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Topic: Love and Thanks to our Vietnam Veterans
Rapunzel's photo
Mon 02/25/08 11:04 AM

Semper Fi



drinker thank you for stopping by Dear Man drinker


flowerforyou i commend you and thank you deeply flowerforyou


:heart: for your love and selfless sacrifice :heart:

Rapunzel's photo
Mon 02/25/08 11:07 AM

Oh No offense taken, its O K and it is nice to be told Thank You, even if it took 30 some years for the country to do it, DO Not Feel Bad for Us, It was just part of life!!!flowerforyou drinker




thank you immensely...drinker drinker drinker


:heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart:


Rapunzel's photo
Mon 02/25/08 11:11 AM
Edited by Rapunzel on Mon 02/25/08 11:14 AM

I saw this in the Tribune, shame of the war was not all the journalists there covered it word for word. I respect the troops, not the politicians.



i have absolutely no respect noway

for the politicians sick

and

i have total & absolute respect drinker

for my Brothers & Sisters :heart:

the soldiers who daily give their LIVES drinker

& those who gave their LIVES :cry:

for peace & freedom :heart: :heart: :heart:









kojack's photo
Mon 02/25/08 11:58 AM
Semper Fi

Rapunzel's photo
Mon 02/25/08 03:39 PM
flowerforyou thank you , my dear buddy Scott flowerforyou



kojack's photo
Tue 02/26/08 01:02 PM
anytime Rapunzel

Rapunzel's photo
Sun 03/02/08 12:10 PM
Edited by Rapunzel on Sun 03/02/08 12:11 PM
flowerforyou :heart: flowerforyou Just sending love & good vibes flowerforyou :heart: flowerforyou

smokin drinker for our awesome Vietnam Veterans drinker smokin


:heart: Thank You :heart: Thank You :heart: Thank You :heart:



drinker You have not been & never will be forgotten..:heart: ..

We love you drinker You are forever in our hearts :heart:





:heart: drinker flowerforyou happy :heart: drinker :heart: happy flowerforyou drinker :heart:

forever_fifites's photo
Sun 03/02/08 12:24 PM
Rapunzel, if you were within driving distance I would drop over and give you a big kiss. You just don't know how few people ever appreciated what was done, a generation of guys that didn't ask questions, we just did what we were told, popular or not. In my case I also did a year in Korea during the Pueblo Crisis when the North Koreans captured one of our ships - the bastards still have it.


I still recall coming back just 4 days after the Kent State thing, I live in Ohio, and all the stuff going on on campus. Perhaps the worst part was sitting in class and being ridiculed by professors, many of whom were no older than I was none of whom ever served. I didn't know whether to cry or slug the bastards. One thing it did do is to make me leave my own country and I went back and lived in Asia for 20 years. I came back about 10 years ago so my kids would know something about my country. But you just cannot believe how many of us are still in fact hanging out on the streets of Thailand, Vietnam, Japan and other places. These are the undocumented MIAs.




Sat 02/23/08 08:11 PM
http://www.screamingeagles-327thvietnam.com/first/stories_poems/honor_among_soldiers.htm




Honor Among Soldiers
Joseph L. Galloway

If you have fed from a steady diet of Hollywood movies about Vietnam you probably believe that everyone who wore a uniform in America's long, sad involvement in war in Vietnam is some sort of a clone of Lt. William Calley---that all three million of them were drug-crazed killers and rapists who rampaged across the pastoral landscape.

Those movies got it wrong, until now. There is one more Hollywood film now playing called We Were Soldiers and it gets it right. Ask any Vietnam veteran who has gone to see the movie. In fact, ask any American who has gone to see it. It is based on a book I wrote with my lifelong friend Lt. Gen. (ret) Hal Moore; a book written precisely because we believed that a false impression of those soldiers had taken root in the country which sent them to war and, in the end, turned its back on both the war and the warriors.

