Memorial Day
Ryan Opel, a Federation & Empire staff member, writes:
Memorial Day.
A time to remember friends and comrades lost. Some lost in war. Some lost in peace. Some lost to old age. Some still alive but yet lost to us.
As I spend my third Memorial Day in the Iraqi Theater of Operations I remember all those brothers, sisters, friends, relatives that have answered their nation’s clarion call of service. From those early days in 1775 when a small group of British Colonies decided that they had had enough. Through the dark days of a Civil War that almost tore our young nation apart. Into the dark days of 1941 when we were forcefully thrust onto the world stage to stay. The dark days of the Cold War brought us even more to the forefront of the stage as millions of men and women from the
My own service began during this time and I trained for war as hard as I prayed for peace. For I knew, like my brothers in arms, who would pay the harshest cost if our efforts to maintain the peace failed. I lost friends and comrades during this time in accidents, both training and regular. I remember them and their families.
On
On Memorial Day I will close my eyes and remember.
I will remember my Grandpa Arthur Fredrick Opel, USMCR, who died before I was old enough to realize what he’d done for country.
I will remember my Grandpa John Elmer Webster, Army of the
I will remember my roommate Todd Drobnick, who was killed while working as a civilian translator on Thanksgiving Day 2003 in
I will close my eyes and walk through the fields of
I will walk along the
I will walk up and down the
I will travel again to
I will patrol the Korean DMZ.
I will go to
Along this trip I will be accompanied by those that have fallen. They wear Continental Blue, Confederate Gray, Union Blue, Khaki and Olive Drab,
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