This Memorial Day does not herald summer
There was a time -- perhaps during the boom years of the late 1990s,
when the future seemed impossibly bright -- that Memorial Day was
more a celebration of the beginning of summer than a somber
remembrance of those who died serving our country. The men and women
of our armed services were largely out of our minds; our focus was on
almost anything but war.
This year, again, all that has changed as the men and women who
serve our country do so under incalculable risk, under daily threats
of harm in all parts of the world. Iraq and Afghanistan are still
troubled and dangerous and, of course, are at the very center of our
worries. We do not know where, or when -- let us hope never -- these
men and women may be asked to serve next.
Tomorrow, for them, signals no summer.
Tomorrow, for us, should be a time when we set aside thoughts of
the beach and vacations, and remember those fighting today and those
who have fought, and died, in days past.
Newport-Mesa has been fortunate since last Memorial Day. Our only
brush with death was last summer, when the community rallied around a
woman who worked at the Rubio’s in the Costa Mesa Courtyards. Her
husband had been killed in Iraq in the spring, just months after she
became pregnant.
Since then, Newport Beach also has adopted Camp Pendleton 1st
Battalion, 1st Marines. Our thoughts, and the thoughts of the
community, are with them and their families.
As we said a year ago, the war in Iraq has provided all of us,
those who supported it and those who opposed it, with a new
generation of heroes.
Twice a year, on Memorial Day and Veterans Day, this country stops
to pay homage to those who have served and sacrificed. The pictures
and stories that continue to come from Iraq are a haunting, vivid
reminder that two days is just the tip of all the thanks they
deserve.
On Monday, all in this community should take time to remember
those who have fought to keep America safe and those who gave their
lives serving this country. We all should also remember that, even
now, there are men and women once again at war.
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