I, and I'm sure you are with me on this, hate war. There are those who cause it, debate it, declare it, and struggle with making sure we are as a nation are in just wars. But the fact is, it is the heroes of the Armed services who have to fight it. They ultimately pay the price for our freedom as a nation.
As an American citizen I have my personal opinion about the wars we fight and whether they are being fought for the right reasons or not and even whether they are being fought in the right way. But those who are responsible for doing the fighting are to be appreciated and honored, in my humble opinion, by all of us who stay behind and argue the justice or the rightness of war.
I want to use one such warrior as a point of reference for this particular Memorial Day. I do not know him, nor do I know the older veteran who embraced him that day in Dallas when this picture was taken, but it is now one of my favorite pictures of all time.
As I said, this picture is one of my very favorites. The older man is Houston James, a Pearl Harbor Survivor from Dallas, who spontaneously embraced Marine Staff Sgt. Mark Graunke Jr. during a past Veterans Day commemoration in Dallas. This picture was taken by the Dallas Morning News and shows the span of time and conflicts that as a Nation we have had to endure. These two men, and those who DID NOT come home, show us freedom is not free. It has a price someone pays. Let's remember them on this Memorial Day 2011.
5 comments:
Thank you for this post, Paul.
For remembrance . . .
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_WDrbbtaO0E
Christiane,
Thanks.
Paul,
I suppose your Memorial Day is to you folk what ANZAC Day is to Australians.
We are quite regularly being reminded, as you are, of the sacrifices.
Only yesterday, the body of one of our young men was returned home.
With you, I hate war, and the wickedness of mankind which causes it, and find myself thinking of what the world would be like without those young men, and their courage and sacrifice.
Apart from a mighty move of God across all nations, the alternative is horrific.
Marine Corporal Travis Bradach-Ball was the Marine who died that day. His mother, Lynn Bradach has spent the last nine years trying to ban mines and cluster bombs.
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