Memorial Day is for All Americans

Memorial Day is for All Americans

As Memorial Day approaches,?Shella, Lucy,?ET, and I hope you all enjoy the holiday weekend. Each year, we send out the note below to help us remember why Memorial Day matters to all Americans.


While Memorial Day is the unofficial beginning of summer, when millions of families get together to barbecue and enjoy a day off, the intent and history of Memorial Day call us to do more; it calls us to remember those who have given the ultimate sacrifice in the defense of our Nation. We go to war differently than we used to - with a smaller but more diverse group of Americans and allies who are closer to actual conflict than ever before. All who died in the service of our Nation deserve to be remembered, so perhaps this day should be more inclusive - adding the fallen of other federal agencies, like the State Department, FBI, the intelligence community, contractors, and those journalists killed covering the wars for We, The People seems appropriate.

Memorial Day, originally called Decoration Day, was first officially proclaimed through?General Order 11?on May 5, 1868, by Major General John Logan, national commander of the Grand Army of the Republic. It was to be observed each May 30, and flowers were to be placed at the graves of both Union and Confederate soldiers at Arlington National Cemetery.

Recall U.S. history when, as early as 1645, hand-selected men from the various colonial militias were outfitted to respond to neighboring villages and towns within one minute—“Minutemen.” This tradition carried forward to Concord in 1775 and helped push the British back to Boston.

The first casualty of the American Revolution occurred years earlier on February 22, 1770, when loyalist Ebenezer Richardson, a customs employee, fired into a crowd protesting in front of his house, killing 11-year-old Christopher Snider. Eleven days later, the Boston Massacre took place, killing five more people, one of whom was?Crispus Attuks, a multi-racial colonist, thus beginning the certain end of British rule in America and the start of the greatest democratic experiment of all time; America. Snider and Attuks were buried in the same grave.

Since that time, our history has given us no shortage of brave Americans who have given their lives defending those “unalienable rights” so wonderfully captured in our?Declaration of Independence; “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” They deserve a moment of reflection and celebration this weekend. The Founders proclaimed, “We mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor.”

So they did and have been followed by millions of Americans in every war since.

Finally, any words we may write here pale in comparison to some of the greatest speeches ever given in memory of the fallen. Since the dawn of time, those who have died in battle have been commemorated in one way or another. We offer three of these speeches here; the first is?Pericles' Funeral Oration, recorded 2,400 years ago in Thucydides’ History of the Peloponnesian War. The second is from 1884 by Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. entitled,?"In Our Youth Our Hearts Were Touched By Fire". The last, our favorite, is Abraham Lincoln’s 1863?Gettysburg Address.?

We encourage you to read these and allow yourselves to be inspired by the selfless sacrifice of so many.

Elected officials should be made keenly aware that the lives we remember on Memorial Day are the precious costs of their decisions to send young men and women to war. This day should give them pause and provide them the opportunity to consider how they resource our national security and how a "yay" or "nay" vote in an air-conditioned chamber of the People can change the course of history for our Nation and the lives of so many young Americans - Native, Black, White, Latino, Asian, mixed-race, men, women, transgender, gender fluid - and even kids from South Buffalo, NY, and Columbus, OH.

We all know or know of someone who has given that “last full measure of devotion,” and even if we don’t, remembering those who bear the burden of war for society affirms the debt that we can never repay - that's why it's called service. Do not mourn them - celebrate them, and demand that our representatives publicly defend their votes and be held accountable as they decide for us all on violent endeavors.

Bringing home our fallen is a solemn duty and a very personal experience for families. This short video from Taking Chance on HBO gives you an idea of the emotion involved:

Enjoy this Memorial Day with your families and friends; the fallen would want you to, but please take more than a moment to reflect on the innumerable personal sacrifices that have secured our way of life and ponder if we have lived up to "earn this".

Much love,

Chris, Shella, Lucy, and ET

Andy Bergin

Virtual Executive Communication Coaching that makes a difference - around the corner and around the world.

9 个月

Unadorned eloquence and a history lesson for the rest of us. I usually tell authors thanks for making us think - that's appropriate here. Plus, a deep thanks for helping us remember what many of us may never have known.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Chris Taylor的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了