I had meant to post this on Memorial day 2013, however distraction over took my intentions. Giving another lesson of the importance of finishing what you start if it has meaning and the importance of knowing when it is meaningless.
Tomorrow is
Memorial Day. It is a day of reflection
on the sacrifices made on behalf of our nation by those men and women of the
armed forces of the United States. It is
the day we as a nation remember those who paid for the continuation of our form
of government and the freedoms it was set up to provide its citizenry. How ironic is the fact that the very things
they fought and died for are under attack; not just from other nations but from
within our own government and people.
To the best
of my knowledge this day was originally called “Decoration Day” started
sometime after the end of the Civil War.
It originated to give acknowledgement to 250 souls lying in an unmarked
mass grave. Those were United States
Military that died in our most personal conflict. They died so slavery would not survive within
our borders. They died so the United States would survive as originally
designed by the fathers of our Nation. There
are a number of different but very similar possible origins of this day of
memory but they all revolved around the same reasoning. Giving thanks for maximum service rendered. As a nation, we have been involved in many
more military conflicts since that time and as “Decoration Day” morphed into
Memorial Day.
I have been
part of a society and part of a family which has been involved in the aftermaths
of warfare (two World Wars, Korea and Vietnam, numerous skirmishes and
ultimately Iraq and Afghanistan). My grandfather,
my uncles and aunts, cousins, friends and acquaintances were involved in one or
more of those military actions. WWI used
my Grandpa Henry. It sent him back home
with a mind and memories filled with the horrors of war and anger toward a God
that he couldn’t understand ever again.
When WWII broke out he was in his late 40’s. Even with his hatred of the
war, he tried to get back into the uniform of his country, willing to stand up
for what was right. WWII saw four of my
uncles and one of my aunts donning the uniforms of the Army and the Navy. Our family was one of the fortunate families
that did not suffer a loss of life. I
might mention that one of my uncles served on four different ships that were
blown out from under him. One blast sent him up into the air and then crashing down into his gun bunker, God had seen
fit that a corpsman found him still alive after being left for dead.
The ones that
we are remembering on Memorial Day are marked by the hundreds of thousands of
grave monuments throughout the World.
Far more American souls have been lost protecting humanity than those lost
for the United States. I remember my grade
school Decoration Days, coming home with the little red poppies made by our
veterans to help provide for the medical needs of the wounded that survived and
in the memory of those who lost their lives. The use of poppies as a symbol originated
in France as the real flowers were placed on the thousands of graves filled
with American blood and sacrifice.
France’s way of recognizing and thanking our country for efforts and
prices paid for their continuance as a sovereign nation. France is not alone as a nation that exists
upon the sea of American blood drenched souls.
We owe a debt of gratitude to so many, a debt not ever to be paid in
kind.
The end of
WWI saw the end of our country’s political will to wage war. When the Korean conflict occurred, our
country’s politics chose to do battle without the commitment to win. Our politicians, feeling guilt over the use
of Atomic power to end WWII, could not bring themselves to call Korea a
war. They instead called it a police
action. Nationally, we looked at the horror of the atomic bomb only in terms of
the devastation it caused. That blinded our nation to the lives that act saved. President Truman was strong enough and wise
enough to make the hard choice needed to stop the war. He was smart enough to know that war, waged
when necessary, must be fought with complete commitment to win. The Korean “police action” has never been won
or lost by either side because of one side’s inability to win and our lack of
commitment to win. In the very least
though we were still united behind our warriors and they were recognized and
appreciated by most of us. They could
still hold their heads high and proud as we continued to recognize their
sacrifice as our warriors equal to their predecessors.
Those who
survived WWII returned home victorious. They were looked upon by most of us as
our defenders and as our conquering heroes.
Those who returned from Korea were, for the most part, ignored by our
politicians and most of us who were not personally connected to those surviving
warriors. Somewhere between Korea and
Vietnam things changed. It’s as if our
entire national psyche had taken a hard turn to the left. Again our fear of being perceived as the bad
guys caused us to behave haphazardly. We
had watched McCarthy ferret out communism, our cold war enemy, with such zeal
that was found to be reprehensible. That
disdain translated into a reversal of society’s pendulum until we have reached
a point at which some view our heroes as villains. In particular, those returning from the Vietnam
War found themselves reviled, spat upon and rejected by those whose rights to
freedom they were sent to protect. The Vietnam War has proven to be the most
noticeable schism point in our political history since the Civil War. The aftermath of that vitriolic passion has
spawned a nation no longer united, a nation that has been dramatically weakened
by division with a government which sends our military into conflict with
half-hearted resolve.
Most recently
we have witnessed the effect of anti-war rhetoric dissolve the unity of purpose
in the aftermath of September 11, 2001, into fragments lacking the strength or
the will to win. It was that brief moment
of unity (the wars of Afghanistan and Iraq) that could have been put into
history as a war of the past. That particular opportunity quickly passed as the
political fears were fanned by memories not of the victories achieved by our military
and the unity of our citizens prior to Viet Nam, but by the dissent during and
after those wars. Our country no longer
spends our country’s blood and treasure wisely and with strong resolve and
purpose. Those are spent instead to
maintain appearances.
Memorial Day
is a day to remember those who gave all for the higher purpose of our
country. A day to remember the
importance of unity misplaced in our history.
A day to remember the richness of our heritage, our gifts, and the
biblical adage that has guided our society’s higher purpose, “to whom much is
given, much is expected”. Many have
complained about our position as the policeman on the streets of the world and
say we have no obligation to better the conditions imposed by tyranny. How much better to accept that we are in fact
our brother’s keeper and we need to be the good Samaritan rather than those
that neglected to assist one in need.
Pray for our
country and our world.
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