Dear Blick, Felix, X-air, and WeatherCat users who remember the true meaning of Memorial day.
I've never had the opportunity to visit the battlefields of the Civil War. Perhaps my trusty wagon will give me that opportunity someday. I have spent some time in France and had the good fortune of hearing the stories of some of the World War II veterans. My Dad as a 15 year old boy served in the French resistance and was part of at least one really important operation.
Yet my Dad's stories was most poignant when he spoke about the sacrifices of World War I. For France, the greatest disaster of the war was the battle of Verdun:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verdun#Battle_of_Verdun_.28First_World_War.29 The utterly callous Germans deliberately attacked the fortress that the France would hold on to at all costs. Verdun had fallen in the war of 1870, just 40 years earlier, and that opened the door to the surrender of Paris in that war. The German strategy was literally to "bleed France to death." As all things in World War I, the strategy didn't work and the Germans did plenty of bleeding of their own.
My Dad must have seen Verdun's "bayonet trench" when it still looked like a line of bayonets with the troops manning them buried alive underneath:
http://www.worldwar1.com/heritage/bayonet.htmIn 1990, my uncle took me to the memorials and one was so mind boggling and yet moving at the same time. The bayonet trench is now covered and I suspect some of the bayonets had rusted away before a cover was provided. My uncle took me also to Fort Douaumont and a monument that I couldn't believe at the time - the Douaumont Ossuary:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douaumont_OssuaryAs we approached the building, I saw what was plainly human remains - lots of them. I couldn't believe my eyes and until this day I had never checked to see how many human remains were housed in this building. According to Wikipedia, the skeletal remains over 130,000 unidentified combatants of both nations are housed in this monument. It is staggering expression of the human folly of war and the stubbornness of nations and peoples to continue a pointless struggle.
If you get a chance to visit this monument - literally, you'll never forget it.
Edouard