I was thinking this morning that across the country
children and their parents will be going to the town parade and the young
ones will sit on the sidewalks and wave their flags as the band goes by.
Later, maybe, they’ll have a cookout or a day at the beach. And that’s good,
because today is a day to be with the family and to remember. Arlington, this place of so many memories, is a
fitting place for some remembering. So many wonderful men and women rest
here, men and women who led colorful, vivid, and passionate lives. There are
the greats of the military: Bull Halsey and the Admirals Leahy, father and
son; Blackjack Pershing; and the GI’s general, Omar Bradley. Great men all,
military men. But there are others here known for other things. Here in Arlington rests a sharecropper’s son who
became a hero to a lonely people. Joe Louis came from nowhere, but he knew
how to fight. And he galvanized a nation in the days after Pearl Harbor when
he put on the uniform of his country and said, “I know we’ll win because
we’re on God’s side.” Audie Murphy is here, Audie Murphy of the wild,
wild courage. For what else would you call it when a man bounds to the top of
a disabled tank, stops an enemy advance, saves lives, and rallies his men,
and all of it singlehandedly. When he radioed for artillery support and was
asked how close the enemy was to his position, he said, “Wait a minute and
I’ll let you speak to them.” Michael Smith is here, and Dick Scobee, both of the
space shuttle Challenger. Their courage wasn’t wild, but
thoughtful, the mature and measured courage of career professionals who took
prudent risks for great reward—in their case, to advance the sum total of
knowledge in the world. They’re only the latest to rest here; they join other
great explorers with names like [Gus] Grissom and [Roger] Chaffee. Oliver Wendell Holmes is here, the great jurist and
fighter for the right. A poet searching for an image of true majesty could
not rest until he seized on “Holmes dissenting in a sordid age.” Young Holmes
served in the Civil War. He might have been thinking of the crosses and stars
of Arlington when he wrote: “At the grave of a hero we end, not with sorrow
at the inevitable loss, but with the contagion of his courage; and with a
kind of desperate joy, we go back to the fight.” All of these men were different, but they shared
this in common: They loved America very much. There was nothing they wouldn’t
do for her. And they loved with the sureness of the young. It’s hard not to
think of the young in a place like this, for it’s the young who do the
fighting and dying when a peace fails and a war begins. Not far from here is the statue of the three
servicemen—the three fighting boys of Vietnam. It, too, has majesty and more.
Perhaps you’ve seen it—three rough boys walking together, looking ahead with
a steady gaze. There’s something wounded about them, a kind of resigned
toughness. But there’s an unexpected tenderness, too. At first you don’t
really notice, but then you see it. The three are touching each other, as if
they’re supporting each other, helping each other on. I know that many veterans of Vietnam will gather
today, some of them perhaps by the wall. And they’re still helping each other
on. They were quite a group, the boys of Vietnam—boys who fought a terrible
and vicious war without enough support from home, boys who were dodging
bullets while we debated the efficacy of the battle. It was often our poor who fought in that war; it
was the unpampered boys of the working class who picked up the rifles and
went on the march. They learned not to rely on us; they learned to rely on
each other. And they were special in another way: They chose to be faithful.
They chose to reject the fashionable skepticism of their time. They chose to
believe and answer the call of duty. They had the wild, wild courage of
youth. They seized certainty from the heart of an ambivalent age; they stood
for something. And we owe them something, those boys. We owe them
first a promise: That just as they did not forget their missing comrades,
neither, ever, will we. And there are other promises. We must always remember
that peace is a fragile thing that needs constant vigilance. We owe them a
promise to look at the world with a steady gaze and, perhaps, a resigned
toughness, knowing that we have adversaries in the world and challenges and
the only way to meet them and maintain the peace is by staying strong. That, of course, is the lesson of this century, a
lesson learned in the Sudetenland, in Poland, in Hungary, in Czechoslovakia,
in Cambodia. If we really care about peace, we must stay strong. If we really
care about peace, we must, through our strength, demonstrate our
unwillingness to accept an ending of the peace. We must be strong enough to
create peace where it does not exist and strong enough to protect it where it
does. That’s the lesson of this century and, I think, of this day. -Morning Dispatch |
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