I did four tours in Vietnam as a war correspondent for United Press International---1965-66, 1971, 1973 and 1975. In the first
three of those tours at war I spent most of my time in the field with the troops and I came to know and respect them and even love them, though most folks might find the words "war" and "love" in the same sentence unsettling if not odd.

In fact, I am far more comfortable in the company of those once-young soldiers today than with any other group except my own family. They are my comrades-in-arms, the best friends of my life and if ever I were to shout "help!" they would stampede to my aid in a heartbeat. They come from all walks of life; they are black, white, Hispanic, native American, Asian; they are fiercely loyal, dead honest, entirely generous of their time and money. They are my brothers and they did none of the things Oliver Stone or Francis Ford Coppola would have you believe all of them did.

On the worst day of my life, in the middle of the worst battle of the Vietnam War, in a place called Landing Zone X-Ray in the Ia
Drang Valley of Vietnam, I was walking around snapping some photographs when I caught a movement out of the corner of my eye. It was a tall, lanky GI who jumped out of a mortar pit and ran, zig-zagging under fire, toward me. He dove under the little bush I was crouched behind. "Joe! Joe Galloway! Don't you know me, man? It's Vince Cantu from Refugio, Texas!" Vince Cantu and I had graduated together from Refugio High School, Class of '59, 55 boys and girls. We embraced warmly. Then he shouted over the din of gunfire: "Joe, you got to get down and stay down. It's dangerous out here. Men are dying all around."

Vince told me that he had only ten days left on his tour of duty as a draftee soldier in the 1st Battalion 7th U.S. Cavalry, 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile). "If I live through this I will be home in Refugio for Christmas." I asked Vince to please visit my mom and dad, but not tell them too much about where we had met and under what circumstances. I still have an old photograph from that Christmas visit---Vince wearing one of those black satin Vietnam jackets, with his daughter on his knee, sitting with my
mom and dad in their living room.

Vince Cantu and I are still best friends.

When I walked out and got on a Huey helicopter leaving Landing Zone X-Ray I left knowing that 80 young Americans had laid down
their lives so that I and others might survive. Another 124 had been terribly wounded and were on their way to hospitals in Japan or the United States. I left with both a sense of my place, among them, and an obligation to tell their stories to any who would listen. I knew that I had been among men of honor and decency and courage, and anyone who believes otherwise needs to look in his own heart and weigh himself.

Hal Moore and I began our research for the book-to-be, We Were Soldiers Once.and Young, in 1982. It was a ten-year journey to find and ultimately to bring back together as many of those who fought in LZ Xray and LZ Albany, a separate battle one day after ours only three miles away in which another 155 young Americans died and another 130 were wounded. We had good addresses for perhaps no more than a dozen veterans, but we mailed out a questionnaire to them to begin the process.

Late one night a week later my phone rang at home in Los Angeles. On the other end was Sgt. George Nye, retired and living very quietly by choice in his home state of Maine. George began talking and it was almost stream of consciousness. He had held it inside him for so long and now someone wanted to know about it. He described taking his small team of engineer demolitions men into XRay to blow down some trees and clear a
safer landing zone for the helicopters. Then he was talking about PFC Jimmy D. Nakayama, one of those engineer soldiers, and how a misplaced napalm strike engulfed Nakayama in the roaring flames. How he ran out into the fire and screamed at another man to grab Jimmy's feet and help carry him to the aid station. My blood ran cold and the hair stood up on the back of my neck.
I had been that man on the other end of Nakayama. I had grabbed his ankles and felt the boots crumble, the skin peel, and those slick bones in my hands. Again I heard Nakayama's screams. By then we were both weeping. I knew Nakayama had died a day or two later in an Army hospital. Nye told me that Jimmy's wife had given birth to a baby girl the day he died---and that when Nye returned to base camp at An Khe he found a letter on his desk. He had encouraged Nakayama to apply for a slot at Officer Candidate School. The letter approved that application and contained orders for Nakayama to return immediately to Ft. Benning, Ga., to enter that course.

