We Salute Them
with
A L O H A !
They are in their late 80s & their 90s.
Active duty military personnel
smartly push their wheel chairs
past the emotional crowd.
Around 100 of them returned yesterday;
The cremated ashes of one man
were brought to Pearl Harbor
for the last time
to be entombed
in the sunken USS UTAH with his
never forgotten ship-mates,
who died aboard her,
on that day 70 years ago-
yesterday.
"They want to return and be
with the shipmates that they lost
during the attack,"
Jim Taylor,
a retired sailor
who coordinates such ceremonies
No one knows
if any of them will return
next December.
Fewer and fewer
survive each passing month.
Though around 2600 of them
still survive,
they are dissolving their organization
with the dying year.
It has become just too much
paperwork for them.
But their
precious documents
are being given into the care
of the US Parks Service.
In order to join the
Pearl Harbor Survivors Association,
each of them wrote an application
detailing WHERE they were on that day,
what they SAW & DID.
Each year a few of them
tell the rest of us about that day:
fallen commrades,
the smell of burning oil,
flaming water all around,
and the screams.
They fought war that followed;
tell the rest of us about that day:
fallen commrades,
the smell of burning oil,
flaming water all around,
and the screams.
They fought war that followed;
But it is their faces,
and yes, their
tears
that tell us
the most.
"Freedom
is not free."
the most.
"Freedom
is not free."
" Yesterday, December 7, 1941—a date which will live in infamy—the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan.... I, therefore, ask that the Congress declare that since the dastardly and unprovoked attack by Japan on Sunday, December seventh,
a state of war has existed between the United States
and the Japanese Empire. "
President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
request to Congress for a declaration of war, Dec 8, 1941-
One of the most famous radio broadcasts in history.
listen HERE
" Before we're through with them,
the Japanese language will be spoken
only in Hell. "
--Vice Admiral William F. "Bull" Halsey,
spoken from his flagship Enterprise
upon returning to Pearl Harbor
and seeing the smoking wreckage
The lives of our Hawaii residents
of Japanese decent
were forever changed
from that day.
Some were interned,
some fought in the most decorated units
of the US Military.
Read about my extraordinary neighbors:
Thank YOU for visiting today!
Your comment is most welcome-
Warmly, cloudia
Freedom is never free. A salute to all the brave men. Thank you so much for sharing !
ReplyDeleteAs the living memory of them fades their accomplishments will consigned to words in books and them who start wars today are doing all they can to ensure that coming generations will not be able to read those words.
ReplyDeleteThey know they fought for a reason that was comprehensible, we fight now and don't even know why. Yet our sons and daughters, just as our grand parents sons and daughters died to preserve what is left of the freedom our parents fought to secure.
Unfortunately that war still has not ended because it did nothing to change mens hearts. May they who gave their lives rest in silent peace, finally free from the nightmares of what they had to do.
I saw that on the news last night - it was a lovely tribute.
ReplyDeleteMy father died two years ago on December 20. He was a veteran of WWII and oddly was never interested in finding old shipmates, etc. We tried to take him to the WWII memorial in DC (my sister was living there then), but he wouldn't go. I think the his mortality was catching up with him and he just didn't want to think about it. But I went to it and was proud that my dad served. He's now buried in a Veterans Cemetery surrounded by other fallen heroes.
What a superb post honoring those who were at Pearl Harbor on that horrid day.
ReplyDeleteAs you probably know, after Roosevelt so cynically ruined the careers of General Short and Admiral Kimmell, Kimmell was replaced by Admiral Chester Nimitz. Nimitz, his wife Catherine and three other Admirals who served with Nimitz in the Pacific (and their wives) are buried in the Military Cemetery at San Bruno, CA. They could have been buried at Arlington, but chose San Bruno with the instructions that they be buried together without monuments and with the common tombstone of the ranks who served with and under them in the Pacific.
Read about this yesterday in the NYT and I was moved to tears ...
ReplyDeleteVery nice tribute, Cloudia! This was the first time for me to read FDR's speech. Mahalo.
ReplyDeletean age, she is passing!
ReplyDeleteHard to forget past!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad lots of them got to Pearl Harbor yesterday. The local metro Kansas City group lists a "Sons and Daughters of Pearl Harbor Survivors" group to hopefully keep the history in view. DrumMajor
ReplyDeleteWhat a great post...and i wish it wasn't true but...Freedom is never free. Have a nice day. Great photos and vid. =)
ReplyDeleteFreedon is indeed not free - but it IS one of the most valuable things in the world. Thanks Cloudia.
ReplyDeleteFreedom always comes with a price. Seen the ceremony on last nights news down here in OZ, it was very moving indeed :-).
ReplyDeleteOh Cloudia, the slide show had such impact...
ReplyDeleteso sad they the organization has to dissolve.
Thanks for sharing this moving post.
Thank YOU!
ReplyDeleteWe are international friends,
not subjects,
because of these wars. . .
am humbled by these greats
ReplyDeletenamaste /\ from mumbai
aloha!
My dad told me of istening to the radio when they announced that pearl harbor had been attacked.he want to join the service right than and there,but Gramma told him NO! he had to finish school first.he did and than he joined the US Army Air Force. when all was said and done he ended his service as part of the occupational forces in japan.
ReplyDeleteI salute to them all ...
ReplyDeleteWe know the historical facts, but we will never know what our parents went through, perfect tribute Cloudia.
ReplyDeleteThe old photos here are so awful. God help this world.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Cloudia, for this important post.
After Pearl Harbor my father-to-be was sent to Hawaii for military training. I remember a few snapshots in my mother's scrapbook of him and buddies shirtless under the palm trees.
So glad YOU joined us here today.
ReplyDeleteThanks EACH of you-
Such a perfectly timed, perfectly toned tribute to those who gave so much for so many.
ReplyDeleteI posted a quote from Ronald Reagan - here - this week that touches on this.
As ever, you've said it as it needed to be said.