Korean
War Veteran Awarded Medal of Honor
By Sara
Wood
AFPS
 |
Korean War veteran Tibor "Ted" Rubin
wears the Medal of Honor he received at the
White House.
Rubin was honored for his actions under fire and his bravery
while in captivity at a Chinese prisoner-of-war camp.
Photo
by Paul Morse / White House Photo |
Sixty years
ago, elements of the 11th Armored Division from Patton's
own 3rd Army liberated the Mauthausen concentration camp in
Austria.
Among the
prisoners freed was Tibor "Ted" Rubin, a 15-year-old Hungarian
who had lost his father, mother and sister to concentration camps.
Five years later, Rubin joined the U.S. Army and showed his appreciation for
his newly adopted country by serving in the Korean War as a rifleman with Company
I, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division. On Oct. 30, 1950, after an intense
nighttime battle, in which Rubin manned a .30 caliber machine gun where three
previous gunners had been killed, he was wounded and captured by the Chinese.
He spent 30 months in a prisoner-of-war camp in North Korea.
Now, all
these years later, Rubin has received recognition for his service
and the valiant actions that set him apart from his comrades.
Rubin was awarded the Medal of Honor, the nation's highest
military decoration, Sept. 23 at the White House and subsequently
inducted into the Pentagon Hall of Heroes.
Speaking
at the White House, President Bush said that by awarding the
Medal of Honor to Rubin, the U.S. acknowledges a debt "that
time has not diminished."
"Corporal
Tibor 'Ted' Rubin's many acts of courage during the Korean
War saved the lives of hundreds of his fellow soldiers," Bush
said. "In the heat of battle, he inspired his comrades
with his fearlessness, and amid the inhumanity of a Chinese
prisoner of war camp, he gave them hope."
 |
President
George W. Bush applauds Korean War veteran Cpl. Tibor "Ted" Rubin
after awarding Rubin the Medal of Honor at the White
House. Rubin was honored for his actions under fire and
his bravery while in captivity at a Chinese prisiner-of-war
camp.
Photo
by Paul Morse / White House Photo |
Before the nighttime
battle in which he was captured, Rubin waged a 24-hour personal
battle, single-handedly defending a hill assaulted by North Korean
troops, according to the citation. He inflicted a staggering number
of casualties and slowed the enemy advance, allowing his regiment
to complete its withdrawal successfully. After being captured,
Rubin refused offers to be returned to his native Hungary. He snuck
out of the camp at night in search of food for his fellow prisoners
and provided them with desperately needed medical care, according
to the citation. His actions were directly attributed to saving
the lives of as many as 40 of his fellow prisoners.
The soldiers
that served with Rubin speak of him as a soldier with great
skill and courage who gladly risked his life for others, Bush
said. Those whom Rubin helped save have never forgotten their
debt to him, he said.
"Many
heroes are remembered in monuments of stone," Bush said. "The
monuments to Corporal Rubin are a legacy of life. We see his
legacy in the many American families whose husbands, fathers
and sons returned home safely because of his efforts. We see
his legacy in the free and democratic South Korea that grew
on the soil of his sacrifice. And we see his legacy in a new
generation of American men and women in uniform who were inspired
to their own acts of courage and compassion."
Rubin lived
and epitomized the warrior ethos, which is to always place
the mission first, to never accept defeat, to never quit, and
to never leave a fallen comrade, Secretary of the Army Francis
Harvey said at the Pentagon ceremony.
"Corporal
Rubin answered the call to duty with valor, integrity and unyielding
bravery," Harvey said. "I cannot think of anyone
who better exemplifies a love of country, a willingness to
sacrifice through his personal actions, than Ted Rubin."
At the Pentagon
ceremony, Rubin said living in America was his dream come true
and that his service in the Army was his way of paying back
the country that was so kind to him.
"I could
never have dreamed of being here with the Medal of Honor and joining
other heroes, but my dream came true in the greatest country in
the world," Rubin said. "The real heroes ... are the
soldiers who give their lives defending freedom."
The
White House
Remarks
by the President in Presentation
of
the
Medal of Honor
The
East Room
September 23, 2005
2:45 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:
Laura and I welcome you to the White House. This is a special
occasion for our nation. We're here to pay tribute to a soldier
with an extraordinary devotion to his brothers in arms, and an
unshakeable love for his adopted homeland of America.
Corporal
Tibor "Ted" Rubin's many acts of courage during the
Korean War saved the lives of hundreds of his fellow soldiers.
In the heat of battle, he inspired his comrades with his fearlessness.
And amid the inhumanity of a Chinese prisoner of war camp, he
gave them hope. Some of those soldiers are here today, and they
have never forgotten what they owe this man. And by awarding the
Medal of Honor to Corporal Rubin today, the United States acknowledges
a debt that time has not diminished.
It's our
honor to welcome Ted's wife, Yvonne; daughter, Rosie -- a 2nd
grade teacher, I might add -- (laughter) -- Frank and Lai, welcome.
Glad you all are here.
Mr. Vice
President, thank you for coming. Mr. Secretary, we're proud you're
here. I appreciate Senator John Warner, the Chairman of the Armed
Services Committee; Congressman Robert Wexler, of Florida -- welcome.
