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Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Norman Podhoretz
11distinguished individuals to receive Medal of Freedom at the White House

Norman Podhoretz 1950
President George W. Bush will award the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor on Wednesday June 23, 2004, to Mormon Church President Gordon B. Hinckley, actress Doris Day, golfer Arnold Palmer, politician Edward Brooke, historian Vartan Gregorian, National Geographic Society Chairman Gilbert Grosvenor, cosmetics mogul Estee Lauder, actress Rita Moreno, ophthalmology researcher Arnall Patz, journalist Norman Podhoretz and economist and banker Walter Wriston the White House announced Friday.
They will join Pope John Paul II and journalist Robert Bartley as 2004 recipients.
President Truman established the award in 1945 to honor civilian contributions during World War II. It was reinstated by President Kennedy in 1963 to recognize distinguished peacetime service. The medal has been conferred on roughly 400 individuals since its introduction.
Bush will present the medals at a White House ceremony on Wednesday, although the president delivered the award to the pope during a visit to the Vatican earlier this month.
Honorees are recommended to the president by a Distinguished Civilian Service Awards Board. Past recipients include former presidents, astronauts, entertainers, scientists, religious leaders and victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Norman Podhoretz


Norman Podhoretz Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom


President George W. Bush presents Norman Podhoretz with the Presidential Medal of Freedom on June 23 in the East Room of the White House.

In celebration of a 50-year editorial career, Norman Podhoretz has been awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest honor awarded to a civilian by the commander in chief. After receiving the award from President Bush on June 23, Podhoretz was quoted in The New York Times as saying, “It’s the most wonderful honor ever to come my way, the most wonderful honor I could ever imagine coming my way.”
As editor of Commentary from 1960–95, Podhoretz became an outspoken proponent for what he viewed as ethical right and wrong. President Bush remarked in his speech, “Norm Podhoretz ranks among the most prominent American editors of the 20th century.” And, referring to the manner in which Podhoretz expressed his views on historical events and people he knew, Bush added that he was “never a man to tailor his opinions to please others, [and] has always written and spoken with directness and honesty.”
Born in Brooklyn in 1930 to Jewish immigrants, Podhoretz began his political career as a devout liberal. However, well into his tenure at Commentary, he underwent a major shift in his political views that led to his position as a forerunner of what is now called neo-conservatism. While he risked isolating himself from former colleagues, Podhoretz believed he was on the proper path for himself. As his beliefs moved to the right, he diverged from the opinions of former friend Allen Ginsberg ’48, spurring a spirited rivalry that would last until Ginsberg’s death in 1997.
Podhoretz previously has been featured in Columbia College Today. In the Winter 1985 cover story, “Political Mavericks,” he and neo-liberal Charles Peters ’49 (founding editor of The Washington Monthly) were highlighted in a side-by-side analysis of political right and left. More recently, the February 2001 issue offered a revealing excerpt from Podhoretz’s introspective memoir, Ex-Friends, about what he learned in his years at Columbia. Foremost was his praise of the Contemporary Civilization courses and their solid foundation of knowledge and literature. Looking back, he was struck by how Columbia taught him that as an American (and, perhaps, as a Jew) he was the “product of a tradition” and that all of the world’s history “bore a direct relation to me and the world in which I lived.”
Podhoretz has hardly slowed down in retirement. In addition to Ex-Friends, he has written other memoirs and political analyses. In the September 2004 issue of Commentary, Podhoretz is featured with an extensive piece, “World War IV: How It Started, What It Means, and Why We Have to Win.” As he states in the prefatory “Note to the Reader,” the article is “the story of what this nation has been fighting to accomplish since September 11, 2001.”


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