George Nye is gone now. But I want you to know what he did with the last months of his life. He lived in Bangor, Maine, The year was 1991 and in the fall plane after plane loaded with American soldiers headed home from the Persian Gulf War stopped there to refuel. It was their first sight of home. George and some other local volunteers organized a welcome at that desolate airport. They provided coffee, snacks and the warm "Welcome home, soldier" that no one ever offered George and the millions of other Vietnam veterans. George had gone out to the airport to decorate a Christmas tree for those soldiers on the day he died.

When we think of ourselves we think Shakespeare, Henry IV, Act IV, Scene 3:

"We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;

For he today that sheds his blood with me

Shall be my brother."



Honor and decency and uncommon courage were common among
these soldiers and all the soldiers who served in Vietnam. I think of how they were, on patrol, moving through jungle or rice paddies. Nervous, on edge, trying to watch right, left, ahead, behind, all at once. A friend once described it as something like looking at a tree full of owls. They were alert for sign, sound or smell of the enemy. But they also watched each other closely. At the first sign of the oppressive heat and exhaustion getting to someone the two or three guys around would relieve him of some or all of the heavy burden that the Infantryman bears: 60 or 70 pounds of stuff. Rifle and magazines. A claymore mine or two. A couple of radio batteries. Cans of C-Rations. Spare socks. Maybe a book. All that rides in the soldier's pack. They would make it easier for him to keep going. They took care of each other, because in this situation each other was all they had.

When I would pitch up to spend a day or two or three with such an outfit I was, at first, an object of some curiosity. Sooner or later a break would be called and everyone would flop down in the shade, drink some water, break out a C-Ration or a cigarette. The GI next to me would ask: What you doing out here? I would explain that I was a reporter. "You mean you are a civilian? You don't HAVE to be here?" Yes. "Man, they must pay you loads of money to do this." And I would explain that, no, unfortunately I worked for UPI, the cheapest news agency in the world. "Then
you are just plain crazy, man." Once I was pigeonholed, all was all right. The grunts understood "crazy" like no one else I ever met. The welcome was warm, friendly and open. I was probably the only civilian they would ever see in the field; I was a sign that someone, anyone, outside the Big Green Machine cared how they lived and how they died.

It didn't take very long before I truly did come to care. They were, in my view, the best of their entire generation. When their
number came up in the draft they didn't run and hide in Canada. They didn't turn up for their physical wearing pantyhose or full of this chemical or that drug which they hoped would fail them. Like their fathers before them they raised their right hand and took the oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. It is not their fault that the war they were sent to fight was not one that the political leadership in Washington had any intention of winning. It is not their fault that 58,200 of them died, their lives squandered because Lyndon Johnson and, later, Richard Nixon could not figure out some decent way to cut our losses and leave the Vietnamese to sort the matter out among themselves.

As I have grown older, and so have they, and first the book and now the movie have come to pass I am often asked: Doesn't this close the loop for you? Doesn't this mean you can rest easier? The answer is no, I can't. To my dying day I WILL remember and honor those who died, some in my arms. I WILL remember and honor those who lived and came home carrying memories and scars that only their brothers can share and understand.

They were the best you had, America, and you turned your back on them.
Joe Galloway

When asked for permisson to post this, Joe Galloway wrote,

"You have my permission to post that article anywhere you wish. Every word in it came straight from the heart. It was published last fall in The Chicago Tribune, but I own the copyright".
Joe Galloway





Rapunzel's photo
Sun 03/02/08 12:48 PM
Edited by Rapunzel on Sun 03/02/08 12:52 PM

Rapunzel, if you were within driving distance I would drop over and give you a big kiss. You just don't know how few people ever appreciated what was done, a generation of guys that didn't ask questions, we just did what we were told, popular or not. In my case I also did a year in Korea during the Pueblo Crisis when the North Koreans captured one of our ships - the bastards still have it.


