A Troop 908 boy scout replaces a worn-out US flag at the tomb
of a US serviceman buried in Montevideo's British
Cemetery. Boy scouts observed Veterans Day on
Sunday, November 11, remembering and paying
tribute to those who fought for our nation. US Embassy Deputy Chief of Mission, Peter Harding, and other officials attended this year's Remembrance Service held at the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Montevideo.
|
|
|
Washington -- The November 11 holiday created
to pay tribute to U.S. veterans of World War I has been
expanded in more recent times into the annual Veterans Day,
honoring all those who have served in the U.S. military.
This year, recognition of those who fought
in World War II and in Vietnam will be a major part of observances
in Washington and in communities across the country.
The earlier, more narrowly focused Armistice
Day commemorated the end of fighting in World War I under
the armistice implemented at 11 a.m. on November 11, 1918
-- “the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh
month.”
President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed the
first Armistice Day just a year later, setting the characteristic
tone of the U.S. observances in years to come. He said that
the holiday would be “filled with solemn pride in
the heroism of those who died in the country’s service
and with gratitude for the victory, both because of the
thing from which it has freed us and because of the opportunity
it has given America to show her sympathy with peace and
justice in the councils of the nations.”
Armistice Day’s message of peace and
international solidarity was reiterated when the holiday
formally received its name in 1926. Congress passed a resolution
asking the president to call for the U.S. flag to be displayed
on all public buildings on November 11, and to call on citizens
“to observe the day in schools and churches, or other
suitable places, with appropriate ceremonies of friendly
relations with all other peoples.”
Congress followed up in 1938 by designating
Armistice Day a legal holiday, dedicated to the cause of
world peace.
But Wilson’s hope that World War I
would be the “war to end war” collapsed soon
after, with the outbreak of new fighting in Europe. The
United States entered World War II in 1941. More than 16
million Americans were to take part; 407,000 of them died,
more than 292,000 in battle.
Seeking to pay tribute to those 16 million,
and others who had served the nation in any of its wars,
Congress and President Dwight Eisenhower in 1954 redesignated
the November 11 holiday as Veterans Day. “On that
day let us solemnly remember the sacrifices of all those
who fought so valiantly, on the seas, in the air, and on
foreign shores to preserve our heritage of freedom,”
Eisenhower wrote in his first Veterans Day proclamation,
“and let us reconsecrate ourselves to the task of
promoting an enduring peace so that their efforts shall
not have been in vain.”
In 1958, two unidentified American war dead,
one from World War II and one from the Korean War, were
buried in Arlington Cemetery, just outside Washington, alongside
the Unknown Soldier from World War I who had been interred
there in 1921. And in 1984, an unknown serviceman from the
Vietnam War was placed beside them. They jointly symbolize
all Americans who gave their lives in all wars.
President George W. Bush stands during the playing of the National Anthem during a Fallen Soldiers National Memorial Ceremony at the American Legion Post 121 in Waco, Texas Sunday, Nov. 11, 2007. |
|
|
This year, as always, the memorial amphitheater
built around the Tomb of the Unknowns remains the focal point
for national Veterans Day ceremonies. The traditions have
been firmly established: a combined color guard representing
all military services executes “present arms”
at the tomb, the president lays a wreath, a bugler plays “taps.”
As the 2007 commemoration approached, the
aging of the World War II generation of veterans, and the
growing loss of numbers of them, focused increased attention
on their contributions.
Television journalist Tom Brokaw called
attention to their sacrifice in a 1998 book, The Greatest
Generation, in which he deemed them “the greatest
generation any society has ever produced.” Director
Steven Spielberg portrayed, the same year, American soldiers
in World War II Europe in his film Saving Private Ryan;
Clint Eastwood did the same for troops in the Pacific in
his 2006 films Letters from Iwo Jima and Flags
of Our Fathers.
In May 2004, aging but proud veterans attended
the dedication of the National World War II Memorial on
Washington’s Mall, between the Lincoln Memorial and
Washington Monument.
Veteran Warren G. King, Sr. of Nashville, center, salutes with fellow veterans Sunday, Nov. 11, 2007, during Veterans Day ceremonies at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va. |
|
|
Most recently, PBS Television ran, over
two weeks in September and October, a 15-hour-long Ken Burns
documentary, The War, featuring interviews with dozens
of World War II veterans. Burns said he had undertaken the
project partly because the war’s veterans were dying
at an accelerating pace. “It hurt me that we were hemorrhaging
these memories,” he said.
Special attention is focused on Vietnam
as well: 2007 marks the 25th anniversary of the completion
of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial -- in Constitution Gardens,
adjacent to the Mall -- which features a black stone wall
inscribed with the names of more than 58,000 service members
killed or unaccounted for in the Vietnam War.
Beginning November 7 and leading up to the
eve of Veterans Day, volunteers recited the names aloud.
And Vietnam veterans, military vehicles,
floats, motorcycles and marching bands from around the country
combined to celebrate the memorial’s anniversary with
a parade planned for November 10, the day before nationwide
observances on “the eleventh day of the eleventh month”
itself.
Ralph Dannheisser / USINFO
Special Correspondent
###