Today is
Memorial Day in the United States. Today the United States honours its war
dead, from all of America’s wars. And it is right that we honor those that
have given their lives for their country, and to honour those who stayed at
home waiting for them, worried daily about the possible telegram, the knock on the
door, the closed casket.
For
Vietnam, we honour our lost with “The Wall”, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in
Washington DC. On Panel 10W, Line 61 is the name John Darling. My cousin. All the words below cannot change the horrible loss suffered by his direct family, my extended family. A hero's death in the service of your country is still a death in the family, a death that they had been hoping would not visit this of all families.
In 1994 at
Fort Gordon in Georgia, a building was dedicated to him memory.
His bio reads:
“John Darling received his commission
as a 2nd Lt. in the U.S Army Signal Corps upon graduation from West Point, USMA
in 1968. Assigned to service in Vietnam in 1969. Was present during a combat
assault on an abandoned Fire Support Base Ripcord. The firebase came under
intense hostile mortar fire and his Battalion's Tactical Operations Center
received a direct hit, wounding the Executive Officer and several other men.
Lt. Darling immediately assumed command then administered first aid to the
casualties. Braving the impacting rounds, he carried a wounded man to the
medical evac helicopter, then returned to the command post to direct armed
helicopter support of the Extraction Operation. For his gallantry, he was
awarded the Silver Star. Less than two months later, on 18 May 1970, 1st Lt.
Darling was killed in action. He died a hero's death when, on the eve of his
rest and relaxation leave, his helicopter was shot down as he voluntarily returned
to a Fire Support Base that was under attack. 1st Lt. Darlings numberous awards
include the Silver Star, Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Army commendation Medal,
National Defense Service Medal, Vietnam Service Medal, Vietnam Campaign Medal,
Parachutist Badge, and the Ranger Tab.”
What that
does not say is the horror of the news in the family, the grief, and the ripple
effect out into his wider family. There is a flag held in reverence by the family - "from a grateful nation". I was too young to know what had happened,
but it was clear that something had. Later I was told that it took a few days
to find the wreckage of the helicopter.
The story
goes that in the early years of the Vietnam War (going back to the 1950s, the
tigers would run from the sound of gunfire and explosions. As the war
continued, the tigers learned that those sounds meant there was a higher chance
of fresh meat, and instead of running way, they would wait, the approach the
area.
John
Darling had a “closed casket” funeral. The family was not able to see what was
left of him, my cousin.
Soon
America is going to lose another hero, John McCain. His politics might not be
fully to my liking; that is quite irrelevant. He was of the Vietnam era as
well, and could very well have been killed in action like my cousin John
Darling. He wasn’t, but he came damned close. Instead he spend years in as a
POW, was tortured and left permanently disabled.
When
offered to chance to be freed as a gesture of goodwill, he refused unless the
other POWs were released as well.
He will
die soon, and when he does, it will not be a Senator who has died, but another
young name killed in an America war.
There are
those today who belittle what has happened, and worse, who smear that names of
those that fought and died, in Vietnam and in all of America’s wars. Never do
that. They gave, and their families gave, willingly (and some not so willingly
due to a draft) for their country. We remember the soldiers and service members
who died for their country, because their country asked for their service, and
they gave it.
That is
the cost of civilization. Not the cost of freedom, the cost of civilization.
This
sacrifice is not unique to Americans. In the National War Memorial in
Wellington, New Zealand, a poem is carved into the wall, remembering those who fought and died in World War 1. These are words that I cannot read out loud, for my throat constricts when I try. It reads:
Age
shall not weary them
Nor the years condemn
At the going down of the sun
And in the morning
We will remember them.
Nor the years condemn
At the going down of the sun
And in the morning
We will remember them.
Memorial
Day should not be the only day we remember them. We must remember them every
day, and take from their sacrifice the knowledge that a new world was made,
however impure or inconsistent with the world that was desired.
So on
Memorial Day, we should also remember the words of Kamel Ataturk, who as a
Captain in the Ottoman Empire’s army at Gallipoli, rallied the Turkish troops
and turned them back to stop the New Zealanders, Australians and British who
were invading his country. At the
dedication of a Gallipoli Memorial in Wellington, the Turkish ambassador presented
and urn of dirt from Gallipoli to be placed under the memorial. At memorials in
Australia, New Zealand and the UK, the quote attributed to Ataturk is carved:
You mothers, who sent their sons
from faraway countries! Wipe away your tears. Your sons are in our bosom. They
are in peace. After having lost their lives on this soil they have become our
sons as well.
From the
pain of loss have come new worlds and new relationships. So we must remember the
sacrifices made, and look to a better world, we hope, that their sacrifices
contributed to making.
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