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Home > Uncategorized > Saluting the Troops

Saluting the Troops

As we Salute the Troops this week­end and every­day,  I recall the fol­low­ing arti­cle that cap­tures it best:

Any­one who has ever looked into the glazed eyes of a sol­dier dying on the bat­tle­field will think hard before start­ing a war.” Otto Von Bismark

Each year, Memo­r­ial Day gives us the for­mal oppor­tu­nity to acknowl­edge and appre­ci­ate the men and women who have died in mil­i­tary ser­vice to our nation. The hol­i­day was orig­i­nally called Dec­o­ra­tion Day. Though Water­loo, N.Y. was offi­cially declared the birth­place of Memo­r­ial Day by Lyn­don John­son in 1966, it is likely that the hol­i­day had many sep­a­rate begin­nings, with over two dozen cities claim­ing to be the birth­place of this day of remem­brance. The first obser­vance of Memo­r­ial Day was May 30, 1868, when flow­ers were placed on the graves of Union and Con­fed­er­ate sol­diers in Arling­ton National Ceme­tery. How­ever, the South refused to acknowl­edge the hol­i­day and hon­ored its war dead sep­a­rately until after World War I–when the sig­nif­i­cance of the hol­i­day broad­ened to honor all Amer­i­cans who had died fight­ing in any war, not just the Civil War. In 1915, a poet, Moina Michael con­ceived the idea to wear red pop­pies on Memo­r­ial Day as a tan­gi­ble expres­sion of honor for ser­vice­men who had died serv­ing the coun­try. This tra­di­tion ulti­mately spred to other coun­tries as well, and the U.S. Postal Ser­vice hon­ored Ms Michael in 1948 for her role in found­ing the National Poppy Move­ment with the issue of her like­ness on a 3 cent red postage stamp. One of her poems con­veys her rea­sons for choos­ing the poppy as the com­mem­o­ra­tive flower:

We cher­ish too, the Poppy red
That grows on fields where valor led,
It seems to sig­nal to the skies
That blood of heroes never dies.

Since the late 1950s,on the Thurs­day before Memo­r­ial Day, the 1,200 sol­diers of the Third U.S. Infantry place small Amer­i­can flags at each of the 260,000 plus grave­stones at Arling­ton National Ceme­tery. Addi­tion­ally, since 1998, Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts place a can­dle at each of the 15,300 grave sites of sol­diers buried at Fred­er­icks­burg and Spot­syl­va­nia National Mil­i­tary Park on the Sat­ur­day before the observed holiday.

A sense of belong­ing, and tra­di­tion enriches all our lives. Most of us have an ances­tor, a rel­a­tive, a friend, a coworker who fought in one of the wars of this country…since the Rev­o­lu­tion­ary War in our fight for inde­pen­dence as a nation. And, in their deaths, these indi­vid­u­als have made us the ben­e­fi­cia­ries of their ulti­mate sacrifice.

Mahatma Gandhi is quoted as say­ing, “The only tyrant I accept in this world is the ‘still small voice’ within me.” More­over, he made the fol­low­ing poignant com­ments about the ori­gins of violence:

“Seven blun­ders of the world that lead to vio­lence: wealth with­out work, plea­sure with­out con­science, knowl­edge with­out char­ac­ter, com­merce with­out moral­ity, sci­ence with­out human­ity, wor­ship with­out sac­ri­fice, pol­i­tics with­out principle.”

I think if you pon­der Gandhi’s state­ment, you will see the ratio­nale for every war we have fought to the present time some­where in the text. We are a nation built upon the prin­ci­ples of lib­erty and jus­tice for all. In efforts to pre­serve these prin­ci­ples both for our own nation, and to aid nations less for­tu­nate than ours, cit­i­zens of our coun­try have died in the process. And, as John Quincy Adams, our sixth Pres­i­dent of the United States remarked, “The influ­ence of each human being on oth­ers in this life is a kind of immortality.”

I’ll close this week’s Insight with a pow­er­ful poem com­posed as the author expe­ri­ences the Viet­nam Memo­r­ial. For all of you who have stood before this wind­ing gran­ite wall of names, you’ll iden­tify with the images he evokes. Over 58,000 Amer­i­cans died in this con­tro­ver­sial war, and I think this poem speaks poignantly of them, and ulti­mately salutes all our war-dead.

Fac­ing It

My black face fades,
hid­ing inside the black gran­ite.
I said I wouldn’t,
dammit: No tears.
I’m stone. I’m flesh.
My clouded reflec­tion eyes me
like a bird of prey, the pro­file of night
slanted against morn­ing. I turn
this way–the stone lets me go.
I turn that way–I’m inside
the Viet­nam Veteran’s Memo­r­ial
again, depend­ing on the light
to make a dif­fer­ence.
I go down the 58,022 names,
half-expecting to find
my own in let­ters like smoke.
I touch the name Andrew John­son;
I see the booby trap’s white flash.
Names shim­mer on a woman’s blouse
but when she walks away
the names stay on the wall.
Brush­strokes flash, a red bird’s
wings cut­ting across my stare.
The sky. A plane in the sky.
A white vet’s image floats
closer to me, then his pale eyes
look through mine. I’m a win­dow.
He’s lost his right arm
inside the stone. In the black mir­ror
a woman’s try­ing to erase names:
No, she’s brush­ing a boy’s hair.

Yusef Komun­yakaa

Stephen L. Hines, M.D.
May 2001