Good Message for Veterans Day
(in case you missed this one at the time I dictated it)
(2011)
My English
guide and I were at the St. Mary's Roman
Catholic Cemetery,
North London. We had become friends and he
wanted to help me find one of my favorite poets, Francis Thompson's grave...
best known for his famous line, “[love] is a many-splendored thing” from his
poem The Kingdom of God. At that time, I had a shadow of vision in my
left eye.
He said to
me, “you will not believe what I see coming down the walk.” A cemetery employee
was pulling a small three-wheeled cart on which was a coffin covered with a
tattered American flag. Walking behind the cart was a Catholic priest, along
with a very frail woman in a wheelchair, being pushed by,evidently, the driver
of the vehicle which had brought them there. This was the extent of the funeral
cortege.
Earlier, we
had almost walked into a freshly dug grave, and I spoke of the danger of such
for a blind person. They stopped at the open grave and two other cemetery
workers put the casket in the ground and began to fill the grave with dirt. The
priest was saying some words as we walked up, he turned to us and said, “she is
not very cognitive, but will appreciate your being here.” She looked at me and
reached out a gloved hand, which I squeezed. I told her that I was American.
She handed me the folded American flag.
The priest
said they were in separate nursing homes, but had been married 50 years, he was
an American veteran. You note that I said to her, “I am American.” It is like
saying, “I believe God.” Many say, “I am an American” like those who
say, “I believe in God.” All sorts of people believe in God, even
the devil; many American citizens, traitors, say “I am an American”, but
when you say “I am American”, you believe this country, just as you believe
God. When you believe this country, you believe all the history, the patriots
who made this country.
I sold that
old, tattered flag many years ago, along with several other 48-star flags I
owned. I do remember that on the hoist edge of the flag was written these
words, “Battle Flag, December 1944”. This flag was possibly flown during the Battle of the Bulge. You
will note that there was nothing pertaining to veterans or the military at this
grave service. Like so many WWII veterans, they had probably met in London after the war, and
he stayed there. But, he probably wanted his casket covered with the American
flag, it still meant something to him (and her).
On this
Memorial Day, we think of the 126,000 buried on foreign soil (not in a casket,
just wrapped in an American flag), the thousands buried in Arlington and other national cemeteries. They
believed America
and would be dumbfounded to see what has happened to their country. Until Korea, most of
the fallen were buried on foreign soil. I stood at the great national cemetery
in Manila where 18,000 are buried, and on the 25th
anniversary of D-Day, I stood at Normandy
at that great cemetery there. What a waste! What a expenditure of life: 50,000
in Korea, frozen bodies
stacked like cord wood; 58,000 killed in Vietnam.
I was still
in the hospital from the Korean era, when the Vietnam
tragedy was going on, I still remember the screams of the woman across the
street from me when her son's casket was brought into her home on his “return”
from Vietnam.
We have a tendency to forget the civilian tragedy of war, on both sides. Even
today, while several wars are going on, drones overhead dropping bombs,
missiles being fired from oceans as well as from “the enemy's” homeland...do
not forget the children who will never recover from the sights and sounds of
warfare, children on both sides, in the clutches of man's inhumanity to man.
Never
forget that many prosper from the greed of war, fortunes have been made from
war. The veteran caught in the dilemma of warfare, the one who
survives...blind, crippled, sown back together, is the blessed survivor; those
in the soil are the heroes. Many of us worked very hard, while others were
having a good time, to get the schooling necessary to sufficiently serve our
country...doctors, engineers, weapons/utilities experts. Disabled, we give up
everything, accept the patriot's zeal.
The
tumult and the shouting dies—
The Captains and the Kings depart—
Still stands Thine ancient sacrifice,
An humble and a contrite heart.
Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
Lest we forget—lest we forget!
Recessional – Rudyard Kipling (1897)
The Captains and the Kings depart—
Still stands Thine ancient sacrifice,
An humble and a contrite heart.
Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
Lest we forget—lest we forget!
Recessional – Rudyard Kipling (1897)
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