Soldier4Christ
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« on: September 26, 2005, 10:22:18 PM » |
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Guy Adams September 21, 2005
They serve for me � blame me. They were wounded for me � blame me. They died for my freedom � blame me.
There is a lot of contention regarding the war on terror recently. I don't understand why. We're at war with people who would destroy us without thinking twice. I certainly respect the feelings of mothers who have lost children in the service of our country. In another way I also thank people like them, because the precious sacrifices of their children keep me free. God bless them, for they have offered up a priceless sacrifice. The anti-war activists among them do America great harm. They undermine morale at home and on the battlefield. They have gone too far for too long.
Loss is not new to the mothers and fathers of soldiers fallen in battle. Their loss is still as painful as when these words were written by President Abraham Lincoln to a grieving mother who had lost all five of her sons in the Civil War. He said in part:
"I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so overwhelming. But I cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Republic they died to save.
I pray that our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn pride that must be yours, to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of Freedom."
War is indeed costly, both to the soldier and to their family. It is also costly to America as we lose the best among us, but sometimes it is necessary. It is impossible to surpass the eloquence and spirit behind Lincoln's timeless words to a grieving mother. However, I will try to share my own personal gratitude to those who served, were wounded or who have fallen in battle, past or present, to ensure my freedom.
I was born in 1955, and growing up I was into anything rebellious. As a youngster I paid my uncle little attention and didn't think much of his war experience. But after researching World War II, I had gained a newfound love and respect for this man and others like him. So much history I never knew or cared about � so much I owed to people I never knew, and to one man from my own family that I barely knew.
I first gained an appreciation of the valor of the American Soldier when on December 7, 1991, I missed work due to a bad migraine headache. I started watching some of the tributes and stories about that infamous day on December 7th, 1941. When they played the segment on Pearl Harbor, I cried. They also showed long segments on the invasion of Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944, and the Battle of the Bulge. By the end of the day, with tears running down my face, I was a changed person. I was deeply moved by their stories. I almost could not believe the sacrifices some of these brave men made for their buddies and their country � for me, really. They made those sacrifices for me.
After reading Stephen Ambrose's excellent book on D-Day, I contacted the National D-Day museum in New Orleans and volunteered to interview veterans for Dr. Ambrose's next book on the Battle of the Bulge. The book's focus was changed and eventually became Citizen Solders. In the process of interviewing many of these veterans, I got an excellent first hand account of the battle � one I couldn't read about in any book. I interviewed guys from nearly every major division in the Battle of the Bulge, which was fought in World War II in the midst of one of the bitterest winters on record. I also ended up interviewing other men from other wars. It was a great experience.
Among the brave American Soldiers I interviewed, were Norm Schoon (my uncle), Bob Cornell, Fred Olivi, Ray Fary, Hubert Kelly, Phil Zurawski, Jacob Emell, and Zenon Lukosius; all from World War II. From the Vietnam War I interviewed Jim Melf, Ed Kannapel, John Reilly, Mike Douglas, Bill Warren, and Rudy Roberson. All of them served in combat, and in my mind, they are all heroes.
The tales of heroes:
In World War II, Zenon Lukosius saved the captured German submarine, the U-505, from sinking by rushing into the sinking submarine and closing the sea-cocks to prevent more water from rushing in. They only had seconds left before the sub was completely flooded, quickly taking it and Zenon with it. I have been in the U-505, on display at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry, and I got a little claustrophobic inside � it's so small and narrow. I cannot imagine rushing down into this sinking submarine, yet this brave American Soldier did, and America gained much valuable knowledge from its capture. Zenon displayed great courage that day over sixty years ago. He was courageous for me. He risked his life for me.
