Families, communities, and
nations are strengthened during the loss of loved ones when there is closure. A
funeral and/or a memorial services usually fills this need. However, there are
times when there is no body to bury. Such is the case with bodies of Americans who
did not return home from war.
Americans are rejoicing, and many
families will finally find closure because North Korea is returning the bodies
of American servicemen lost in the Korean War. A crew of U.S. service members
recently traveled aboard a U.S. Air Force C-17 to Wonsan, North Korea, to
collect the soldiers’ remains. The news carried pictures of the retrieval of the bodies.
Fifty-five wooden cases, draped with
white and blue United Nations flags, carrying the remains of U.S. soldiers
killed during the Korean War arrived Friday in South Korea on the 65th
anniversary of the Korean Armistice Agreement, the White House said in a news
release.
A solemn honor guard greeted the fallen
soldiers at the Osan Air Base outside Seoul, South Korea. U.S. service members
methodically carried each small casket – one by one – to their awaiting
vehicles. A formal repatriation ceremony will be held Aug. 1, the White House
release said.
“Today’s actions represent a significant
first step to recommence the repatriation of remains from North Korea and to
resume field operations in North Korea to search for the estimated 5,300
Americans who have not yet returned home,” the White House release said.
One may well ask why this bit of
news is something that I want to post on my blog. I have a good reason for
writing about the collection of the remains of the bodies of Americans lost in
the Korean War. I have a cousin who never returned from the war, and my family
is anxiously awaiting the identification of the remains. We want to know if our
family member is among the fifty-five soldiers who are coming home.
The return of the remains of
American servicemen and women is critical for their families to have closure
about their deaths. Families, communities, and nations are stronger when all
their sons and daughters are accounted for.
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