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-Homegrown memorials used as tributes, antiwar
protests
Though the war isn't over, memorials are already
honoring lives lost in
Iraq. By Patrik Jonssonhttp://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0616/p02s01-ussc.html
Homegrown memorials used as
tributes, antiwar protests War isn't over over
there, but memorials are already honoring lives
lost in Iraq.
By Patrik Jonsson |
Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
BRANDENBURG, KY. - When Ray Cottrell, Jr. put up
the first three white crosses to mark the first
casualties of the Iraq war, he did not know what
the future would hold for US troops overseas. But
the scene outside his Ford dealership in this
rural Kentucky town has changed dramatically:
Today, 801 crosses and flags dominate the small
grassy strip in front of new F-150s and
Suburbans.
HEARTFELT: The 800 pairs of
combat boots bearing the names of fallen soldiers
on display next to the Capitol in Washington is
an example of
spontaneous memorials across the US.
KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS
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Permission to reprint/republish
This Normandyesque memorial has
become a somber ritual in the lives of Mr.
Cottrell's employees, and they dedicate their
time to grooming it as though it were a family
cemetery plot. "It really hits close to
home," says Larry Green, a retired Army
soldier and a salesman at Ray's Ford. "It's
like losing a family member each and every time
we put a cross out." At a time when the Bush
administration is closely monitoring images of
flag-draped caskets containing US casualties,
memorials are springing up across the country
honoring those killed in Iraq - some intended to
convey overt political messages and others just
to show support. As memorials grow from porches
and front gates of Army bases across the country,
the phenomenon is part of a broader return of
mourning symbols and rituals in American society.
They also offer a rare touchstone in what has
become a fractious divide in the United States
over the current military situation in the Middle
East.
"These memorials are
popping up as avenues to give voice to different
areas of the country," says Alan Wolfelt,
the director of the Center for Loss and
Life Transition in Fort Collins, Colo. "It's
one thing to have a memorial in Washington, but
not everyone can travel there. These roadside
memorials
allow people to ... experience the healthy
functions of converting grief to mourning - no
matter your politics." Some are simple
collections of mementos on the family porch of a
slain soldier. Others are more elaborate. Cobbled
together with flags and flowers, bricks and
crosses, these expressions of grief, support, and
even protest are giving Americans vaunted places
to absorb the real costs of war, to reflect, and
to pray. Outside Fort Carson, Colo., a new black
granite memorial with a map of Iraq and the names
of 49 fallen soldiers from the 3rd Task Force
Armored Cavalry Regiment was recently unveiled.
At the bottom is an inscription that rings of
Kipling: "Brave Rifles! Veterans. You have
been baptized in fire and blood, and have come
out steel." Today's memorialization harks
back to an expression of home that was typified
in the 1940s by the popularity of the song
"White Christmas," which spoke about
Christmases past and coming home - as opposed to
the Vietnam War, when the concept of
"home" itself was in disarray, both
generationally and politically. In Fonda, N.Y.,
Veterans for Peace planted 833 crosses in 40 neat
lines as part of a temporary memorial at the
National Shrine of Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha. One
local Vietnam veteran, Joe Fonda of nearby
Fultonville, says he doesn't oppose the display.
"They're doing two things - they're trying
to get people home, and they're honoring our
dead," he says. In West Palm Beach, Fla.,
the All Operation Iraqi Freedom Veterans Memorial
was dedicated on Memorial Day - the only one of
13 memorials at the Royal Palm Memorial Gardens
cemetery to honor veterans of an ongoing war.
More than 800 pairs of black combat boots were
displayed on the lawn of a federal courthouse in
Youngstown, Ohio - a tribute to troops who have
died in Iraq. Each pair was labeled with a
servicemember's name, rank, age, and hometown.
Here in Brandenburg, some may see the Ray's Ford
memorial as a perfect statement on why going to
Iraq was a mistake. But that's far from what the
builders intended. "It's simply a gesture of
support for our troops," says Cottrell.
Indeed, though most of the organizers of the
memorial support the president, they are careful
about delivering any kind of general statement.
But elsewhere, memorials embody an antiwar
protest. In Ithaca, N.Y., organizers are
constructing an eight-foot plexiglas structure
where more will be etched than the names of
fallen soldiers and the numbers of dead Iraqi
civilians. Statements by President Bush and
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld justifying war
and a list of corporations that are doing
business in Iraq will also be listed. "I
felt a strong need to do this because of the
[secrecy around] the caskets and the fact that
any remembrance seemed to be swept under the
rug," says Ken Ritter, an Ithaca activist
who struggled with whether to use the memorial to
make a statement about the war. Yet even in
Ithaca, one of the first cities to pass a
resolution condemning the decision to go to war
in Iraq, the local memorial has still to gain
approval to be installed on the public downtown
commons. Indeed, some local governments have
become squeamish about makeshift memorials in
general, such as crosses along accident-prone
stretches of highway. In Robbins, Ill., local
officials have restricted the size of private
memorials. "There's still the tension
between the goals of the nation and the
unfortunate and tragic consequences," says
John Bodnar, a history professor at Indiana
University in Bloomington. "[Memorials] are
a way of saying, 'OK, we support this, but we're
not actually comfortable with it,' " he
says. Still, no matter one's politics, the
memorials are having a deep impact. Here in
Kentucky, Green of Ray's Ford notes that the wife
of a medical corps officer laid a wreath on a
cross inscribed with the name of a soldier who
died in the doctor's arms. A veteran from a US
ordnance division placed unit insignias on the
crosses of lost battalion members. And even those
with no connection to the war gaze in awe:
"We've had an incredible amount of positive
feedback," Green says. Mr. Ritter in Ithaca
agrees. "The reason these memorials are so,
well, memorable is that they come from average
people." . Associated Press material was
used in this report.
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