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Edited on Fri May-27-11 10:21 PM by Old and In the Way
This really hit home for me. Not sure if you experience Memorial Day the same, but the Memorial Days of my youth (50s/60s) were totally different than they are today. I guess we weren't that far removed from the WWII and all of the people who were directly involved and impacted by the effects of the war. If there was a righteous war to be fought, I believe that was truly the last one in my lifetime. My grandfather, a WWI vet, was commander of the local American Legion Post, my Dad a WW2 veteran....so it was a very important weekend with parades, picnics, a special mass, and concert in the park. I remember it as being a bigger deal than the July 4th celebrations.
Today, while I live a few hours removed from my hometown, I know it has nowhere near the importance that it had to me 40+ years ago. I'm not a veteran and the people of my dad and grandfather's generations are mostly gone. While I think back and remember Memorial Days past, I don't have their experiences (good and horrible) in these wars to reflect back upon. I don't think many Americans of my age do, to be honest. I know this day is meant to honor the people who made the ultimate sacrifices in all of our wars, but our wars have steadily become harder to honestly justify. Korea, VietNam, Iraq 1 and 2, and Afghanistan were wars that were fought for reasons other than national survival. And that is certainly not said to disrespect the sacrifices made by those who fought, were injured, or died in this conflicts; just a sad acknowledgment that the casus belli's of these conflicts were built on ideological fear, flawed intelligence, political opportunity, or corporate economic benefit. Subconsciously, has that changed our national psyche on how we think about Memorial Day? Can we honor the individual sacrifice without asking why these people's lives were sacrificed? Don't know the answer, but I do know that I see less and less public engagement in this holiday. Seems to me Memorial Day is now more about heralding in the beginning of summer with a 3 day holiday weekend for people to get away to the beach, the lake, or the mountains. Or a time to get some serious work done around the house.
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