My
War Memorials
by
Linda
Schrock Taylor
by Linda Schrock Taylor
Sixteen
years ago I thought it would be a good idea to bring my son the
only grandchild home from Colorado Springs to be raised
near his grandparents and relatives. That part of my decision was
good. The sad part about returning to my hometown after being gone
for thirty-one (31) years, was that I found myself again entrapped
by the oversold, eternal, ineffaceable, World War II; by the only
world that my father really had known since being a teenager.
During
the passing of these years, I have realized that much of my entire
life has been defined, dictated and distressed by the War that
served as a finishing school, as well as a continuing way of life,
for my father's generation. As a war baby, my life has been woven entangled with
the fibers of memories, nightmares, Memorial Day parades, 21-gun
salutes, war stories, mementoes, and heartbreaks all from The
Big One. I will never completely break the ties that bind me
to FDR's vile use of my father as a pawn in that worldwide chess
game, although I hope that just my recognition of the role it has
played, and still plays, in my life will remove a few knots.
I
find the process of healing from this "war baby" syndrome to be
especially slow, and I attribute that to the fact that every working
day I must drive past the war memorials of my childhood; of my life.
Every working day I must pass through the community where my great-grandparents
homesteaded their century farm; where my grandparents worked triply
hard while all three sons were serving in FDR's war. When I had
to sell that farm, too many of the war memorials came to reside
with me here at my home: dog tags; duffle bag; German field telephone;
photos of every size and type; maps of battles; induction paperwork;
debarking papers; uniforms; symbols and insignias; newspaper articles
written by my father; VFW coats, clocks, keepsakes.
I
am knee-deep in personal mementoes; town-wide in war monuments;
and feel too keenly for my father's suffering, both during and following
the War, to bring myself to just discard his things. Many of the
items hold memories for me, as well. The German field telephone
was the first phone that my family had to use, and then only after
Dad and Grandfather strung telephone line the miles to our house.
No handy Bell Telephone service trucks were available in those days.
When
we emptied the farmhouse and the barn, I reminded my family to find
"The Star" for I did not want it left behind or thrown away. Grandfather
made the star during the War, adding a blue bulb for every local
boy fighting overseas. Even after the War had ended (but, of course
it has never really ended for many of us) it was hung on Grandpa
and Grandma's porch as a Christmas Star, as well as a memorial.
We always looked for the star as we drove into the farmyard. Then
I saw it as a symbol of the holiday, even though I knew its history;
now I grieve that it had been crafted specifically to serve a local
purpose during a global project. As bulbs burned out, few were replaced
until now it glows barely at all, and that is probably a most appropriate
outcome.
Every
day I drive past the VFW hall that my father, uncles, and their
friends founded, then built; where they have so generously invested
their time in organizing fundraising events to aid the community;
from which they appraised and evaluated most everything about them
in relation to how it compared with, or related to, The War.
When
my son was small, he referred to the VFW as "Grandpa's Club." When
Dad passed away, David, although quite young, volunteered to work
at the VFW. For many months he served breakfast to the public on
Sunday mornings, hoping to fill the gaping hole left by the death
of his Grandfather who had always been a mainstay of the group.
In appreciation of his efforts and of his caring, the veterans awarded
David with an honorary membership in the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
That war memorial hangs over our piano.
I
drive past the old opera house, now crumbling in disrepair, where
my parents met and began their courtship following my father's return
from the War. My mother has her own memories from the War, as do
others who stayed behind to tend the Homefront. Mother, while only
a teenager, worked in the grocery store which I pass twice a day,
as well to deal with ration cards that forced citizens to do without,
so that the Games might continue.
Every
day I drive past two of the cemeteries where my WW-II relatives
rest, finally at peace after fifty-plus years of ghosts, nightmares,
life-defining experiences and a collage of memories. Dad has been
gone for five years now. Still it seems strange that he doesn't
stop in for coffee after placing flags at the cemetery nearest our
home, in preparation for Memorial Day that traditional day
of war worship.
