Monday, May 25, 2020

On the 75th Anniversary of the End of World War II

 


A Memorial Day Observation

On the 75th Anniversary of the End of World War II


If you can, please stand—not for what I am about to read here, but for those it is written about!



Ladies and gentlemen, I wish my dad were here,

And many of you wish the same, I fear,

For the decades have stretched so far and long

That our World War II soldiers are nearly gone.


From that “Day of Infamy,” 16 million served ‘til done

And over four-hundred-thousand never learned they’d won

Because they gave all they had when there was no more

So their families and homeland could be spared of war.


It is difficult to look back from where we are now

To prop-driven bombers and battleship prows,

Infantry brigades with the M-1 Garand

And paratroopers jumping into no-man’s land.


But those soldiers were tough and they followed orders well

Which often led them through the gates of hell

Where they came face-to-face with the devil’s crew,

And, more often than not, dealt them their due!


September 2nd, of ‘45 makes this a diamond anniversary year,

And, like I said, I wish my dad were here,

But seventy-five years plus a young man’s score

Makes those guys all ninety-five or more.


And though we thought they’d go on living forever

With that same determination in their every endeavor,

We find now that they really were only women and men

And wonder how they carried the world back then?


  • Upon their backs is how it was done,

With courage, and sacrifice, and resolution—

For which we now stand in witness to honor those lost:

Downed on land, in air, and wild seas tossed!


May they live forever in freedom in our heads and our hearts,

Recalled and regaled for the sacrifices that set them apart,

And may the flag of our nation forever wave over them

For all they have given and gave so proudly….  Amen.


by

James N. “Jim” Zitzelsberger

© 2020



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