I still recall coming back just 4 days after the Kent State thing, I live in Ohio, and all the stuff going on on campus. Perhaps the worst part was sitting in class and being ridiculed by professors, many of whom were no older than I was none of whom ever served. I didn't know whether to cry or slug the bastards. One thing it did do is to make me leave my own country and I went back and lived in Asia for 20 years. I came back about 10 years ago so my kids would know something about my country. But you just cannot believe how many of us are still in fact hanging out on the streets of Thailand, Vietnam, Japan and other places. These are the undocumented MIAs.

drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker


Oh Dear Soldier....thank you so much for your love :heart:

i would love to receive a sacred kiss from you blushing

and here are many sent to you smooched smooched smooched

:heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart:


I am so saddened to hear of what has happened to you

and the other soldiers..sad ..just an absolute tragedy :cry:

i lived in Connecticut during the " Kent State Slaughter "

and remember Neil Young's account of it :cry:

in the song " Ohio " :cry: it sickened me then & it still does now...sad


and to think that some punk teachers
treated you so disrespectfully ..sad ..

it is an absolute abomination sick



No wonder people sometimes snap indifferent








Sat 02/23/08 08:11 PM
http://www.screamingeagles-327thvietnam.com/first/stories_poems/honor_among_soldiers.htm




Honor Among Soldiers
Joseph L. Galloway

If you have fed from a steady diet of Hollywood movies about Vietnam you probably believe that everyone who wore a uniform in America's long, sad involvement in war in Vietnam is some sort of a clone of Lt. William Calley---that all three million of them were drug-crazed killers and rapists who rampaged across the pastoral landscape.

Those movies got it wrong, until now. There is one more Hollywood film now playing called We Were Soldiers and it gets it right. Ask any Vietnam veteran who has gone to see the movie. In fact, ask any American who has gone to see it. It is based on a book I wrote with my lifelong friend Lt. Gen. (ret) Hal Moore; a book written precisely because we believed that a false impression of those soldiers had taken root in the country which sent them to war and, in the end, turned its back on both the war and the warriors.

I did four tours in Vietnam as a war correspondent for United Press International---1965-66, 1971, 1973 and 1975. In the first
three of those tours at war I spent most of my time in the field with the troops and I came to know and respect them and even love them, though most folks might find the words "war" and "love" in the same sentence unsettling if not odd.

In fact, I am far more comfortable in the company of those once-young soldiers today than with any other group except my own family. They are my comrades-in-arms, the best friends of my life and if ever I were to shout "help!" they would stampede to my aid in a heartbeat. They come from all walks of life; they are black, white, Hispanic, native American, Asian; they are fiercely loyal, dead honest, entirely generous of their time and money. They are my brothers and they did none of the things Oliver Stone or Francis Ford Coppola would have you believe all of them did.

On the worst day of my life, in the middle of the worst battle of the Vietnam War, in a place called Landing Zone X-Ray in the Ia
Drang Valley of Vietnam, I was walking around snapping some photographs when I caught a movement out of the corner of my eye. It was a tall, lanky GI who jumped out of a mortar pit and ran, zig-zagging under fire, toward me. He dove under the little bush I was crouched behind. "Joe! Joe Galloway! Don't you know me, man? It's Vince Cantu from Refugio, Texas!" Vince Cantu and I had graduated together from Refugio High School, Class of '59, 55 boys and girls. We embraced warmly. Then he shouted over the din of gunfire: "Joe, you got to get down and stay down. It's dangerous out here. Men are dying all around."

Vince told me that he had only ten days left on his tour of duty as a draftee soldier in the 1st Battalion 7th U.S. Cavalry, 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile). "If I live through this I will be home in Refugio for Christmas." I asked Vince to please visit my mom and dad, but not tell them too much about where we had met and under what circumstances. I still have an old photograph from that Christmas visit---Vince wearing one of those black satin Vietnam jackets, with his daughter on his knee, sitting with my
mom and dad in their living room.

Vince Cantu and I are still best friends.

