toward full equality for
every citizen, which demands the guarantee of civil rights for all.
(Applause.) Any suggestion that the segregated past was acceptable or
positive is offensive, and it is wrong. (Applause.)
Recent comments -- recent comments by Senator Lott do not reflect
the spirit of our country. (Applause.) He has apologized, and rightly
so. Every day our nation was segregated was a day that America was
unfaithful to our founding ideals. (Applause.) And the founding
ideals of our nation and, in fact, the founding ideals of the political
party I represent was, and remains today, the equal dignity and equal
rights of every American. (Applause.)
And so the -- and this is the principle that guides my
administration. We will not, and we must not, rest until every person
of every race believes in the promise of America because they see it in
their own eyes, with their own eyes, and they live it and feel it in
their own lives.
We have work to do. We must be honest about it. We have got a lot
of work to do in this country, because there are pockets of despair in
America. (Applause.) There are men and women who doubt the American
Dream is meant for them. There are people who face the struggles of
illness and old age with no one to help them or pray with them. There
are men and women who fight every minute of the day against terrible
addictions. There are boys with no family but a gang, and teenage moms
who are abandoned and alone. And then there are the children who
wonder if anybody loves them.
We've reformed welfare in America to help many, yet welfare policy
will not solve the deepest problems of the spirit. (Applause.) Our
economy is growing, yet there are some needs that prosperity can never
fill. We arrest and convict dangerous criminals; yet building more
prisons is no substitute for responsibility and order in our souls.
(Applause.)
No government policy can put hope in people's hearts or a sense of
purpose in people's lives. That is done when someone, some good soul
puts an arm around a neighbor and says, God loves you, and I love, and
you can count on us both. (Applause.)
And we find that powerful spirit of compassion in faith-based and
community groups across our nation: People giving shelter to the
homeless; providing safety for battered women; giving care and comfort
to AIDS victims; bringing companionship to lonely seniors.
I saw that spirit of compassion earlier today when I visited adults
and children involved in a program called Amachi at the Bright Hope
Baptist Church right here in Philadelphia. In the Amachi program, good
people from more than 50 churches in this area serve as mentors to the
children of prisoners. They share their time and attention. They just
serve as a friend.
Most of us find it difficult to imagine the life of a child who has
to go through a prison gate to be hugged by their mom or dad. Yet this
is the reality for almost a million-and-a-half American boys and
girls. They face terrible challenges that no child deserves to face.
Without guidance, they have a higher risk of failing in school and
committing crimes themselves. The volunteers of Amachi, who are with
us here today with the children they are loving, are such wonderful
givers of guidance and love.
I'm told that "amachi" is a Western African word that means, "Who
knows what God has brought us through this child." That attitude is
the inspiration of a good mentoring program. No child is a problem or
a burden; every child is a priority and a blessing. (Applause.) That
is the message of the almighty God who cares for these, and that is the
message carried to the city by the volunteers of Amachi. And I want
thank them for being here today. And I want to thank them for their
love. And I want to thank them for their example for other Americans
to follow.
Faith-based charities work daily miracles because they have
idealistic volunteers. They're guided by moral principles. They know
the problems of their own communities, and above all, they recognize
the dignity of every citizen and the possibilities of every life.
These groups and many good charities that are specifically religious
have the heart to serve others. Yet many lack the resources they need
to meet the needs around them.
They deserve the support of the rest of us. They deserve the
support of foundations. They deserve the support of corporate
America. (Applause.) They deserve the support of individual donors,
of church congregations, of synagogues and mosques. And then deserve,
when appropriate, the support of the federal government. (Applause.)
Faith-based groups will never replace government when it comes to
helping those in need. Yet government must recognize the power and
unique contribution of faith-based groups in every part of our
country. And when the federal government gives contracts to private
groups to provide social services, religious groups should have an
equal chance to compete. (Applause.) When decisions are made on
public funding, we should not focus on the religion you practice; we
should focus on the results you deliver. (Applause.)
The Amachi program receives 38 percent of its funding from the
federal government. My administration has been working for nearly two
years to encourage this kind of support to good faith-based programs.
And we're making some progress. The Department of Housing and Urban
Development, run by Mel, we've changes regulations in eight programs
which cover over $8 billion in grants to encourage competition that
includes faith-based groups. We've opened up more than $1 billion in
after-school programs to competition, including faith-based groups.
We're reaching out to grassroots community groups and helping them
learn the complicated process of grant-making. I see a lot of heads
nodding when it comes to complicated process. (Laughter.)
Yet there's a lot to do. In government, we're still fighting old
attitudes, habits and rules that discriminate against religious groups
for no good purpose. In Iowa, for example, the Victory Center Rescue
Mission was told to return grant money to the government because the
mission's board of directors was not secular enough. The St. Francis
House Homeless Shelter in South Dakota was denied a grant because
voluntary prayers were offered before meals. A few years ago in New
York, the Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty was discouraged from
even applying for federal funds because it had the word "Jewish" in its
name.
