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Pacific American Foundation: 8th Annual Roll Call of Honor in Rememberance Ceremony

REMARKS OF SENATOR DANIEL K. AKAKA, KEYNOTE SPEAKER

May 27, 2007

Punchbowl National Cemetary of the Pacific 

Aloha, and mahalo nui loa. I want to thank the Pacific American Foundation for inviting me here, and I want to thank you for your work in honoring all veterans, including those who call the Pacific Islands their home.

When I was a young man, the Pacific was a battleground of the second World War. That war transformed the Pacific and our country. Many Pacific Island people gave their lives in that war and those that followed. Today we honor their service and their sacrifices.

Memorial Day is a time to honor those servicemembers who gave their lives - what Abraham Lincoln described as "the last full measure of devotion." When Lincoln spoke those words, he was dedicating a modest "soldiers cemetery" in a Pennsylvania town called Gettysburg.

Today Gettysburg and Lincoln's address hold a special place in our national memory. In fewer than 300 words, President Lincoln delivered one of the most famous speeches in the history of this great republic.

In that speech, Lincoln said that it is good and right to dedicate a place to honor the brave servicemembers who rest beneath it.

But more important, Lincoln said that the best way to honor the dead is to remember their sacrifices, and dedicate our lives to the nation for which they gave their lives.

What we now call Memorial Day started in the aftermath of that war, with two dozen cities and towns across the United States laying claim to being the birthplace of what was then called Decoration Day.

Generations later, America paused in the aftermath of World War I, a massive conflict that inspired the poem, "In Flanders Field," about the lives the war took and the bond between the living and the dead.

That poem roused the convictions of an American teacher named Moina Michael, who clung to the image of the red poppies in Flanders Field, which grew above the graves of World War I servicemembers.

Miss Michael vowed to "keep the faith" with those who had died and to wear a red poppy as a sign of that pledge. She recorded her commitment in a poem she called "We Shall Keep the Faith," which reads, in part:

We Cherish, too, the poppy red,

That grows on fields where valor led;

It seems to signal to the skies

That blood of heroes never dies

Miss Michael spent the rest of her life raising money for veterans and survivors in need, by selling red poppies to honor the men and women who gave their lives in the service of our Nation. Through the sale of poppies made by disabled veterans, she raised approximately 200 million dollars for veterans and their survivors.

Today, our great nation steps further into the fifth year of our current war in Iraq, and our sixth year in Afghanistan. Our service men and women include people from across the Pacific Islands. As we ponder how best to honor those who have died, we can look to our history to find words and actions to guide us.

Just as Lincoln's Gettysburg Address turned sentiment into prose, Miss Michael turned it into poetry, and then into action. Each of us can look at the sacrifices of those who have served and then look within ourselves to honor them with our lives.

Mahalo nui loa.


Year: 2008 , [2007] , 2006 , 2005 , 2004 , 2003 , 2002 , 2001 , 2000 , 1999 , 1998 , 1997 , 1996

May 2007

 
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