From Military.com:
“Vets return to Memorial Day
traditions as pandemic eases”
(Bob Workman of Boston, a retired
Marine Gunnery Sgt., and past commander of the Boston Police VFW, replaces
flags at veteran’s graves ahead of Memorial Day on Thursday, May 27, 2021, in
the Fairview Cemetery in Boston. After more than a year of isolation, American
veterans are embracing plans for a more traditional Memorial Day. After more
than a year of isolation, military veterans say wreath-laying ceremonies,
barbecues at local vets halls and other familiar traditions are a welcome
chance for them to reconnect with fellow service members and renew solemn
traditions honoring the nation’s war dead._
A pair of military vets navigate
the hilly, meandering paths in a historic cemetery in Boston, searching out
soldiers’ graves and planting American flags in front of them. About 10 miles
away, scores of other vets and volunteers do the same, placing more than 37,000
small flags on the downtown Boston Common — a sea of red, white and blue meant
to symbolize all the Massachusetts soldiers killed in battle since the
Revolutionary War. It’s an annual tradition that returns in full this year
after being significantly scaled back in 2020 because of the pandemic. In
Boston and elsewhere, this holiday weekend will feel something closer to
Memorial Days of old, as COVID-19 restrictions are fully lifted in many places.
“This Memorial Day almost has a different, better feeling to it,” said Craig
DeOld, a 50-year-old retired captain in the Army Reserve, as he took a breather
from his flag duties at the Fairview Cemetery earlier this week. “We’re
breathing a sigh of relief that we’ve overcome another struggle, but we’re also
now able to return to what this holiday is all about — remembering our fallen
comrades.” Around the nation, Americans will be able to pay tribute to fallen
troops in ways that were impossible last year, when virus restrictions were in
effect in many places. It will also be a time to remember the tens of thousands
of veterans who died from COVID-19 and recommit to vaccinating those who remain
reluctant.
Art delaCruz, a 53-year-old
retired Navy commander in Los Angeles who leads the Veterans Coalition for
Vaccination, said his group has been encouraging inoculated veterans to volunteer
at vaccine sites to dispel myths and help assuage concerns, many of which are
also shared by current service members. “We understand it’s a personal choice,
so we try to meet people where they are,” said delaCruz, who is also president
of Team Rubicon, a disaster-response nonprofit made up of military veterans. There’s
no definitive tally for coronavirus deaths or vaccinations among American
military vets, but Department of Veterans Affairs data shows more than 12,000
have died and more than 2.5 million have been inoculated against COVID-19 out
of the roughly 9 million veterans enrolled in the agency’s programs. The
isolation of the pandemic has also been particularly hard on veterans, many of
whom depend on kinship with fellow service members to cope with wartime trauma,
says Jeremy Butler, a 47-year-old Navy Reserve officer in New York who heads
the advocacy group Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. “We’re reuniting
now, but it’s been an extremely challenging year,” he said. “To have those connections
cut off — the counseling sessions, the VA appointments, social events with
other vets — those are so important to maintaining mental health.” But for the
families of veterans who survived the horrors of war, only to be felled by
COVID-19, Memorial Day can reopen barely healed wounds.
In western Massachusetts, Susan
Kenney says the death of her 78-year-old father last April from the virus still
remains raw. Charles Lowell, an Air Force veteran who served during the Vietnam
War, was among 76 residents of the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home who died in one of
America’s deadliest coronavirus outbreaks last year in a long-term care
facility. A memorial service was held at the home earlier this week, and the
names of residents who died over the past calendar year were read aloud. Kenney,
who has been a vocal advocate for reforming the troubled home, says there are
still lingering questions about who else should be held accountable, even as
top officials at the state-run facility face criminal negligence and abuse
charges and federal and state agencies launch investigations. “I’ve been
reliving this for a whole year,” she said. “At every milestone. Veterans Day.
His birthday. His death anniversary. Everything is a constant reminder of what
happened. It’s so painful to think about.” For other families, Memorial Day
will be as it ever was, a day to remember loved ones killed in war.
(Army veteran Willie Ransom poses
at the American Legion Lodge named after his son, Air Force Major Charles
Ransom in Midlothian, Va., Thursday, May 27, 2021. The younger Ransom was among
eight U.S. Airmen killed when an Afghan military pilot opened fire at the Kabul
airport in 2011.)
In Virginia, Willie Ransom, a
74-year-old Vietnam War vet, said his family will hold a modest service at the
grave of his youngest son. Air Force Maj. Charles Ransom was among eight U.S.
airmen killed in Afghanistan when an Afghan military pilot opened fire at the
Kabul airport in 2011. The American Legion post in Midlothian, Virginia, that
the elder Ransom once helped lead is now named in his honor. The Powhatan
resident says a silver lining this year is that the country is poised to end
the war that claimed his 31-year-old son and the lives of more than 2,200 other
American fighters. President Joe Biden has promised to end the nation’s longest
conflict by Sept. 11, the anniversary of the 2001 terror attacks that launched
the war. “It’s the best decision we could make,” Ransom said. “It’s become like
Vietnam. They don’t want us there. We should have been out of there years ago.”
Back in Boston, DeOld will be thinking about his father, an Army vet wounded in
a grenade attack in Vietnam. Louis DeOld returned home with a Purple Heart and
went on to become a police officer in New Jersey, but the physical and mental
scars of war persisted long after, his son said. He died in 2017 at the age of
70. On Memorial Day, DeOld will gather with fellow vets at the VFW post in the
city’s Dorchester neighborhood that he commands. They will lay a wreath by the
American flag out front and then grill burgers out back. It will be the first
large social event hosted by the post since the pandemic virtually shuttered
the hall more than a year ago. “I hope it’s nice,” DeOld said. “I hope folks
linger. Families and friends gather. Good camaraderie. The way it should be.”
^ It’s good to see Memorial Day
celebrated like it used to be. It’s also good to see the men and women of the
US Military remembered and honored for their service and sacrifice. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/us-news/vets-return-to-memorial-day-traditions-as-pandemic-eases/
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