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JimLor

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Good article by Jack Valenti. This may seem odd to some or most of you, but the most emotional and gut-wrenching line for me in any movie is in Private Ryan when he looks at his wife at the end of the movie and asks if he's been a good man.

USA Today

December 21, 2006

Pg. 13

Does The Next Generation Value The Sacrifice Of War?

By Jack Valenti

There is a piece of sadness that the election failed to debate. It is the lamentable detachment by the young among us to freedom's history.

The press has reported that Clint Eastwood's Flags of Our Fathers, his masterly recreation of courage and fidelity to duty and country exhibited by young Marines in the bloodiest battle of World War II, has gone largely unattended by the youngsters of this day.

Watching this movie, watching ordinary young men performing extraordinary feats of heroism, broke my heart. They put to hazard their own lives not to win medals, but because their country was in danger. Why, then, a casual indifference to this story by so many young people? Maybe it's because we have been so benumbed by war, particularly this Iraq war, and because so few youngsters have worn a uniform. A movie about a battle a half a century ago carries no umbilical connection to them. That's understandable. But it ought not to be.

Perhaps some parents might want to do what I did years ago. When my son was about 14, I took him to Omaha Beach and the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial in France. We stood on the bluff above the beach in the same spot where Nazi troops had dug in. They had poured rifle, mortar and machine gunfire onto the U.S. troops clambering out of their landing crafts. They cut them down on the sand and in the water that seemed to still run red with the blood flowing so wantonly on that invasion day, June 6, 1944.

My son was struck with how close it was from the bluff to the beach. I said, "John it was very close, but remember those young boys never turned back, not one of them. They never turned back. They kept coming."

Then we walked a short distance to the American Cemetery. It is on land a grateful France granted to the United States for use in perpetuity. The Stars and Stripes flies over this cathedral of the dead. We turned our gaze to the grave markers, row upon row upon row, as far as the eye could see. There, I told my son, were buried 9,387 young men, many of whom were in between the ages of 18 and their early 20s, "just a few years older than you are right now," I said.

We walked among the markers laid out in serried ranks. I asked my son to read the inscriptions on those grave markers, the bland finalities of a young warrior's life — name, rank, outfit and the day he died — lives ended before they could be lived.

Finally, I stopped and looked full face at my son. "John, I want you to know why I brought you here." He looked puzzled. I said, "I wanted you to understand that these boys, who never knew you, nonetheless gave you the greatest gift one human can give another. They gave you the gift of freedom. They bought and paid for that gift in blood and bravery. They made it possible for you and millions like you to never have to test your own courage to see how you would react when the dagger is at the nation's belly and death stares you right in the face. You owe them a debt you will never be able to repay."

My son seemed genuinely moved. We never spoke about this again until one day years later, he phoned me. "Dad, last night I saw Saving Private Ryan. You were right. They never turned back, not a one. They kept coming." His voice trembled as he spoke.

Somehow, my own voice cracked a bit with gratitude. My son remembered. May God grant that every boy and girl in this free and loving land never forget the gift of young boys so long ago, a gift given to generations of Americans who were yet to be born.

Jack Valenti flew 51 combat missions in World War II as a pilot commander of a B-25 twin-engine attack bomber with the 12th Air Force in Europe. He also is former chairman of the Motion Picture Association of America.

 
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very moving story -

my dad was at D-day and he planned all his life to make it to the 50 year anniversery. Unfortunately he didn't live that long. He was also at the Battle of the Bulge. He really never talked to me about the war and even though a lifer in the military urged me to run away to Canada when my vietnam lottery sweepstakes rolled in.

My guess is that kids have about the same amount of concern for war as I did and my generation did. We know it sucks especially when we are engaged in senseless slaughter for an inane cause and are there with lousy support and don't know when we are coming home. Flags of our Fathers is a stunning movie and probaby should be seen with Clint's new Japanese slant movie (haven't seen it yet, but plan to) about the Japanese at Iwo. I wouldn't blame kids for not viewing the movie as much as I would hollywood, distribution channels and lack of advertising.

I have been to Normandy Beach - and Arlington Cemetery (I spent 18 months duty in The Garden) during the early 70's and can't tell you how many brave folks I planted there. One of the reasons I wont hardly go to a funeral any longer.

What does it all mean -- hell - I don't know, but I don't think kids are much different today than they were then. Not having the draft probably makes them a little less cognizant of what is going on because they aren't in jeopardy of going themselves. Reinstate the draft and I'm pretty sure they will wake up a tad.

 
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