These are examples of a larger pattern, a pattern of
discrimination. And this discrimination shows a fundamental
misunderstanding of the law. I recognize that government has no
business endorsing a religious creed, or directly funding religious
worship or religious teaching. That is not the business of the
government. Yet government can and should support social services
provided by religious people, as long as those services go to anyone in
need, regardless of their faith. (Applause.) And when government
gives that support, charities and faith-based programs should not be
forced to change their character or compromise their mission.
(Applause.)
And I don't intend to compromise either. (Applause.) I have
worked for a faith-based initiative to rally and encourage the armies
of compassion. I will continue to work with Congress on this agenda.
But the needs of our country are urgent and, as President, I have an
authority I intend to use. (Applause.) Many acts of discrimination
-- many acts of discrimination against faith-based groups are
committed by Executive Branch agencies. And, as the leader of the
Executive Branch, I'm going to make some changes, effective today.
(Applause.)
First, in a few minutes -- you'll be happy to hear --
(laughter) -- I am going to sign an executive order directing all
federal agencies to follow the principle of equal treatment in
rewarding social service grants. (Applause.)
Every person in every government agency will know where the
President stands. And every person will have the responsibility to
ensure a level playing field for faith-based organizations in federal
programs. No funds will be used to directly support inherently
religious activities; yet no organization that qualifies for funds will
ever been forced to change its identity.
And secondly, I have directed specific action in several federal
agencies with a history of discrimination against faith-based groups.
FEMA will revise its policy on emergency relief so that religious
nonprofit groups can qualify for assistance after disasters like
hurricanes and earthquakes. (Applause.) HUD and HHS, who provide so
much grant money to communities across America, will revise their
regulations to reflect the principle of nondiscrimination. (Applause.)
In addition, we're issuing a guidebook which you've received. The
book explains in plain English -- (laughter) -- how faith-based
groups can qualify for government grants. It gives guidance on what
you can and cannot do with taxpayers' money. We're going to distribute
this guidebook widely. We will continue to hold regional conferences
like this one all around the United States of America. The rules for
dealing with the government are clear, and we want more and more
faith-based charities to become partners in our efforts, our unyielding
efforts to change America one heart, one conscience, one soul at a
time. (Applause.)
Through all these actions, I hope that every faith-based group in
America, the social entrepreneurs of America, understand that this
government respects your work and we respect the motivation behind your
work. We do not want you to become carbon copies of public programs.
(Applause.) We want you to follow your heart. We want you to follow
the word. We want you to do the works of kindness and mercy you are
called upon to do. (Applause.) Thank you.
For too long, for too long, some in government believed there was
no room for faith in the public square.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Preach on, brother! (Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT: I guess they've forgotten the history of this great
country. People of faith led the struggle against slavery. People of
faith fought against child labor. People of faith worked for women's
equality and civil rights. Every expansion of justice in American
history received inspiration from men and women of moral conviction and
religious belief. And in America today, people of faith are waging a
determined campaign against need and suffering.
When government discriminates against religious groups, it is not
the groups that suffer most. The loss comes to the hungry who don't
get fed, to the addicts who don't get help, to the children who drift
toward self-destruction. For the sake of so many brothers and sisters
in needs, we must and we will support the armies of compassion in
America. (Applause.)
The steps we take today will help clear away a legacy of
discrimination against faith-based charities. In the new year, I will
announce further initiatives to help community groups that serve their
neighbors.
Our nation needs more mentors. Particularly, mentors for children
whose mom or dad is in prison. (Applause.) Our nation needs more
centers to treat addiction. Our nation must recognize that if we can
change a heart, we're more than likely to change someone's habits, and
addiction on drugs and alcohol. (Applause.) Instead of building
towering bureaucracies, government should be finding new and creative
ways to support local efforts.
I call this approach compassionate conservatism. And in my State
of the Union message, I will ask members of both political parties to
move forward with me on this vision. By promoting the compassion of
our people, by promoting the great strength of America, we will bring
new hope to neighborhoods all across this land.
You know something about America? We meet every challenge that
faces our country. That's why I'm so optimistic about our future. And
we will answer the call of our times. We will defend our freedoms, and
we will lead the world toward peace. And we will unite America behind
the great goals of justice and compassion.
In the work of compassion, it is not the people in government who
are the experts; the people in this room are the experts. (Applause.)
The people in this room are helping lead America to a better day. You
just need to know that. And you need to know that I am incredibly
grateful for what you do. There is a saying, nobody can teach you how
to be a good servant of God, you have to learn it on the job.
(Applause.) And you are doing that job so incredibly well.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: And you are, too! (Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT: I appreciate your commitment -- I appreciate your
commitment. I appreciate your service. I appreciate your love. And
now I'm proud to sign this executive order providing equal treatment
for faith-based charities all across the greatest land on the face of
the Earth, the United States of America. May God bless you all.