“What do
these stones mean?” the children of Israel asked their fathers as they viewed
the memorial stones. They were told that
it was the evidence of God‘s presence leading all of their people into the freedom
of the promised land. Every child was to
be told the meaning of the stones lest they forget who it was that gave them
their freedom and how it was done.
On Memorial
Day many of us will view the gravestones of our brave countrymen who fought and
died for America. Our children, too,
must learn the meaning of those stones, lest the memory of those who lay
beneath them and what they fought for, be forgotten-and their deaths be in
vain.
They were
Americans. They came from all over our
nation: the north, the south, the east
and the west, to answer their country’s call.
They were the rich and the poor of every color; they were from the farmlands
and the cities; they were the scholars and the factory workers from all different
ethnic backgrounds, but they were all Americans. They were prepared and dedicated to defend
our freedom. They stood for America,
where a man could be a man-where he could hold his head up and walk shoulder to
shoulder with every other man, without having to grovel and cower in fear
before tyrants. They stood for America,
where the circumstances of one’s birth did not dictate the course for one’s
life-the place where a man could choose and fulfill his own destiny. He could, with hard work and God-given
ability, make his dreams come true. Yes,
America has always been the place where dreams could come true! We even call it, “The American Dream!”
You and I can
still dream the dream only because of the sacrifices of those beneath the
gravestones. What do these stones
mean? Do these stones help us remember that
there is a cost for our freedom? A note
was found beside one brave American who had died in battle and it said, “I gave
my today for your tomorrows.” He gave
his all. Can we give anything less than
he? We are living those tomorrows for
which he died. We are alive and can live
for those American ideals for which he and many other Americans died. We can honor their lives by lifting high “the
sacred fire of liberty” and passing it on to future generations, lest we forget…lest
we forget.