When I walked out and got on a Huey helicopter leaving Landing Zone X-Ray I left knowing that 80 young Americans had laid down
their lives so that I and others might survive. Another 124 had been terribly wounded and were on their way to hospitals in Japan or the United States. I left with both a sense of my place, among them, and an obligation to tell their stories to any who would listen. I knew that I had been among men of honor and decency and courage, and anyone who believes otherwise needs to look in his own heart and weigh himself.

Hal Moore and I began our research for the book-to-be, We Were Soldiers Once.and Young, in 1982. It was a ten-year journey to find and ultimately to bring back together as many of those who fought in LZ Xray and LZ Albany, a separate battle one day after ours only three miles away in which another 155 young Americans died and another 130 were wounded. We had good addresses for perhaps no more than a dozen veterans, but we mailed out a questionnaire to them to begin the process.

Late one night a week later my phone rang at home in Los Angeles. On the other end was Sgt. George Nye, retired and living very quietly by choice in his home state of Maine. George began talking and it was almost stream of consciousness. He had held it inside him for so long and now someone wanted to know about it. He described taking his small team of engineer demolitions men into XRay to blow down some trees and clear a
safer landing zone for the helicopters. Then he was talking about PFC Jimmy D. Nakayama, one of those engineer soldiers, and how a misplaced napalm strike engulfed Nakayama in the roaring flames. How he ran out into the fire and screamed at another man to grab Jimmy's feet and help carry him to the aid station. My blood ran cold and the hair stood up on the back of my neck.
I had been that man on the other end of Nakayama. I had grabbed his ankles and felt the boots crumble, the skin peel, and those slick bones in my hands. Again I heard Nakayama's screams. By then we were both weeping. I knew Nakayama had died a day or two later in an Army hospital. Nye told me that Jimmy's wife had given birth to a baby girl the day he died---and that when Nye returned to base camp at An Khe he found a letter on his desk. He had encouraged Nakayama to apply for a slot at Officer Candidate School. The letter approved that application and contained orders for Nakayama to return immediately to Ft. Benning, Ga., to enter that course.

George Nye is gone now. But I want you to know what he did with the last months of his life. He lived in Bangor, Maine, The year was 1991 and in the fall plane after plane loaded with American soldiers headed home from the Persian Gulf War stopped there to refuel. It was their first sight of home. George and some other local volunteers organized a welcome at that desolate airport. They provided coffee, snacks and the warm "Welcome home, soldier" that no one ever offered George and the millions of other Vietnam veterans. George had gone out to the airport to decorate a Christmas tree for those soldiers on the day he died.

When we think of ourselves we think Shakespeare, Henry IV, Act IV, Scene 3:

"We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;

For he today that sheds his blood with me

Shall be my brother."



Honor and decency and uncommon courage were common among
these soldiers and all the soldiers who served in Vietnam. I think of how they were, on patrol, moving through jungle or rice paddies. Nervous, on edge, trying to watch right, left, ahead, behind, all at once. A friend once described it as something like looking at a tree full of owls. They were alert for sign, sound or smell of the enemy. But they also watched each other closely. At the first sign of the oppressive heat and exhaustion getting to someone the two or three guys around would relieve him of some or all of the heavy burden that the Infantryman bears: 60 or 70 pounds of stuff. Rifle and magazines. A claymore mine or two. A couple of radio batteries. Cans of C-Rations. Spare socks. Maybe a book. All that rides in the soldier's pack. They would make it easier for him to keep going. They took care of each other, because in this situation each other was all they had.

When I would pitch up to spend a day or two or three with such an outfit I was, at first, an object of some curiosity. Sooner or later a break would be called and everyone would flop down in the shade, drink some water, break out a C-Ration or a cigarette. The GI next to me would ask: What you doing out here? I would explain that I was a reporter. "You mean you are a civilian? You don't HAVE to be here?" Yes. "Man, they must pay you loads of money to do this." And I would explain that, no, unfortunately I worked for UPI, the cheapest news agency in the world. "Then
you are just plain crazy, man." Once I was pigeonholed, all was all right. The grunts understood "crazy" like no one else I ever met. The welcome was warm, friendly and open. I was probably the only civilian they would ever see in the field; I was a sign that someone, anyone, outside the Big Green Machine cared how they lived and how they died.

