Memorial Day - 2009
God Bless
The United States of America

God Bless
Our Service  
Men and Women
Who fought in all Wars
     from
1776 to the Present!
This Memorial Day, Heritage honors those who serve in
the United States Armed Forces, their families, and all
military retirees and veterans.
From the battlefields of the
Civil War–after which the first
Memorial Day was observed–to
the Forest of Argonne, the
beaches of Normandy, the
islands of the Pacific, the
Chosin Reservoir, the jungles
of Vietnam, the deserts of Iraq,
the mountains of Afghanistan,
and all the other fields,
territories and theaters
American soldiers, sailors,
airmen, Marines, and Coast
Guardsmen have fought bravely, we remember those
fallen men and women who gave “the last full measure of
devotion.” We will also not forget those who have yet to
come home and remain missing in action.

The nation is grateful for a commitment that can never
fully be repaid when an American citizen raises their right
hand to take the formal oath to protect the U.S.
Constitution–and by extension fiercely guard the daily
freedom everyone of us enjoy.

This weekend reminds us all of the universal consensus
that surrounds the commitment to protect our protectors–
the troops. For the past, present, and future of American
liberty, and liberty around the world, is built upon the
shoulders of their unwaivering dedication and willingness
to sacrifice for our great nation.








































         
WAR CEMETERIES

VOLKSTRAUERTAG

The question of what do with soliders killed in war has
been a problem throughout recorded history, addressed
in different ways by different cultures. An extreme
solution was eating the killed individual, an act often
connected with the idea that the power of the victim
would be added to that of the eaters. Or the deceased
might be left on the ground until the corpse was decayed
or devoured by animals, which would be considered a
disgrace, especially to the losers of a fight or battle. More
often than not, killed individuals would be buried.

Throughout history the dead, mainly the losers, were
often deprived of their belongings. This was seen as part
of the spoils of war. The winners often displayed a more
honorable reaction to their own dead than to those of the
losers. Another principle permitted the leaders to be
appreciated in a special manner. One can find impressive
monuments to the leaders, while ordinary fighters were
buried anonymously. The so-called Drusus Stone, a huge
monument in the town of Mainz, Germany, was erected
for the Roman general Drusus, a brother of the emperor
Tiberius, who was killed in 9 B.C.E. in a battle at the River
Elbe.

    Burying the War Dead

Modern times saw the inauguration of the practice of
burying soldiers who were killed in battle. This was done
partly due to hygienic considerations common
throughout the world—unburied corpses can soon create
epidemics. The burial grounds are often found where the
fights took place. However, there can also be "regular"
cemeteries in which the bodies are buried side by side
with the dead of the region or, more frequently, in war
cemeteries dedicated exclusively to fallen soldiers.

Because of the huge numbers of casualties on both sides
in the U.S. Civil War (more than 600,000 victims), the
dead of both sides were often buried side by side, hence
giving birth to the idea of posthumous reconciliation of
the warring sides and respect for the sacrifice of the
individual soldier, each of whom now had his own grave
site, a contrast to earlier practices of mass military
burials in which all soldiers achieved a rough equality in
death, without all distinctions of rank, religion, and race
erased by collective interment.

The uniformity of design of all U.S. war cemeteries was
influential on the subsequent design of war cemeteries in
other countries. Each nation selected its own special
grave symbol. The French had a cross made of concrete
with the victim's name and a rose; the British typically
employed a stele.

The annual honoring of the American war dead occurs on
Memorial Day, at the end of May. However, in some
countries this day of remembrance has been expanded to
the memory of all the war dead of all countries, as in
Finland after World War II.

German War Cemeteries

Although World War I primarily took place in Europe,
many of the participating nations drafted men from their
far-flung colonies. During World War I, 10 million people
were killed, among them 2 million German soldiers. By
1928, 13,000 cemeteries had been completed in twenty-
eight countries for these dead. World War I is also
another example for the different attitudes toward losers
and winners, as outlined above. The French government,
for example, did not permit German officials to design
their own war cemeteries.

Fifty-five million people were killed in World War II, among
them 13.6 million soldiers of the Red Army and 4 million
German soldiers. For those 1.8 million German soldiers
who died beyond German borders, 667 cemeteries in
forty-three countries were completed. Most of these were
created in Western countries such as France, Italy, or
Belgium. The task of properly burying all German soldiers
of WWII has not yet been completed. With the lifting of
the Iron Curtain in 1989, it was possible to lay out new
cemeteries in former communist countries. In the 1990s a
new cemetery was opened for 70,000 soldiers near St.
Petersburg in Russia. The task of lying to rest all fallen
German soldiers is expected to be completed by the end
of 2010.

Honoring the German War Dead

The body responsible for completing war cemeteries for
passed German soldiers is an independent organization
founded in 1926; its name is Volksbund Deutsche
Kriegsgräberfürsorge (People's Community for the Care
of German War Graves). It can be observed that the
functions of this organization and of the cemeteries have
changed since World War II. Its initial task was to bury
the soldiers and to enable the families to visit the graves.
Each year, between 700,000 and 800,000 persons visit the
German war cemeteries. Originally, war cemeteries were
established to honor those who gave their lives for their
countries. The dead soldiers were declared heroes. The
memorial day for killed soldiers was called
Heldengedenktag (Heroes' Memorial Day) during the
Third Reich in Germany. Such a name held strong
connotations toward nationalism and chauvinism. After
World War II the name for the memorial day was changed
into Volkstrauertag (People's Mourning Day) and
designated to be the Sunday two weeks before Advent.
The new name signifies a change of attitudes. The idea of
commemorating the deeds of proud heroes was
abolished and has been replaced by the grief for killed
fathers, brothers, and sons, which is the focus of
memorial sermons.

In the case of Germany there is a special historical
burden that required this change of attitudes. Not only
had Germany lost World War II, but that war had been
provoked by an authoritarian and terrorist regime. Thus,
there is an ambiguity toward their soldiers who sacrificed
their lives for their country. The Volkstrauertag
remembrance sermons, held in many towns in the frame
of a ceremony, are now not only for soldiers, but for alle
Opfer der Gewalt ("all victims of violence")—as is now the
official term. The victims include the refugees, the
resistance fighters against Nazism and all those who died
or were killed in the concentration camps. Thus, any
glorification of war and Nazism is excluded.

There is another change in the purpose of war
cemeteries, namely toward reconciliation and work for
peace. The two slogans of the Volksbund Arbeit für den
Frieden ("work for peace") and Mahnung über den
Gräberm ("warning over the graves"), characterize its
activities. The graves themselves, often many hundreds
to a cemetery, point to the importance of peace. Different
countries send participants to youth camps dedicated to
this aim. These young people not only work in the
cemeteries but they also learn to respect each other and
permit new friendships to develop. Since 1953, 3,670
camps have been held involving 170,000 participants.

       Conclusion

An increasing number of the dead soldiers no longer have
surviving family members. In just one generation there
will be far fewer visitors going to the cemeteries. The
dead have a right of eternal rest, so no war graves are
levelled, which is a sensible principle in the light of the
changing functions of war cemeteries. Visitors with no
personal interest in the graves can still be impressed by
the huge area of the cemetery and thereby be
encouraged to contribute toward maintaining peace.

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