I am America
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I lost my first child on the day I
was born on April 19, 1775 … I am America.
He fell on the green at Lexington, his heart pierced by a British musket
ball. Many more of my sons and
daughters would fall on that day and in the years to come until the guns grew
still and peace came to me on that glorious day at Yorktown. Eighty-six years later my heart was
nearly broken as my sons and daughters donned the blue and gray and took up
arms against each other. At Manassas,
Missionary Ridge and elsewhere my children fell. And I grieved. During
this devastating time my son Abraham Lincoln eloquently expressed my feelings
at a place called Gettysburg when he pledged that those who had fallen “shall
not have died in vain; and that government of the people, by the people and
for the people shall not perish from the earth.” Fifty-two years had passed when I was called upon to aid my cousins in Europe. This time my children crossed the sea and “over there” at places like the Somme and Meuse-Argonne many gave their last great measure of personal sacrifice to stem tyranny’s tide. In the 1940s my children became
embroiled in the biggest war the world has ever known. From a harbor called Pearl to Iwo Jima,
Anzio, Bataan, and Bastogne they fought and died that the peal of freedom’s
bell would not be stilled. And only
then, when it was done, did Johnny come marching home again. In 1950 my loved ones were again off
to stay tyranny’s iron hand in a faraway place called Korea. At places with names like Pork Chop Hill
and Hearbreak Ridge did my children again fight and die for freedom, and
again I wept for those who fell. In the ‘60s and ‘70s my children took
up arms in freedom’s name. From the
Mekong to the DMZ to a valley called the Ia Drang many gave some and some
gave all. The pride I have I them for
the courage and sacrifice each made has never faded. Since Viet Nam, more of my sons and
daughters have given their all in freedom’s behalf in places with equally
strange sounding names like Mosul, Fallujah, the Korengal Valley and Helmand
Province. There are those who hate me and what
I stand for. Given the chance, they
would snuff out the inseparable essentials of my existence, liberty and
freedom. They have different names
and faces, but their nefarious goal remains the same – to destroy my children
and me. Nothing made this so clear as
the attack on Sept. 11, 2011, when those dark forces ended the lives of
nearly 3,000 of my children for the sole reason that they are Americans. For some, time passes and memories
fade, but through all this I tell you that I remember each of these my
children. The faces of those who fell
at Bunker Hill are as fresh in my mind today as those who perished at
Gettysburg, Chateau-Thierry, Normandy, Pusan, Baghdad, and, yes, on United
Flight 93. I know of the dreams each
had for their family, and those their family had for them. And where they now lie, be it in my bosom
or in some distant land makes no difference as every name and face is forever
etched in my mind and heart. No, I can never forget these my
children for I AM AMERICA, and I shall always remember. John R. Stoeffler, who
lives in St. Petersburg, wrote this article in conjunction with Memorial Day,
May 29 (2017). |
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