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1/20/2004: A soldier's funeral
http://cellar.org/2004/soldierfuneral.jpg
Some say it's for political reasons that the media is not permitted to shoot the caskets coming home from Iraq to Dover AFB; some say the administration doesn't want to acknowledge the deaths involved. Others say it's just the continuation of a policy that's been around for a while. I don't know about that, but I do know that we could stand a bit more acknowledgement of those who paid the ultimate price. And I've never been one for sappy patriotism, but this item blew me away. So I include it even though it's been around a while. http://webelegant.50megs.com/james/ Quote:
The images are so pure Americana. And when you stop to think about it, they show us an image that is so wrong and so right at the same time. So wrong, because it is a funeral. James M. Kiehl met his wife at an Army training center at Fort Gordon, GA. They married in July 2001. She was pregnant with their first child when he was shipped overseas. James was killed on March 23, 2003. He was 22. Nathaniel Ethan Kiehl was born on May 12. So wrong. And yet so right; somehow everything RIGHT with the situation is two and a half miles of children with flags solemnly acknowledging the casket. http://cellar.org/2004/flag6.jpg James was a member of Pfc. Jessica Lynch's unit, the Fort Bliss, Texas-based 507th Maintenance Company, which was ambushed near Nasiriyah. The unit was on a supply mission. James Kiehl, thank you. http://cellar.org/2004/flag4.jpg |
I may strongly disagree with WHY they were sent, but that does not in any way lessen my respect for those who have gone, and even more so for those who have paid the ultimate price...
Great pictures..... |
2 1/2 miles on both sides of the road.
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That is at once the saddest and most glorious thing that I have seen in quite some time. Thanks, UT.
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it just makes me sad.
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I thought this was totally cool. I wish all our returning soldiers were treated this way!
If you haven't done it yet, check out the web site that UT gave a link for. This man was in PFC Jessica Lynch's outfit and was one of the recovered bodies found behind the hospital that they rescued her from. |
Thanks UT. My buddy is over there right now and originally they were saying they weren't coming home until June. (After almost 2 years) Now I find out they will probably be flying to Colorado on Feb 22nd - 1 day before my birthday. This is probably the best present anyone could have ever given me. Granted - they will be in quarantine for a month - but hell - stateside is better that the Kuwait/Iraq border.
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Very moving pictures and the video still frames through the car window add a surreal, dreamy quality to them. I did some looking around at the website and found a link to this one:
http://www.annistonstar.com/www/as/iraq/ which has the stories and many pictures of the coalition fighters killed, captured or missing in Iraq Interesting reading. |
wow. strange.
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Quote:
I like the Churchill quote the best. Of course I believe he oversimplifies the situation a bit. What these words evoke in the people who hear or read them is as unique to each person as a fingerprint. When we see an object like an orange, those of us who are familiar with them bring our experience of what is an orange. Freedom, honor, justice - are all concepts. They are not tangible, and are sometimes only noticed in their absence. People who have known oppression can better appreciate freedom. Injustice makes more of an impression than justice in the same way that we only notice the air we breathe when it is cut off. It is an amazing sacrifice to give up one's life for duty. Many of us would fight hard if we could see our house at the edge of the battlefield. Fighting and dying in a war thousands of miles away against an enemy who probably could never have reached our shores demands a great commitment and sense of duty. Each man and woman who risks themselves because of an oath deserves everything we can give. In a nation where many of us live in comfort and safety, the example of what some must endure should be a reminder of what we take for granted each day. They deserve our respect. Their families deserve everything we can give them. |
Respect
That is why photos of our fallen Heros coffins are not shown. It has been a law for many , many years.
As a military wife the thought of my DH dieing in the line of duty is a terror i have to , as many spouces like me, face each and every day. But to show the family or coffin of a person who has given up all for our freedoms is consided one of the most disrespectful things you can do, in the eyes of many Active Duty and there families. To me (IMO) the photos of the people on the side of the road were to remember just how many stand behind our military. I would love to say that i have come across more that support our military than dont , but that is not the case. Next time you see a person in Uniform , please say thanks. Yes they choise to do this job, but it helps them to know that people see them and what they do to keep us all free. |
Welcome to the Cellar, Joy. I'm confused about the law that forbids photographing military coffins. I've seen still pictures and film clips of coffins being unloaded at Dover AFB in DE. I've also seen pictures of military funerals where the coffin was plainly displayed. I remember seeing pictures from Viet Nam showing body bags lined up and being carried, but that's different, I guess. :confused:
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It's all about context. I understand why it's rarely depicted as a current event but often used in documentary form to highlight the atrocity of war/conflict in general.
Much like the Jackson nipple debacle. Oh the shock, oh the awe yet EVERY news service here showed it over and over and over ad nauseum. Look everybody! This shocked everyone! I guess you have to desensitise folks first then reveal the truth in manageable doses. |
Ps: Welcome to the Cellar Joy.
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Thanks Novice and xoxoxoBruce for the welcome.
The ban has not allways been inforced. And like Novice said it is all about context. |
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