Posted by R. Ann Siracusa
November 11 is coming. A day off! No Mail! We get to wear red poppies, wave flags, and go to a parade!
Many American tend to think of Veterans Day as just another day off. Or, if you don't have a holiday, it may be just another day when the mail isn't delivered.
That's sad, because it should be a day of reflection
and thanks to the multitude of armed services veterans, and their families, who
have kept our country "the land of the free, and the home of the
brave." Photo source:inthesetimes.com/veterans_day Photo credit: U.S. Air Force / Flickr
Don't confuse it with Memorial Day, which honors those
service men and women who have died in the service of their country. This day
honors everyone who has served.
HISTORY
Nothing is easy when it involves the federal government.
US President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed Armistice Day for November 11, 1919, one year after the armistice between the Allied nations and Germany went into effect on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month and brought to a halt the actual fighting in WW I. The Treaty of Versailles was signed seven months later, on June 28, 1919.
I was surprised to read that Congress didn't officially recognize the end of WW I until June 4, 1926.
It's hard for me to envision
signing the treaty without acknowledging the end of the war. However, in the
same resolution, Congress requested President Coolidge to proclaim November 11
as a national holiday. This is the same day celebrated in other parts of the
world as Remembrance Day, Armistice Day, Victory in Europe Day, and other
names.
An act approved in May 13, 1938, made the 11th
of November a legal federal holiday, known as "Armistice Day",
dedicated to the veterans of WW I and the cause of world peace. A decision as non-partisan and non-controversial as this took
almost ten years. No wonder we're in trouble.
Then, on June 1, 1954, Congress approved legislation
changing the name from Armistice Day to Veterans Day, a holiday which honors of
the veterans of all wars, not just WW I, and celebrated on October 25. The
first Veterans Day was celebrated on October 25, 1971. Confusion ensued. No one
was happy.
On September 20, 1975, President Gerald Ford signed a law
which returned Veterans Day to the original date of November 11, beginning in
1978.
Sigh of relief. This pleased just about everyone,
although I used to wonder why my employer gave us a union-negotiated holiday on
October 25, when the official holiday was November 11. Now I understand.
Hopefully, everything is settled for a while. And it pleases
me that Veterans Day hasn't been moved from the specific date. That's not an
accident. The proponents wanted to preserve the significance of November 11 and
to focus attention on the purpose of Veterans Day.
A
TIME FOR REFLECTION AND THANKS
As Senator Mike Johanns said,
"Nothing we can do in
Congress will ever fully return the favor of those who have given so much for
America. But we must do all we can to
honor them. All Americans share in the responsibility of caring for our
veterans who have defended our freedom.
Fewer causes are so
imperative or so noble. This Veterans Day, we remember the service to our brave
men and women in uniform. We thank them for their sacrifice and for their
service."
Rory Fanning inthesetimes.com/veterans_day
sends this message.
“Many veterans enlisted in the military thinking that they were indeed
serving a noble cause, and it's no lie to say that they fought with valor for
their brothers and sisters to their left and right. Unfortunately, good
intentions at this stage are no substitute for good politics. What they really
want is not to be thanked for their service; they want politicians to stop
sending young soldiers off to die.”
THANK
YOU TO THOSE MEN AND WOMEN, AND THEIR FAMILIES, WHO HAVE SERVED IN THE PAST AND
TO THOSE WHO CONTINUE TO SERVE AND PROTECT OUR FREEDOM!
Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima is an iconic
photograph taken by Joe Rosenthal on February 23, 1945 which depicts six United
States Marines raising a
U.S. flag atop Mount
Suribachi during the Battle of Iwo
Jima in World War II.
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