It didn't take very long before I truly did come to care. They were, in my view, the best of their entire generation. When their
number came up in the draft they didn't run and hide in Canada. They didn't turn up for their physical wearing pantyhose or full of this chemical or that drug which they hoped would fail them. Like their fathers before them they raised their right hand and took the oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. It is not their fault that the war they were sent to fight was not one that the political leadership in Washington had any intention of winning. It is not their fault that 58,200 of them died, their lives squandered because Lyndon Johnson and, later, Richard Nixon could not figure out some decent way to cut our losses and leave the Vietnamese to sort the matter out among themselves.

As I have grown older, and so have they, and first the book and now the movie have come to pass I am often asked: Doesn't this close the loop for you? Doesn't this mean you can rest easier? The answer is no, I can't. To my dying day I WILL remember and honor those who died, some in my arms. I WILL remember and honor those who lived and came home carrying memories and scars that only their brothers can share and understand.

They were the best you had, America, and you turned your back on them.
Joe Galloway

When asked for permisson to post this, Joe Galloway wrote,

"You have my permission to post that article anywhere you wish. Every word in it came straight from the heart. It was published last fall in The Chicago Tribune, but I own the copyright".
Joe Galloway






Rapunzel's photo
Thu 03/06/08 08:21 AM
Edited by Rapunzel on Thu 03/06/08 08:23 AM
http://www.vvmf.org/index.cfm?SectionID=1



The Virtual Wall is a commemorative website created to extend the legacy of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. It allows families, friends and veterans to post photo, text and audio remembrances to those who lost their lives in the war or remain missing in action.

The Virtual Wall features more than 100,000 messages, anecdotes and photographs and provides visitors with the ability to print digital name rubbings similar to those at The Wall in Washington, D.C. The Memorial Fund encourages you to post remembrances for friends and loved ones whose names are inscribed on the Memorial to remember and honor each and every one of those who served in the Vietnam War and to expand this digital legacy project.



On November 10, 1998, The Virtual Wall was launched during a White House ceremony hosted by Vietnam veteran and then-Vice President Al Gore. The Memorial Fund and Winstar Communications Inc. created the website. From Spring 2001-Summer 2003, Soza and Company, Ltd. maintained the site and helped underwrite its hosting.



Through this interactive website, the healing power and emotional impact of The Wall now is extended to millions of more people through the Internet. For veterans, family, friends and others who are unable to travel to the nation's capital, the site offers an opportunity to remember and honor the more than 58,000 men and women whose names are inscribed on the Memorial.



Thank you for visiting The Virtual Wall.




On Veterans Day 1996, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund unveiled a half-scale replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., designed to travel to communities throughout the United States.

"Bringing The Wall Home" to communities throughout our country allows the souls enshrined on the Memorial to exist, once more, among family and friends in the peace and comfort of familiar surroundings. The traveling exhibit, known as The Wall That Heals, allows the many thousands of veterans who have been unable to cope with the prospect of "facing The Wall" to find the strength and courage to do so within their own communities, thus allowing the healing process to begin.


The Wall That Heals also features a Traveling Museum and Information Center providing a comprehensive educational component to enrich and complete visitors' experiences. The Museum chronicles the Vietnam War era and the unique healing power of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, while the Information Center serves as a venue for people to learn about friends and loved ones lost in the war.


Since its dedication, The Wall That Heals has visited more than 250 cities and towns throughout the nation, spreading the Memorial's healing legacy to millions. In addition to its U.S. tour stops, the exhibition made its first-ever international journey in April 1999 to the Four Provinces of Ireland to honor the Irish-born casualties of the Vietnam War and the Irish-Americans who served. It has also traveled to Canada.

