President Joe Biden.Photo: Anna Moneymaker/Getty

Joe Biden

It was an emotional day at the White House Wednesday, when PresidentJoe Biden, First Lady Dr.Jill Bidenand Vice PresidentKamala Harrisall spoke about the administration’s renewed “Cancer Moonshot” initiative and the disease which has darkened each of their lives.

“See that doctor on the end there?” the president, 79, said at the start of the event, acknowledging Dr. W.K. Alfred Yung, who treated the president’s oldest son,Beau Biden, before his 2015 death at 46 of brain cancer.

“That’s the man who spent 18 months trying to save our son’s life. Doctor, I love you. The whole family loves you,” the president said.

He praised Dr. Yung’s “optimism and fearlessness,” saying that’s “what the ‘Cancer Moonshot’ is all about.”

“I committed to this fight when I was vice president,” Biden said Wednesday. “It’s one of the reasons why, quite frankly, I ran for president. Let there be no doubt: Now that I am president, this is a presidential White House priority — period.”

The first lady also spoke at the kickoff. “Certain words have the power to make time stop: Malignant. Aggressive. Terminal. Cancer,” she said. “Like a spell, they still the air around us. Frozen in place, we feel the world we knew slipping away. In the span of a breath, a thousand questions fill our minds. ‘What can I do? How do I tell people? Why did this happen?’ "

Jill Biden.Anna Moneymaker/Getty

Jill Biden

Dr. Biden has leaned on some of thepainful experiences in lifeto guide what she called a “healing role” as first lady.

“Cancer changes everyone it touches,” she said Wednesday. “For Joe and me, it has stolen our joy. It left us broken in our grief. But through that pain, we found purpose, strengthening our fortitude for this fight to end cancer as we know it.”

She also spoke about loved ones dying of breast cancer, which prompted her last year toencourage women to get mammograms.

“Almost 30 years ago, four of my friends were diagnosed with breast cancer in one year,” she said. “And one of my dear friends, Winnie, lost her battle. Winnie inspired me to take up the cause of prevention and education.”

Vice President Harris likewise spoke about the issue in personal terms, praising the work of her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, a scientist and breast cancer researcher who died of colon cancer in 2009.

Vice President Kamala Harris.Anna Moneymaker/Getty

Kamala Harris

“My mother’s discoveries helped save women’s lives, and I am so proud that she brought our nation and our world closer to the goal of ending breast cancer as we know it,” Harris said.

The day she learned her mom, who had worked hard to fight the disease, would become sick with it was “one of the worst days of my life and an experience that, sadly, millions and millions of people in our country have had.”

Harris spoke about caring for her mom during her mom’s months-long “courageous fight” that ended in hospice care.

“One of the last questions she asked the hospice nurse was, ‘Are my daughters going to be okay?'” the vice president said. “I miss my mother every day, and I carry her memory with me wherever I go.”

“The president’s ‘Cancer Moonshot’ demonstrates who he, our president, is,” she said. “Because as you all know, out of his personal pain, he launched an initiative — this initiative that will help countless lives, the lives of people he may never meet.”

source: people.com