Like many nations, the United States pauses once a year to honor the sacrifice of those who died in its defense through military service. The tradition is an ancient one, recalling Pericles' admonition to his fellow Athenians that their war dead were worthy of the city and "the living need not have a more heroic spirit."
On Monday, May 31, Memorial Day, in communities across the U.S., there will be speeches striking similar themes and a moment of silence will be observed. Like the poppies in Flanders Fields, small flags will be seen among the graves in military cemeteries and the families of the fallen will stop to remember.
Beyond mere ceremony, the day represents a debt paid by the living to those Americans who made the ultimate sacrifice to ensure their country’s freedom. Some died in battle, some of disease. Others were lost in foreign prisons and never returned. Most died very young, defending their nation’s ideals and liberties perhaps even before they had much of a chance to fully appreciate them. Hundreds of thousands died fighting to make others free too, in North Africa, Europe, the Pacific, Asia and the Middle East.
Memorial Day honors no single battle or war. Its meaning transcends heroic monuments and stately entablature. Rather, it is the recognition by a grateful nation that lives and blood lost in defense of its freedoms are never given in vain.
Like many nations, the United States pauses once a year to honor the sacrifice of those who died in its defense through military service.