Thank you for being here. Former Congressman Ben Gilman and Georgia
are with us. Secretary of the Army Francis Harvey; Pete Geren,
acting Secretary of the Air Force; "Admiral G," Vice
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs is with us. General Pete Schoomaker,
Chief of Staff of the United States Army. And, Rabbi, thank you
very much for your blessings.
I want to
thank Ambassador Andras Shimoni, the Ambassador of Hungary to
the United States, for joining us -- proud you're here. Yes. (Laughter.)
So honored
to have the four Medal of Honor recipients with us: Barney Barnum,
with the United States Marines; Al Rascon, the Army; Bob Foley,
the Army; and Jack Jacobs, of the Army. Proud you're here. Thanks
for being here.
The Medal
of Honor is the highest award for bravery that a President can
bestow. It is given for acts of valor that no superior could rightly
order a soldier to perform. And that is what we mean by "above
and beyond the call of duty." By repeatedly risking his own
life to save others, Corporal Rubin exemplified the highest ideals
of military service and fulfilled a pledge to give something back
to the country that had given him his freedom.
Born in Hungary
in 1929, Ted and his family were rounded up by the Nazis and taken
to concentration camps when he was just 13 years old. He was taken
to Mauthausen Camp in Austria, where an SS officer told the prisoner,
"You, Jews, none of you will ever make it out of here alive."
And many did not. Before the war was over, both of Ted's parents
and one of his sisters were lost in the Holocaust. Ted Rubin survived
the camp for 14 months, long enough to be liberated by U.S. Army
troops on May the 5th, 1945.
These American
GIs gave Ted his first real taste of freedom. Their compassion
for the people in the camp made a deep impression on this teenage
survivor. It was his first experience with soldiers who were fighting
to protect human life. That day Ted made a promise to himself,
if he ever made it to America, he would show his appreciation
to this great land by enlisting in the United States Army. He
did move to America after the war, and the young immigrant made
good on his pledge. Even though he was not yet a citizen, he volunteered
to serve his new nation in uniform, and seven months after taking
the oath of a U.S. soldier, he was sent to Korea.
The conditions
were brutal, the fighting was intense, and the bitter cold was
unrelenting. And it was in these grueling circumstances that Corporal
Rubin impressed his fellow soldiers in the 1st Cav Division as
one of the best ever to wear our nation's uniform.
Those who
served with Ted speak of him as a soldier of great skill and courage.
One night near the Pusan Perimeter, Corporal Rubin had been assigned
to hold a hill that was essential to the 3rd Battalion safe withdrawal.
For 24 hours this lone rifleman would defend the hill against
an overwhelming number of North Korean forces. By his actions
Corporal Rubin inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy, saved
the lives of countless soldiers, and gave the unit time to withdraw.
Those who
served with Ted speak of him as a soldier who gladly risked his
own life for others. When Corporal Rubin's battalion found itself
ambushed by thousands of Chinese troops, the Americans' firepower
soon dwindled to a single machine gun. The weapon was in an exposed
position and three soldiers had already died manning it. That
was when Corporal Rubin stepped forward. He fought until his ammunition
was gone. He was badly wounded, captured and sent to a POW camp.
He risked his life that day to protect his fellow American soldiers,
and his heroism helped many of them escape.
Those who
served with Ted speak of him as a soldier whose many acts of compassion
helped his fellow GIs survive the nightmare of imprisonment. As
a teenager, Ted had taught himself how to survive the horrors
of a Nazi death camp. He was resourceful, courageous, and unusually
strong. And in Korea, he drew on these qualities to help keep
many of his POWs alive. Whenever he could, at the risk of certain
execution, Corporal Rubin would sneak out and steal food rations
from the guards, and then he shared them with his fellow soldiers.
Throughout this ordeal he nursed those who were sick back to health,
and said the Kaddish prayers for those he buried.
And when
his captives offered to release him to Communist Hungary, with
the guarantee of a good job and nice clothes and plenty of food,
Corporal Rubin refused. He said, "I was in the U.S. Army,
and I wouldn't leave my American brothers because they need me
here." Ted's decision was in character.
As a Jew
and non-citizen serving in uniform, he had experienced prejudice
in the Army. And he knew that the America he fought for did not
always live up to its highest ideals. Yet he had enough trust
in America's promise to see his commitment through. He saw it
as his personal duty to live up to our nation's promise, and by
doing so he set an example of what it means to be an American.
Many heroes
are remembered in monuments of stone. The monuments to Corporal
Rubin are a legacy of life. We see his legacy in the many American
families whose husbands, fathers, and sons returned home safely
because of his efforts. We see his legacy in the free and democratic
South Korea that grew on the soil of his sacrifice. And we see
his legacy in a new generation of American men and women in uniform
who were inspired to their own acts of courage and compassion.
Today, we
remember the mother, father and sister that Corporal Rubin lost
to an unspeakable evil. We admire the determination of a young
man who sought to repay his American liberators by following in
their footsteps, and we recall the selfless acts that gave his
comrades strength and hope in their darkest hours.
In the years
since Abraham Lincoln signed into law the bill establishing the
Medal of Honor, we have had many eloquent tributes to what this
medal represents. I like Ted's description. He calls it "the
highest honor of the best country in the world." And today,
a grateful America bestows this award on a true son of liberty.
I now ask
the Military Aide to read the citation. (Applause.)
(The citation
is read. The medal is presented.) (Applause.)
END 2:58
P.M. EDT