Showing posts with label soldiers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soldiers. Show all posts

Monday, May 27, 2013

They Shall Grow Not Old...

ROSEMARY HARRIS: Barbeques, pool openings, Memorial Day is filled with those activities. It's the unofficial start of the summer season - blockbuster movies and the smell of Coppertone.

Of course, it's more than that.

Today, I'm thinking of a man I never met. I became aware of him when I was about eight years old.
I remember asking my mother why her youngest sister - certainly the most beautiful of all the DeMaria girls - had never married.

She told me Aunt Jenny's fiance had died in The War. I went back to whatever I was doing (making mudpies...tormenting my sister..)and didn't think much about it until I was a bit older and bothered to ask a few questions.

Jenny DeMaria and Henry Marino grew up on Adelphi Street in Brooklyn. In the same way everyone in the working-class Italian community seemed to know that my father and mother would marry everyone knew that Henry and Jenny were destined to be together. Except they weren't. As a teen my cousins and I thought it terribly romantic that our aunt was still pining for her lost love. She never married.  In my twenties, I thought it neurotic.
Now it makes me think of all the friends and family members forever changed by the casualties of war. All wars. All nations.




Rest in Peace
Cpl. Henry J. Marino
KIA, Battle of Iwo Jima
23rd Marines,USMC

Gone but never forgotten.

This is a beautiful reading of one of the most famous poems of World War 1, In Flanders Fields. It always reminds me of how  much some of us have given.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6e4jqTF6aks

HANK: Thanks, RO. I can't hear that without crying.

My mother used to talk about the gold stars that appeared on her high school walls one by one, day after day...indicating another classmate had been killed in World War II.

LUCY BURDETTE: Hats off to all the folks who lost their lives trying to protect what they loved. I have never seen anything so sad as the cemeteries in Normandy. I know that war changed my father permanently...he kept in touch with his WWII buddies right up until the last months of his life.

HALLIE EPHRON: We take so much for granted, like the people who put their lives on the line every day for the rest of us. We have many friends who served in the Vietnam War. Fortunately they all came back; all of them were changed.

DEBORAH CROMBIE: I'm all for picnics and flag flying, but it doesn't seem to have much to do with honoring those fallen in war. In the UK and Commonwealth countries, they celebrate Remembrance Day on November 11th, the official date of the end of WWI. Poppies are worn by young and old for weeks in advance, and poppy wreaths are placed on all the war memorials. On that day, there is a two minute silence at eleven o'clock. It's very moving, and makes the loss seem very real.

JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: I wrote the story of 1st Lt. Melvin Spencer for Memorial Day two years ago. It started like this:
"You see them in long-range photos on the evening news and old black-and white pictures in books about Vietnam. They are iconic; the woman in a black dress, her heels sinking into the dirt that always seems softer around anew grave. The man in front of her is wearing a uniform so starched and polished you feel you could cut your fingers on the crease of his trousers, or be blinded by the sun off his brass. He is handing her an American flag, tightly folded so that only the blue star-spangled field shows. The other details vary: there may be a trumpeter, or a rifle volley. There may be four planes overhead, one arching away, lost in the sky. There may be motorcycle-riding angels and protestors. But there is always, always the uniformed man. And the woman. And the flag.
Mine is on an old chest of drawers in my bedroom."

I'll leave the rest at Command Posts. http://www.commandposts.com/2011/04/the-flag-and-the-families/ 

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Supporting Prince Harry with a Naked Salute - a not entirely SFW post!



JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: This week, the cover of PEOPLE blared, "Harry - The Naked Prince!" Inside there's a detailed description of naughtiness, nudity and nubile young women, none of which would be noteworthy if it had been any other 27-year-old soldier vacationing in Las Vegas. I like royalty watching as well as the next American and I like good looking men as much as the next woman, so I've been following along in the various British papers (Okay, the Daily Mail, since the Times and The Guardian insist on being stuffy about printing pictures of the third in line to the throne in his royal birthday suit.) Which is how I discovered the Facebook page "Support Prince Harry with a naked salute."
The group was started by an ex-Royal Marine and his friend, formerly of the Royal Hussars, two soldiers who clearly know how to craft an elevator pitch. Much like "Snakes on a Plane," "Support Prince Harry with a naked salute" pretty much tells you exactly what you're getting. There are soldiers in Afghanistan preserving their modesty with their SA80s. There's a cheerful army wife displaying her coffee and tea canisters. There are any number of ex-military standing behind the Union Jack. The site has been so successful, they've spun off a fundraiser for Walking With the Wounded that's raised £4,107 so far.  And yes, the FB page opens with a picture of a group of amputee soldiers who have their hats off to Prince Harry.

Purusing  these sites, I've come to three conclusions: 

1. If there were an international Olympics for humor (or humour!) the UK would take Gold.

2. There are a lot - and I mean a lot - of tattoos out there.

3. The British have no problem referring to sweaty, mostly-naked men carrying deadly weapons as "cheeky lads."




 
So, Reds, what do you think?
HALLIE EPHRON: I hope their hats are strategically placed.

I know, I'm a killjoy, but what I think is that Harry's an idiot. Twenty-seven is a grown-up -- his grandmother was two years younger when she became queen. Is it a surprise to him that paparazzi are following him around? Because at some level this has to be a deliberate plea for attention. And who can blame him? It's tough being second-born in that family.

RHYS BOWEN: Hallie I couldn't agree more. He knows the job
comes with certain standards and responsibilities. If one of my grandchildren had done something to embarrass me, I would think less highly of them. This is a teenage stunt at best. I will not be displaying myself with a couple of geraniums.
p.s. Having written this original comment we now find that he has been deployed back to Afghanistan. So the silliness now doesn't seem quite so out of place. A last act of bravado before he returns to hell.
DEBORAH CROMBIE: Oh, I can't say I MIND looking at Harry in the buff, and I know he's going off to Afghanistan. But lots of soldiers going off to fight have wives/husbands/families and don't need to "let off steam" by cavorting naked in Vegas with questionable girls. Nor do I see why he needed a "break" after looking responsible for two weeks at the Olympics. Grow up, Harry. I have huge admiration for his grandparents, who have always behaved well no matter how difficult the circumstances. So there's me--stuffy. And no well-placed geraniums:-)

JAN BROGAN - I think we all need famous people to behave badly
-  or we'd have nothing to talk about.  And who better than a good looking prince? Face it,  unless you go to a Charlie Sheen extreme, it's just not that unusual when actors or rock stars behave badly.  They are SUPPOSE to behave badly.  It's only interesting when an actual PRINCE (and not the musician formerly known as Prince) act up.  It's the contrast between responsibility and irresponsibility that make it so thoroughly entertaining.  Besides, this takes the pressure off William and Kate - they can continue be the models of behavior and allow Harry to provide us with a scandal.   LUCY BURDETTE: Well said all! Now off you go to look at the Facebook page--it's pretty darned funny. Though I like the original photo the best. It reminds me of one of my favorite funny movies, The Full Monty:). (Though I'm not posting either Rhys.) (Though hmmmm, most of the reds will be at Bouchercon--group shot??)

JULIA: I think we should definitely do a group shot at Bouchercon. I'll be the one standing behind the potted plant. 



What do you think, readers? Scandalous? Sexy? Silly? Or all three?