Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Standing with the oppressed during Captive Nations Week
Standing with the oppressed during Captive Nations Week
Feb 11, 2026 9:47 AM

On July 17, 1959, President Dwight D. Eisenhower issued a proclamation declaring the third week of July “Captive Nations Week” for that year and every year “until such time as freedom and independence shall have been achieved for all the captive nations of the world.” At the time, Eisenhower was condemning the unjust and oppressive Soviet regime and lending a voice to those countries trapped under Soviet rule. The threat of the Soviet Union no longer exists today. Still, we have celebrated Captive Nations Week every year since 1959, and are doing so this year, because, unfortunately, threats to freedom persist today.

President Obama released a beautiful proclamation this week that extols the value of liberty and the power of the mitment to the ideals of democracy and freedom at home and abroad.

Since our earliest days, the United States has worked to uphold the rights enshrined in our founding documents. The ideals that sparked our revolution find their truest expression in democracy, and our enduring belief in the right to self-govern is not limited to our borders — we believe the human impulse toward freedom is universal. During Captive Nations Week, we recognize the inherent dignity of all people, and we renew our support for those struggling under oppressive regimes and striving to secure the blessings of liberty for themselves and their posterity.

Though the President acknowledges the progress the world has made towards peace and freedom since the first Captive Nations Week, he states that the ideal of freedom for all peoples still eludes us. He notes the political oppression of Ukraine, the devastation of war in Syria, the growth of the Islamic State, and the continuing human rights violations in Cuba.

President Obama affirms mitment of the United States to freedom and justice at home and abroad and calls for Americans to “lead by example” in the constant fight for a more perfect world.

We will continue to stand for equality and dignity beyond our borders and encourage economic and political reforms that foster democracy. And we remain dedicated to leading and working with others to build security, prosperity, and justice, and to fighting for any person still suffering under the grasp of tyranny.

This week, Americans must stand in solidarity with those who live under the crushing thumb of oppression and speak out against tyranny and despotism wherever it persists. We must constantly remind ourselves that there are those whose hearts still yearn for liberty and continue the long battle for freedom that started in this country more than 200 years ago.

As President Eisenhower said in 1944, “Freedom has its life in the hearts, the actions, the spirit of men and so it must be daily earned and refreshed—else like a flower cut from its life-giving roots, it will wither and die. “

Let us today and everyday seek to earn and refresh freedom everywhere so as to cultivate it for this generation and preserve it for the next.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
DB at Let’s Tend the Garden
The PowerBlog’s own Don Bosch is attending the Let’s Tend the Garden evangelical environmental conference this week. He’s liveblogging at his own habitat, and will cross-post and update us here as opportunity permits. He writes to me briefly that there are “lots of Christian environmental leaders (Rich Cizik is here, along with Rusty Pritchard, Floresta, A Rocha, etc) and also secular groups (Sierra Club).” ...
Blessed Antonio Rosmini
Roman news agency Zenit reports the ing beatification of Antonio Rosmini. Rosmini was a notable Italian intellectual and priest who has long been among the figures highlighted by the Acton Institute’s survey of the history of liberty. An additional point making this particular road to sainthood interesting is that some of Rosmini’s thought had been called into question by the Vatican in the nineteenth century. That his theology was sound was confirmed by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the...
The Largest Anti-Poverty Campaign in The World
The problem and pain of poverty garners a prolific amount of attention in the Church today, and rightfully so. In Evangelical Christian Churches, poverty awareness, discussion, and action has risen to new heights. Much of this has to do with the rapid speed munication, increase in education, and a reaction against social conservatives, who in the past, have emphasized much of their focus on more specific social and moral issues such as abortion. While I was in seminary, during an...
Reformed Education and Pentecostal Evangelism
I’ve heard it said from a number of leaders in the munity that there is a great opportunity for Reformed churches to be a positive influence on the growth of Christianity abroad, particularly in places like Africa where Pentecostalism has made such large inroads. The thesis is that as time passes and institutions need to be built, the traditionally other-worldly Pentecostal faith will by necessity need to embrace a more prehensive world-and-life view. Reformed institutions ought to be prepared to...
Let’s Tend the Garden Conference 2007, Boise ID
The first day at LTTG-07 here at Vineyard Church, Boise Idaho was full of great fellowship, worship, workshops and discussions among evangelical and secular environmental leaders. Day Two is just getting underway. For you folks new to LTTG, this is the second annual gathering of Christian leadership from across the United States (and beyond?) to honor the Creator and diligently seek ways to be better stewards of creation. The idea for the conference was hatched by VB’s pastor Tri Robinson....
OT Israel: Constitutional Monarchy?
I did a brief interview yesterday with Greg Allen of The Right Balance and have a couple more scheduled for next week. It’s kept me thinking about some of the issues surrounding the debate about Christianity, democracy, and Iraq. In the piece I wrote I pointed to some of the rather guarded opinions of representatives from the Christian tradition, namely John Calvin, Abraham Kuyper, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer, on the possibility of finding the “best” form of government. But I’ve also...
What Would Jesus Drive? – Jay W. Richards in NRO
Jay W. Richards of the Acton Institute, has mentary today in the National Review Online titled, What Would Jesus Drive?: Electrified Evangelical theological confusion. Richards notes in his article, “With respect to the environment, the theological principles are uncontroversial: human beings, as image bearers of God, are placed as stewards over the created order.” He asks four separate questions, which he calls “tough.” (1) Is the planet warming? (2) If the planet is warming, is human activity (like CO2 emissions)...
Club for Growth on The Call of the Entrepreneur
Andrew Roth of the Club for Growth provided a short assessment On The Call of the Entrepreneur. The Call will be the opening film at the American Film Renaissance Festival in Washington D.C. on September 26th. Roth declared: I was given a sneak peek of “The Call…” earlier this month. It’s a fun, feel-good movie that provides real life examples of how entrepreneurs have succeeded personally, and how they’ve made the world a better place. The show also cuts mentary...
Quran, Money Lending, and Economic Growth
Samuel Gregg, director of research at the Acton Institute, has a piece in today’s Detroit News titled, “Will Quran limit growth of Muslim nations?” mentary addresses the economic outlook of Muslims, and Islamic nations, considering their religious position against the charging of interest. Gregg notes: Given the Arab world’s increasing religiosity, however, one potential obstacle could significantly handicap these nations’ financial creativity and economic diversification policies: Islam’s prohibition of interest-charging. Gregg also briefly examines how Christians settled the moral dilemma...
Reports on Religious and Economic Freedom
The US State Department issued its annual religious freedom report late last week (HT). And earlier this month, Paul Marshall of the Hudson Institute discussed the ing book, Religious Freedom in the World 2007. He had this to say about economic and religious freedom: If you take the worst 30 countries in terms of economic freedom, every one scored low with religious freedom. The top 30 countries all scored high. Why is that? We see two connections. First, wealth could...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved