Tomorrow is Memorial Day. This day of commemoration began after the Civil War when Americans wanted to remember the men who fought and died. At that time, May 30 was known as “Decoration Day” because it was a day to decorate the graves.
As
the years passed, the day became a day to honor the dead from all the wars and
became known as Memorial Day. In 1968, it became a three-day weekend when the
federal government moved Memorial Day to the last Monday in May. Dakota Wood
wrote the following about commemorating Memorial Day.
People are the heart of a nation’s strength,
especially those comparatively few who step forward to serve their community
and their country in military service. Wars are rather rare, but the nation’s
future can hang in the balance when war comes and the loss of life that results
in defeating an enemy can number in the thousands, sometimes the tens of
thousands.
Our history is punctuated with such crises
and sacrifices. Citizen-patriots rose to the challenge of securing America’s
birth nearly 250 years ago, with some 8,000 new Americans giving their all to
defend our fledgling republic.
The Civil War, two world wars, operations against
terrorists who have attacked America at home and Americans abroad, and wars to
protect U.S. interests not just in our hemisphere but also in Asia, the Middle
East, and Africa, have resulted in the loss of nearly 700,000 Americans.
These men and women did not seek death; it
came to them through their service. Their motivations included protecting the
lives of those they loved; defending their homeland that has provided
opportunity and freedom previously unknown in history; and facing dangers
loyally alongside their brothers and sisters with whom they trained, deployed,
and surged into combat as they answered their nation’s call.
Wood
reminded his readers that every fallen warrior was “someone’s son or daughter;
they might have been a husband or wife, father or mother, sister or brother.
They were surely friends.” He continued, “They meant something to someone, and
their loss struck deep to those whose lives they touched.” Wood explained that
it is the loss of someone important who gave rise to ways to remember the
fallen warriors. These memorials included “cemeteries dedicated to their
internment; poems, books, songs, and speeches written in their honor; and
specific occasions, like Memorial Day, set aside on which to reflect on all of
this.”
Like
Wood, I encourage my readers to take time on Memorial Day to show gratitude for
the thousands (millions ??) of men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice
for you and me. Those heroes include those who fought to establish our nation,
to maintain our union, and to defend our nation for more than 250 years.
No comments:
Post a Comment