This year, when rereading this blog post, my attention has been drawn to the initial reason for Decoration Day (what Memorial Day was originally called). Here in a Southern state, examination of our history regarding race, slavery, and those who may have owned slaves is an interesting process involving suffering, contentiousness, invidiousness, jealousy, disdain, and pride. We want to rewrite our history from the perspective of the 21st century rather than as it happened. We don’t want to remember our history as it was, we want to see it as we wish that it was.
Remembering those who have died in the military while in service for our country cannot, should not be a process of heroic designation any more than of vilification. Most of us who, in the service of our country, were neither heroes nor traitors. We were members of our families, communities, and military branches. We have contributed as our nature and circumstances have allowed. Those who died in that service contributed their lives, not always sacrificed for a higher cause, and not always circumstantially.
Remembering ordinary souls with pride is helpful in maintaining a perspective on our own ordinary lives. What is ordinary is also special as we are all anchored in a very particular place in time and space, the children of parents, the parents of children, cousins, aunts and uncles with long histories behind and unknown futures. Memorial Day is not for heroes. Memorial Day is about finding perspective.
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