Author Topic: Semper Fi, sir.  (Read 230 times)

Offline MarineUS

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Semper Fi, sir.
« on: June 09, 2013, 10:46:54 PM »
http://www.stripes.com/news/us/marine-general-speaks-from-a-broken-heart-at-memorial-s-dedication-1.224692

If you've ever lost a loved one in a war zone, never let their death be in vain. Remember them and be proud that they died doing something they believed in and loved.  :salute

Marine general speaks from a broken heart at memorial's dedication

 CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. — After writing scores of condolence letters, Marine Gen. John Kelly thought he knew something about the pain of having a son killed during war.

Then his own son was killed in combat in Afghanistan in 2010 and Kelly found the pain more scorching and paralyzing than he had ever imagined. But it also gave him an unbreakable bond with other family members of the fallen.

And so on Thursday, near the end of his speech at the unveiling of a memorial to 89 Marines and sailors from the 5th Marine Regiment killed in Afghanistan, Kelly made a personal offer of regret to the Gold Star family members in attendance — regret from someone who has suffered the same loss.

“From the bottom of my own broken heart, I’m sorry,” he said.

His voice was not as strong as it had been moments earlier, when he spoke of America’s enemies being possessed of “a reckless and mindless hate” and holding “extremist values that can never be reconciled with American values,” and must be opposed and defeated.

Like the others killed in Afghanistan, Lt. Robert Kelly had been a volunteer to military service, his father said. Now they all join an “unbroken list of heroes” from other wars fought by the 5th Regiment.

The sadness “will never go away,” Kelly told the families, but neither should the pride of knowing their loved ones answered their nation’s call at a time of peril.

When the ceremony was finished, after taps and the playing of “Anchors Aweigh” and the “Marines’ Hymn,” family members went to the memorial to look at the names, to trace the outline of the lettering.

Patricia Segovia, whose grandson was Lance Cpl. Richard Rivera, said the ceremony provided a trace of comfort. She was one of nine family members who traveled from Oxnard, Calif., for the unveiling. Rivera, 20, was killed by an Afghan soldier in August.

“We’re proud to be here, to know he died a hero,” said Segovia, who, like other members of the family, wore a button with a picture of a smiling Rivera.

Patty Schumacher, the mother of Lance Cpl. Victor Dew, came to the ceremony from Sacramento. When her son was killed, she was studying for a job in the pharmacy business. That ended the night in 2010 when the Marines notified her of her son’s death, she said.

Now her focus is on preserving the memory of her son’s unit — 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines. She worked on the “Boys of 3/5” page on Facebook and is arranging to talk to high school groups about her son and the others.

“They can’t be forgotten,” she said. “They just can’t.”

Robert Kelly was with the same battalion in 2010 when he was killed while leading a patrol. Like his father, he began as an enlisted Marine and, after graduating from college, became an officer. Father and son fought in Iraq, as did an older son, who is now a major.

John Kelly led Marines during the assault on Baghdad and Tikrit in 2003 and the battle in Fallujah in spring 2004. He later returned to Iraq as the top Marine. He’s now commanding general of the Miami-based Southern Command.

After his speech, after thanks were given to civic groups from southern Orange County that helped fund the memorial, Kelly waded into the crowd. He made sure to talk to Marines from his son’s battalion.

“They’re all my sons and my daughters,” he said.
Like, ya know, when that thing that makes you move, it has pistons and things, When your thingamajigy is providing power, you do not hear other peoples thingamajig when they are providing power.

HiTech

Offline gyrene81

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Re: Semper Fi, sir.
« Reply #1 on: June 09, 2013, 10:56:42 PM »
Semper Fi
jarhed  
Build a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day...
Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life. - Terry Pratchett

Offline Guppy35

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Re: Semper Fi, sir.
« Reply #2 on: June 09, 2013, 11:21:10 PM »
When my son and daughter died in a car wreck in 2005 we went to a group called "Compassionate Friends" for a while.  It was a group of parents who had lost kids.

There was a career military man there with his wife.  His son had died a day after my kids on the way to being deployed and was the first loss the unit had and they hadn't even left the States.  This  Dad had as part of his time in the service worked preparing the uniforms for the fallen.  He'd 'polished the brass' for other people's kids and he said he thought it gave him an idea of what it must be like.

Then his son died and he realized no matter how much he'd tried to understand that loss, he had no clue.  He had polished his son's brass for the funeral, and it didn't mean a thing to him.  His son was gone and he wasn't coming back.

My heart breaks for all of them. 

Dan/CorkyJr
8th FS "Headhunters

Offline Rich46yo

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Re: Semper Fi, sir.
« Reply #3 on: June 10, 2013, 05:11:26 PM »
All we can do is honor them and try to be the kind of people "they" would have thought worthy of their sacrifice. My kid joined the service and I worry already. I dont care how gung ho one is it becomes different when your child is the one in danger.

As a Policeman I had to be there to many times after wrecks and shootings or fires to comfort parents and care for their loved ones one final time. You remember them all you know and you pray you said and did the right things.

Its a terrible thing man. So bad I sat here staring at the screen for 10mins wondering if I should hit "post". The only words that can bring comfort to a grieving parent are Gods.
"flying the aircraft of the Red Star"