
"Mom and Dad, I'm coming home, but I've a favor to ask. I have a friend I'd like to bring home with me."
"Sure, they replied, we'd love to meet him."
"There's something you should know," the son continued, "he was hurt pretty badly in the fighting. He stepped on a land mind and lost an arm and a leg. He has nowhere else to go, and I want him to come live with us."
"I'm sorry to hear that, son. Maybe we can help him find somewhere to live?"
"No, Mom and Dad, I want him to live with us."
"Son," said the father, "you don't know what you're asking. Someone with such a handicap would be a terrible burden on us. We have our own lives to live, and we can't let something like this interfere with our lives. I think you should just come home and forget about this guy. He'll find a way to live on his own."
At that point, the son hung up the phone. The parents heard nothing more from him until a few days later, however, they received a call from the San Francisco police. Their son had died after falling from a building, they were told. The police believed it was suicide. The grief-stricken parents flew to San Francisco and were taken to the city morgue to identify the body of their son. They recognized him, but to their horror they also discovered something they didn't know, their son had only one arm and one leg.
Notes: This story is far too common. My wife lost an eye after 30 operations to attach the retina and they included failed surgical procedures to fit her for an artificial eye. When she told her mother that it had been removed, her mother said that she didn't want to see her daughter until she had been fitted with an artificial eye. Her daughter went to her parents 50th wedding anniversary with an eye patch. End of Notes:
By
Rees Lloyd
On Nov. 11, at 11
a.m. millions of Americans will participate in Veterans Day ceremonies
honoring the service and sacrifice of all of America's veterans.
Millions more will not. Many Americans remain oblivious of the history
of the national holiday and that it is celebrated to honor all veterans,
from the first veterans who secured our freedom in the Revolutionary War
to the veterans who have safeguarded our American freedom in every war
since, including those serving today.
Veterans Day ceremonies take place at the 11th hour, of the 11th day,
of the 11th month because it was on Nov. 11, at 11 a.m. that the armistice
that ended World War I was signed in 1918. Congress established "Armistice
Day" in 1926 to honor those who served in World War I. In 1954, it was
renamed Veterans Day to honor all veterans.
According to the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs, more than
42-million Americans have served to defend American freedom in wartime in
all the wars.
More than 1 million veterans have given their lives, including some
655,000 killed in battle and another 540,000 dying while serving in
wartime from non-battle causes. Another 1.5 million veterans have suffered
non-fatal battle wounds, many permanently disabling.
The Founding Father of our nation, George Washington, was first and
foremost a soldier, a veteran who was "the indispensable man," historians
generally agree, without whose military valor and martial virtue American
freedom would not have been obtained. It is often forgotten that the
Revolutionary War was the longest war in our history until the Vietnam War
– a war pitting the greatest military power on earth against a ragtag
citizens army without proper equipment, clothing, food or necessities, but
endowed with the spirit of freedom.
I believe the most moving image in our American iconography is that of
George Washington, the father of our country and general of the
Revolutionary Army, kneeling in humble prayer at Valley Forge, in snow
stained by the bloody footsteps of America's first citizen soldiers, the
veterans who made us free.
Washington said about those veterans, as quoted in William J.
Federer's now classic "For God And Country: Encyclopedia of Quotations":
George Washington said to those soldiers of the American
Revolutionary Army, as Federer records: "The fate of unborn millions will
now depend, under God, on the courage of this Army. … We have, therefore,
to resolve to conquer or die."
We are those "unborn millions" of Americans of whom Washington spoke.
We owe a great debt to all those veterans of the Revolutionary War whose
service and sacrifice secured our freedom, and to all those veterans of
each succeeding generation whose service and sacrifice has preserved our
freedom through all the wars.
It may truly be said of America's veterans, of every generation,
including this one: "All gave some; and some gave all."
We can repay the debt that we owe to those veterans who came before us
only by what we are willing to do to preserve the freedom of those
Americans who will come after us.
The inspiring poem, "Flanders Fields," came out of World War I, that
terrible war that killed some 10 million combatants altogether, before the
Armistice on Nov. 11, 1918. However, we may appropriately apply the words
of "Flanders Fields" to all veterans as we gather on Nov. 11, every year, to
honor and remember the service and sacrifice of the veterans of every
generation who paid the price for our freedom and passed the torch of
liberty to us:
Between the crosses, row by row, We are the dead. Short days ago, Take up our quarrel with the foe; The torch; be it yours to hold it high.No history now extant can furnish an instance of an
army's suffering such uncommon hardships as ours has done and bearing
them with the same patience and fortitude. To see men without clothes to
cover their nakedness, without blankets to lie on, without shoes (for
the want of which their marches might be traced by the blood from their
feet) ... and submitting without a murmur, is a proof of patience and
obedience which in my opinion can scarce be paralleled.
In Flanders Fields the poppies blow
That mark our place; and in the
sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard among the
guns below.
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset
glow,
Loved, and were loved,
And now we lie
In Flanders Fields.
To you, from falling hands we
throw
If ye break faith with us
who die,
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders
fields.


You who have dreams If you act, they'll come true To turn your dreams to a fact It's up to you If you have the soul and the spirit Never fear it, you'll see it through Hearts can inspire Other hearts with their fire For the strong obey When a strong man shows them the way Give me some men who are stout-hearted men Who will fight for the right they adore Start me with ten who are stout-hearted men And I'll soon give you ten thousand more Shoulder to shoulder, and bolder and bolder They grow as they go to the fore Then there's nothing in the world Can halt or mar a plan When stout-hearted men Can stick together - man - to man... Oh... Give me some men who are stout-hearted men Who will fight for the right they adore Start me with ten who are stout-hearted men And I'll soon give you ten thousand more Shoulder to shoulder, and bolder and bolder They grow as they go to the fore Then there's nothing in the world Can halt or mar a plan When stout-hearted men Can stick together - man - to man...
