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I don't post much around here any more, but I thought I'd drop by just
long enough to share these thoughts with those of you who might appreciate them. Departing from the aviation scene for just a moment, I would like to again share with you a reflection about D Day that I posted last year about this time. Remembering D Day surely affects people in different ways. This is only natural. The event certainly affected many lives, each in a particular and personal way. One only has to stand among the grave markers at Normandy to realize the sheer personal impact on human lives. I wasn't present during the landings, so my personal memory is of course much different from those who were. You can talk to any veteran who was there that day, and they all seem to have that same look in their eyes as they speak; that far away tear filled emotional look that usually is accompanied by a hesitation in the voice, as they remember some long ago moment in time, when in the span of a few seconds, something happened to them, or they witnessed something so horrible that it has remained with them all their lives. It's in meeting and talking to these veterans, that you begin to realize the price of war. My thoughts about D day are perhaps unique to me; perhaps not. They concern a man I never met or knew in any way, yet his image has remained with me all my life, and will remain with me until I die. Every year on June 6th, I see him again. I've seen him in countless movies at both the theatre and at home on television. I seriously doubt if there has been a single year gone by in my life when I haven't seen him at least once or twice. I don't know his name, but I feel closely bound to him anyway. I can honestly say that I've thought about this man enough during my life to easily qualify him as a close friend, even though he remains unknown to me. My friend appears in a 3 second film clip, shot on the beach by a combat photographer while obviously under heavy fire. The clip shows several men, American solders, running in from the water's edge. The fire is quite heavy; machine gun bullets spraying the sand around the soldiers as they run. My unknown friend lives in this clip just long enough to take two steps. He's at the lower left side of the screen. Then he's hit and falls forward, obviously dead. This film clip has been seen by almost everyone in the world at one time or another. I'm willing to bet heavily that there are many reading this post who are now thinking about the many times they have seen this soldier die and thought to themselves just as I have thought through the years; who was this man? I have lived my life surrounded by military airplanes and those who fly them, yet, my most personal memory of war is associated with this one unknown soldier dying on a beach in France. He appeared in my life only a few seconds many years ago in a film clip, and I have absolutely no idea who he was, but to me he represents something I never want to forget; that war, above anything else, is deeply personal! -- Dudley A. Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Commercial Pilot/CFI/Retired |
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Thank you Dudley. I think those of us caught up in the hardware of war need
a reminder that there is indeed a software side that brings the reality of war down to a much more personal level. Jack G. "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ink.net... I don't post much around here any more, but I thought I'd drop by just long enough to share these thoughts with those of you who might appreciate them. |
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