Remembering and Honoring the Fallen
Deb Fischer
U.S. Senator
May 25,
2018U.S. Senator
In 1863, President Abraham Lincoln traveled to Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania, to close a dedication ceremony of the Soldiers’ National Cemetery
in the aftermath of the bloodiest battle of the Civil War. From those hallowed
grounds, Lincoln gave one of the most moving and poignant speeches in American
history. Lincoln’s Gettysburg address clarified the meaning of the war, sought
to unify our battered country, and pledged that our country “can never forget”
the cost of our Union soldiers’ sacrifice.
In the years that followed the Gettysburg Address, communities
across the country began to hold tributes to fallen soldiers of the Civil War
by offering prayers and decorating gravestones with flowers. In 1868, Major
General John A. Logan designated a day to honor the soldiers who died in the
Civil war. This was known as “Decoration Day”. But as our nation found itself
entrenched in the First World War, the holiday evolved into commemorating those
who paid the ultimate sacrifice in all wars. Nearly 100 years later, Congress
officially declared Memorial Day a national holiday in 1971.
Since then, we gather every year on Memorial Day to set aside
our busy routines and come together to pay our respects to fallen soldiers. We
celebrate the unofficial beginning of summer by honoring the best of us, those
who gave their lives so that we can live ours more fully and freely. We honor
our heroes who answered when our country called for their help.
In America, we have been fortunate to have examples of true
heroism all throughout our history. A group of patriots fought against unfair
taxation and restraint of individual liberty to defeat a military superpower in
the Revolutionary War. Brother fought against brother to preserve our Union
during the Civil War. America’s Doughboys confronted peril in the trenches of
Europe throughout World War I. The Greatest Generation bravely fought in Europe
and the Pacific Theater. They stared into the face of evil and liberated a
continent. Americans were deployed to remote regions of the world like Korea
and Vietnam, where they fought to defeat communism and defend our freedom.
Since September 11, 2001, our nation has faced a new enemy.
Nebraska’s finest have risen to defend our country against the threat of
terrorism. Many have suffered life-changing injuries. Some are visible, while
others are not. According to the Nebraska Department of Veterans’ Affairs, 77
Nebraskans have given their lives during the war on terror so that we can be
safe.
President Kennedy once said, “A nation reveals itself not only
by the men it produces but also by the men it honors, the men it remembers.” In
our communities throughout Nebraska, we honor and remember the men and women we
have lost.
As Nebraskans send care packages to their loved ones oversees,
they may stop in the Caleb A. Nelson Post Office in Omaha, named after a
Nebraska Navy SEAL who was killed while serving in Afghanistan. Or they may
walk along the Wayne R. Cornell Street in Hastings that pays tribute to an Army
Sergeant from Holstein, Nebraska, who lost his life serving during Operation
Iraqi Freedom. Or they may visit the Sergeant Cory Mracek Memorial Post Office
in Chadron, dedicated in honor of a soldier who also lost his life while
serving in Iraq. In Lincoln, fans pack the University of Nebraska’s Memorial
Stadium. The stadium was built in honor of generations of Nebraska’s heroes
that have served in every war.
This Memorial Day, I hope you will take a moment to pause and
reflect on the valor of our brave fallen. We should always honor and remember
those who have made the ultimate sacrifice for our great nation.
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