Fred Olivi copiloted the plane that dropped the atomic bomb on Nagasaki, helping to end the war (see my article The Balance of Hiroshima). Ed dropped the second atomic bomb in order to save countless thousands of American lives, which he did. My dad would have been one of the men slated for the planned invasion of Japan in November of 1945. Furthermore, Fred's actions undoubtedly saved millions of Japanese civilian lives as well. After he left the service, his private life was at times, miserable. Instead of thanking him, war protesters occasionally camped out in front of his house to castigate him for his role in ending World War II. They tore his lawn up by spinning the wheels of a pickup truck on it. How disgraceful and unappreciative of the freedom he helped secure for them. I think of the words of Jesus: "Father forgive them, for they know not what they do." Although Fred believed he did the right thing � as I do � I can only imagine the nightmares and distress of soul that Fred must have suffered as he considered the power and horror he unleashed on the people on the ground. Fred surely suffered for me. He did it all for me.
My dear friend Ed Kannapel served two tours of duty attached to the Navy Seals, protecting the radio relay station at Marble Mountain in Vietnam. Ed's best friend, Leroy Melvin Shields, was killed there and Ed mourns for him to this day. War always causes great loss. Ed's primary jobs were rear guard and bunker watch. Consider how important a rear guard is. You can't fight without a rear guard or the enemy can sneak up on you. Should the rear guard fail, your unit would be overrun. The rear guard is also the last man out. The best and bravest are usually picked to be the rear guard.
Ed was awarded three Purple Hearts, two Navy Unit commendations, and the Personal Navy commendation. I wish I could have awarded these medals to him myself. Ed was bayoneted and shot during his two tours at Marble Mountain. Ed was wounded for me.
Another dear friend, Jim Melf, served in Vietnam as a rifleman in the 4th Division. Jim volunteered to live with the Montagnard tribes in Vietnam when the Army heard that the Vietcong were planning to attack these villages. Jim volunteered to protect � with his life � a village and it's people whom he hardly knew. When they approached this village, the villagers themselves opened fire on Jim and his unit. Jim volunteered to protect these people, and was led into an ambush. What a painful shock this must have been. Many Americans were killed that day, and this bothers Jim to this day.
Jim was given an honorable discharge. Sadly, America gave Vietnam veterans like Jim an "honorable" discharge, then took their honor away when they returned home. In my eyes, Jim and others like him are deserving of great honor and respect. Jim told me that despite this betrayal and the difficult combat he endured, he'd "do it again" and added "I am proud to have served my country." I am proud that he did too. Jim served for me.
Artilleryman Rudy Roberson usually supported the 1st Calvary in Vietnam. A lot of American and South Vietnamese soldiers probably owe their life to Rudy and guys like him, whose accurate and timely fire support saved their lives or helped them out of a desperate situation. Rudy did his job so that others could live. Many soldiers in support roles go unheralded. They tirelessly worked behind the scenes so that others could fight, and so that I could live in freedom.
My uncle Norm was a member of the 106th Division during the Battle of the Bulge. He was a squad leader in the 423rd Infantry, 1st battalion, D company (heavy weapons). He was captured on Dec. 19th, 1944 and was released on Good Friday, a few months later.
Although my uncle Norm's interview didn't make it into Dr. Ambrose's book, his interview was the most vivid, and the most emotional. I wondered if it was because I had a new found respect for this older Dutch man whom I'd never paid much attention to before. Probably somewhat, but his story was so emotional and personal. He remembered every little detail, including some tearful recollections of his reactions when seeing guys he knew, laying dead in the snow, with their frozen eyes gazing at the sky. At this recall, he cried. I almost did too. I was sitting there talking to an old man who was once a young man fighting across the ocean in a dense Belgian forest. Thanks to my uncle and others like him, I'll never have to confront what he did. And he did it all without complaint.
During the interview, when he talked about how he'll never forget the sound of a German Tiger tank, you could almost see the fear on his face. I could almost feel the fear my uncle tried to express � it's hard for me to comprehend. I also interviewed a guy from the 99th Division, who was a survivor of an incident where enemy tanks rolled down a line of American foxholes and matter-of-factly machine gunned most of the GI's where they lay.
Cont'd page two
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