For more information or to learn how to bring The Wall That Heals to your community, please contact the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund at (202) 393-0090 or via email at vvmf@vvmf.org.






The exhibition is sponsored by Disabled American Veterans (DAV) Charitable Trust,
Federal Express, Fujitsu Transaction Solutions, Inc., Harley-Davidson Foundation
and Target Corporation.





Rapunzel's photo
Thu 03/06/08 08:26 AM
Remembrance
HERMAN TOWERY
Dad my wife wrote this for you and I .....your loving son
By: Timothy M Towery
I took a trip today, not thousands of miles like the masses here, but one just as profound. As I journeyed I touched them, all of them and they touched me. As I walked I ran my hand over the names inscribed into the black granite and I heard the voices. They all have stories ...

I heard whispers and painful frightened cries of men, more like boys, many just old enough to vote and shave, and of women. Brothers, Sisters, Mothers, Fathers, Husbands and wives. All of those who fought and never made it home.

Viet Nam, the war of wars. The sacrifices American soldiers made should have never been; but they were not the only victims nor the only casualties. There are those who lived through Hell and came home to tell. And though I could never know the pain and suffering, the loss of those who survived and of those who died, I hear their stories.

All I have to do is look at the lone soldier standing at the Wall - his head is bowed, his soul is shattered, his heart is broken, and his friend is dead. And as I watch he reaches forward and touches the name of one who fought beside him. He has memories of their talks, of winning, of defeating, of returning home, and of dying, but they never talked of doing these things alone - never alone.

He stands there, lost in his own thoughts, reliving the terror he tries to forget, his shoulders shudder as he he realizes that he didn't come home whole. I watch as a single tear runs down his cheek and for a moment I feel his pain.

All I have to do is to look at the son standing at the Wall, mourning for the father who went to war and returned in a casket. At four years old he could not comprehend what had happened, his father had been taken from him at a very young age in his life. I watch as he runs through the 'what-ifs' in his mind - and he is alone.

I watch as that same single tear runs down his cheek, as he cries for the memories never made and for the very few memories he has to last him a lifetime. For the father he lost, for the grandfather who never knew a grandchild, and the grandchildren that never knew him. The love is there, along with a painful gaping emptiness that never goes away.

All I have to do is stand next to the woman searching for a name on the Wall. I watch as she locates ... the husband? ... the father? ... the brother? So I ask who it is that she has found on the Wall, she turns to look at me with a small bitter-sweet smile on her face. Then softly she starts to speak....

As she begins, she puts her hand to her mouth, I notice the slight tremble as she catches her breath and I listen as she speaks with emotion of the dear brother she has lost in this tragic war. I watch as that same single tear again escapes and runs down her cheek. Together we stand in silence ... then she turns and walks away.

Yes they all have stories, all these 58,219 names on the wall, they were people, they have faces and they have families. If you stand close enough to the "Wall" you can hear the voices too.

Most important you hear the love and the pride of those names on the "Wall", listen closely to the voices of the living and the dead ... they each have a story to tell.

"Ode to the Wall"
Copyright 2002 Tracy A Towery

Dedicated to the many families who lost loved ones
to the Viet Nam war,
to those who fought and lived
and to the names on the Viet Nam Wall Memorial


Rapunzel's photo
Thu 03/06/08 08:49 AM
Edited by Rapunzel on Thu 03/06/08 08:50 AM
drinker Posted for: :heart: ALLAN DAVID MORTENSEN: :heart:

Toys of his childhood packed neatly away...
I think I'll take them out and look at them today.
He once played with them when only just a boy;
to him they were always a wonderful joy.
Then came that day when he grew to be a man,
and went across the sea to that far away land...
"to be a soldier" he said..."to help those oppressed",
how proud he once stood in his uniform so neatly dressed.

