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Scene #1: The morning of December 16, 1944. A lonely outpost on the Belgian frontier. In subzero temperatures, the last German counteroffensive of World War II had begun. Within one month, 19,000 American lives would be lost in the Battle of the Bulge. Hell came in like a freight train. I heard an explosion and went back to where my friend was. His legs were blown off-he bled to death in my arms. Scene #2: Memorial Day, 60 years later. In a small town in the United States, it is a day off from work or school and it is the unofficial start to the busy summer season. We sit in our lawn chairs, we chat with neighbors and sip our drinks when the gentlemen with the flag march past.
The holiday known originally as "Decoration
Day" originated at the end of the Civil War
when a general order was issued designating May 30, 1868, "for the purpose of
strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense
of their country during the late rebellion." When Congress passed a law formally
recognizing the last Monday in May as the day of national celebration, we effectively got
our three-day weekend and our de facto beginning of summer. Of the sixteen million American men and women who served in WWII, a half million died on the field of conflict. In 2007, over 1200 veterans of World War II quietly slip away every day. The national memory of the war that did more than any other event in the last century to shape the history of the American nation is dying with them. Incredibly, it comes as a shock to most Americans today that the “Battle of the Bulge” didn’t originate as a weight-loss term. In the high school where I teach, I have been inviting veterans to my classroom to share their experiences with our students. As their numbers dwindled, I smartened up and began to record their stories. Weve spoken at length with a pilot forced to bail out at 28,000 feet of his flaming B-17 bomber, only to watch crewmembers die in the subsequent explosion and then be taken prisoner himself. We have had conversations with POWs who survived forced marches in brutal weather, and with Jewish infantrymen who were among the first to liberate the death camp at Dachau. We have met men who were handcuffed to Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg and who were assigned to suicide watch guard shifts there after fighting their way across Germany. We can imagine what it was like to sail eerily into Pearl Harbor 36 hours after the Japanese attack and see no lights except the USS Arizona still blazing with the bodies of hundreds of Americans entombed in it. We are with the torpedo bomber pilot as he takes off from the flight deck of the carrier USS Yorktown during the epic battle of Midway, and is forced to land on the deck of another carrier as the Yorktown burns and later slides to the bottom of the sea. We intently listen to a blind Marine describe what it was like to lose his eyesight fifty-nine years to the day of his being struck by mortar fragments, not once, but twice in the same day at Okinawa (and he told us that " the hardest part was telling my mother"). Across a kitchen table I have discussions with other veterans, including a former 17 year old describing what it was like to share a foxhole with a headless fellow US Marine on Iwo Jima. My students and I are just "one person away" from the shock of Pearl Harbor, the chaos at Omaha Beach and the horrors of Guadalcanal and Peleliu Island.
Sixty-plus years ago these men and women saved the
world. I think about this: by the time my teaching career ends in 10 or 15 years,
almost all of them will be
gone. These men and women have helped to spark students interest in finding out more about our nations past and the role of the individual in shaping it. On our website we work to weave the stories of our communitys sacrifices into the fabric of our national history. And that, to me, is what teaching history should be all about. After all, if we allow ourselves to forget about the teenager who bled to death in his buddys arms, if we overlook the sacrifices it took to make this nation strong and proud, we may as well forget everything else. Where will we be when there is nothing important about our past to remember? The answer is found in quick look at any other great civilization in history that also allowed the searing imagery of the collective past that once bound them together be trivialized, blurred and eroded away...
This Memorial Day, remember.
Copyright © 2001,2007 by Matthew A Rozell and Hudson Falls CSD. All rights reserved.
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