Yes,
flags will be at the graves of each man and woman who "served our
country in its time of need." My father always phrased it that way.
I held my tongue, even as my mind prodded me to cry out, "You were
used as a pawn! A pawn in a gigantic worldly game
of very powerful chess! You were a dispensable game piece, of limited
value, to be pushed around the board within agreed upon parameters."
I never said it so bluntly, for the mere hint of such a discussion
caused my father to take a most defensive stance. He had no choice
but to protect himself. It would have destroyed him to admit that
he had been used, and had then spent fifty years celebrating his
own bondage and the violation of his personhood and the warping
of his entire outlook and life.
I
believe that I lack the stamina to attend the Memorial Day "celebrations"
this year. I cannot bear to watch the parade down Main Street. I
cannot watch another wreath being tossed into the river, to float
on to the ocean, in memory of sailors who died at sea. It hurts
too much to see the dwindling ranks of ageing servicemen, clothed
in remnants of uniforms from fifty and more years past. I cannot
bear to hear the sad bugle, nor its echo, following the guns fired
in salute. Every day I drive past the War Memorial that my father
helped to plan and bring to the community. His name is there
Max E. Sneary. I will avoid the ceremonies there this year, but
I will do so with great sadness.
In
addition to sadness, I feel much anger. I resent the fact that always
more wars are being created and conducted, and I despise the State
leaders who put our people in harm's way in those 135 countries.
I am angry that our young people are continually being seduced into
believing the lies of the State lies told so that the Games
can go on. I wonder how long these State Games will continue, damaging
not only the lives of our young people, but also the hearts, spirits,
and memories of mothers, fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers.
They all we all deserve better than
this from the United States of America.
May
all of those who keep the Games alive, spend sleepless nights sharing
the horror of my father's dreams dreams of nights spent in water-filled
sleeping holes breathing through a bundle of twigs as a crude filter;
thoughts of spaces crawling with bugs and vermin; memories of humans
sleeping underground to prevent shrapnel from damaging the pawns
before the Players could decide their next move. I have a powerful
video of my father describing those war experiences to my history
students. I believe that young people deserve the right to understand
the true nature of war, and should be prepared to stand firm against
the lies of the State.
Never
hope, or expect, to hear the word "Checkmate." Contrary to
popular beliefs, and to State lies, winning is neither
the purpose, nor the prearranged outcome, of these worldly chess
games. Money. Power. Leverage. The stakes are high and citizens
are well trained to overlook the truth while dutifully blaming the
State's fall guy. Merely games. A war concocted and conducted by
the State is never a cause.
A
cause is something honorable and right. The actions of Austrian
Economists teaching "those who have ears to hear" of the ways that
freedoms and rights will bloom and grow in Free Market environments
is a cause one worthy of sacrifice and support. The honorable,
constitutionally supported decision of the Southern states to peacefully
leave the collection of American states was a cause although
one that was cruelly and illegally aborted and distorted
by Lincoln and his rewriters. The Revolution to free the Colonies
from British dominion and establish our country, was a cause.
Wars,
on the other hand, are devious courses of action; secretive plans
purposely designed to rob citizens: of freedoms and rights; of production
and financial rewards; of savings and investments; of sons and daughters;
of peaceful lifetimes and restful sleep.
As
my father left the theater after viewing Saving
Private Ryan he stated, with much stress in his voice, "I
could have gone to my grave without seeing that!"
The film stirred the ghosts that had haunted him, and he died not
long after that. He died sleeping fitfully and I'll always wonder
if he finally realized that he had been played for a fool and sacrificed
for a rook.
May
31, 2004
Linda
Schrock Taylor [send
her mail] lives in Michigan.
She is a free-lance writer and the owner of "The Learning Clinic,"
where real reading, and real math, are taught effectively and efficiently.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
Linda
Schrock Taylor Archives
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