Toys of his childhood packed carefully away,
I think I'll take one more look at them today.
Toy guns and toy soldiers fill boxes in the hall;
he is no longer with us, his name is on a Wall,
with so many others...I just can't count them all.

Toys of his childhood packed tenderly away;
I'm not sure how much longer I dare stay,
here in this room where he always liked to play.
I promised myself that I would try not to cry,
but as I entered here I remembered his last wave good-bye.
"Don't worry Mom", he said as he went quickly out the door,
"they need me to help in that far away war".

Toys of his childhood packed lovingly away;
be a dear friend and come sit beside me today,
and help me understand why this young man so kind and so tall,
has left me with only wonderful memories & his name on a Wall...
with so many others, I just can't count them all.

Toys of his childhood now safely locked away,
perhaps if I wait here long enough,
he'll come back again this way.
I know this won't happen as I sit in his chair,
again remembering how wonderful
he looked with his windblown hair.

Toys of his childhood, again put away;
the day is now ending and I know I can't stay,
here in this room that he loved so very much,
for I long to reach out and again feel his touch.

Please be kind and don't tell anyone, :heart:
but I think I'll wait here until my life is done; :cry:
for he was all that I had...he was my only son.sad

Toys of his childhood and wonderful memories too, flowerforyou
I only wish I could have introduced him to you. drinker
In dreams now I hear his loving voice call, drinker
but when I reach out for him, I see only his name on a Wall...:cry:

with so many others, I just can't bear to count them all.sad



drinker Dedicated to the Memory of and the family of Al Mortensendrinker







Rapunzel's photo
Fri 03/07/08 08:55 AM
Edited by Rapunzel on Fri 03/07/08 08:58 AM
:heart: Love and Light to all of our Vietnam Veterans :heart:


Prayers and Blessings drinker flowerforyou :heart: flowerforyou drinker

and ...

:cry: to all those Family Members who lost loved ones :cry:



noway They may be gone, but never ever forgotten, noway


as long as my heart beats :smile:


& there is breath in my lungs drinker



:heart: :heart: :heart: You will never ever ever be forgotten...:heart: :heart: :heart:




:heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart:




Rapunzel's photo
Fri 03/07/08 09:00 AM
Edited by Rapunzel on Fri 03/07/08 09:02 AM
flowerforyou smokin drinker Uncle Louie and Uncle Joe ...drinker smokin flowerforyou


:cry: :cry: :cry: who died so tragically in WWII :cry::cry: :cry:


sad sad sad at the tender ages of 19 and 21 sad sad sad



:heart: :heart: :heart: I am thinking of you with love today :heart: :heart:


drinker :heart: blushing thank you for your love & eternal sacrifice blushing :heart: drinker


flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou You will never be forgotten flowerforyou flowerforyou flowerforyou


and



:heart: :heart: :heart: i will see you Both in Heaven :heart: :heart: :heart:

Rapunzel's photo
Mon 03/31/08 12:07 PM
Edited by Rapunzel on Mon 03/31/08 12:14 PM
http://www.vietvet.org/


Purpose:

To honor Vietnam Veterans, living and dead,
who served their country on either side of the conflict.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Mission:
To provide an interactive, on-line forum for Vietnam Veterans
and their families and friends to exchange information,
stories, poems, songs, art, pictures,
and experiences in any publishable form.




drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker drinker






Rapunzel's photo
Mon 03/31/08 10:09 PM
Edited by Rapunzel on Mon 03/31/08 10:13 PM
flowerforyou a heartfelt prayer..:heart:

from before, but still just as powerful flowerforyou



:heart: Love and Light to all of our Vietnam Veterans :heart:


Prayers and Blessings drinker flowerforyou :heart: flowerforyou drinker

and ...

:cry: to all those Family Members who lost loved ones :cry:



noway They may be gone, but never ever forgotten, noway


as long as my heart beats :smile:


& there is breath in my lungs drinker



:heart: :heart: :heart: You will never ever ever be forgotten...:heart: :heart: :heart:




:heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart: :heart:



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