Editorial: A reason to keep honoring
Published 8:45 pm Tuesday, June 10, 2025
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|
Thursday was the anniversary of D-Day, a pivotal moment in World War II that turned the tide of the European conflict toward the favor of the allies.
Friday was another opportunity to not only remember one of the most pivotal battles of the war, but to honor the soldiers who hit the beaches that day along the Normandy coast and those that gave their lives.
It was a display of bravery that will be etched in the annals of history and requires us, as on-lookers, to acknowledge each year that bloody assault on June 6, 1944.
The reality is that for many soldiers still alive who served during World War II this may well be the last D-Day they see. The world is losing our World War II veterans, an inevitability for us all in the march of time.
While it’s important that we honor all of those — men and women — who served, fought and died in defense of our nation while they live with us today, it will remain on us to continue to remember these people after their time on this planet has come to an end.
They have done what many of us would not or could not do. They’ve marched into the worst conditions and came out the other side, while still others never saw past that day.
This is a sacrifice of life and the least we can do is remember that sacrifice going forward.
We owe it to these brave souls to remember not just their deeds, but their names. We are able to enjoy freedom in France, England, here at home and around the globe because men women of valor stood up and said “I’ll go.”
When the soldiers of World War II — as in any conflict — are all gone, we will look back and know with pride that we are who we are because of them and that comes with no less a burden today as it was in the entirety of this nation.
That’s why, as time moves on, days like the D-Day anniversary become increasingly important because these men and women need to know our gratitude while they are still here with us. And if they are not, then those days stand as stark reminders that the freedom and rights we enjoy today are based on the soldiers who stood up to evil.