Monday, August 30, 2021

A Remembrance - weekly column 29 August 2021

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

 

A Remembrance

 

Last week more of this nation’s finest young men and women were killed by a depraved suicide bomber.

 

Along with our young Marines, a Navy Hospital Corpsman (“Doc”), and a Soldier, hundreds of civilian men, women, and children were blown apart because they wanted to be free.

 

Our young American men and women were serving our nation and helping refugees because they were always encouraged to be the best.

 

Other young men and women are sometimes commanded by their perverse elders to be the worst.

 

There is a difference.

 

We have all seen our young men and women tend to the babies, the sick, and the elderly, giving them water and food and comfort. These are not propaganda images; every soldier, sailor, airman, and Marine who has seen the elephant can tell you of the generosity and kindness of American grunts toward displaced civilians. The notorious exceptions are just that, exceptions, a failure to meet the standards expected of every G.I.

 

Our wonderful young men and women, hardly out of their teens, died on their feet doing good, bravely and in the open.

 

Their murderer was a skulking wretch who could only cling to his hatred and his bomb.

 

There is a difference.

 

The young men and women who were murdered last week did not go to The Right Schools, did not wear custom-made uniforms with lots of shiny stars and gew-gaws, and did not sip single-malt in oak-paneled rooms with wealthy arms dealers I mean government contractors.  They carried rifles and aid-bags and the burden of duty, not briefcases, and they busted a sweat in the field, not on the golf course. The concept of summering in the Hamptons was unknown to them; they summered on the rifle range and in technical school

 

There is a difference.

 

They probably didn’t execute a salute as precisely and as prettily as some of our political leaders who never made the first day of recruit training, but their salutes meant something.

 

There is a difference.

 

These young men and women found a purpose.

 

They made a righteous difference.

 

They did good.

 

 

 

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old: 

Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.

At the going down of the sun and in the morning

We will remember them.

 

-Laurence Binyon, “For the Fallen”

 

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