November 11, 2019 (Monday)
Today is Veterans’ Day. On this day we remember all those who have served in the armed forces. Although Memorial Day in May is the day set aside to honor those who died in the service of their country, much is said about them on Veterans’ Day as well. We do well to pay special attention to every occasion calling upon the nation to remember its veterans, living and dead. The recent free election is a monument in itself to all those who have served their country to purchase our freedom and insure the continuation of democracy.
When I was a boy, November 11 was celebrated as Armistice Day, remembering the end of World War I, the “War to end all wars.” It was a holiday for schools, and we all went downtown to see the great parade, featuring marching bands and troops, and the weapons of war.
Here is a photograph of Joe Ross, my Grand Uncle, during World War I. It’s more than 100 years old. He was later disabled as a result of being wounded in combat.
We rejected Woodrow Wilson’s dream of a “League of Nations,” where nations could iron out their differences with diplomacy instead of war. Alas, we soon realized the error of our ways as Germany, under Hitler, regained its strength and attacked its neighbors with the goal of ruling the world. Japan also rose to power and drew the United States into the conflict with their attack at Pearl Harbor. Italy eventually joined the Axis powers. Russia might have joined with Germany had it not been for Hitler’s egomania, attacking Russia and sealing his fate.
This is a photograph of my uncle, Lloyd Lowe, during World War II.
After World War II, the United Nations was established, but there was no talk of a “war to end all wars.” The cold war settled in, and erupted as a deadly war in Korea. Later came the Vietnam war, the Gulf War, the Iraq War and other conflicts in the Middle East, capped with the onset of terrorism, which eventually made its way onto American shores. Our war with terrorism goes on, wherever it is at work. In all of this, Americans have unselfishly given themselves to the service of their country in the armed services, and we honor them for that service today. We owe them a debt we can never fully pay.