Editorial: Memorial Day is about the fallen, not the living

Published 8:53 am Monday, May 27, 2013

It’s nice to have a three-day weekend near the end of May to celebrate the early days of summer weather.

But that convenience for many isn’t why this holiday was created. It was created as a day to honor the large numbers of Civil War dead, and the holiday was called Decoration Day.

After World War I, it became a day to honor all fallen service members, a way to remember those who gave their lives. By 1971, an act of Congress made Memorial Day what it is today.

Email newsletter signup

This Memorial Day and in recent years, it has been trendy in the mainstream media to note the veterans who remain living and who fought in recent wars.

We find that trend dishonorable to the fallen. It’s as if the word “memorial” has lost its meaning on people. It is a word to remind people of an event or fact and typically memorials are associated with people and the achievements they accomplished before death. One such courageous act is dying in defense of the United States, in defense of every one of us living here.

Let’s keep Veterans Day for honoring the living soldiers. Let’s keep Memorial Day for honoring the ones we miss so very much.

If you get a chance today, please visit a cemetery and contemplate the heroes — soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines — who paid the ultimate price for their country, for our country.