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Home » Memorial Day should also honor families of those who made Ultimate Sacrifice
Never forget ...

Memorial Day should also honor families of those who made Ultimate Sacrifice

Don Brunell

Don C. Brunell is a business analyst, writer, and retired president of the Association of Washington Business. He now lives in Vancouver, Washington, and can be contacted at [email protected].

May 23, 2024
Don Brunell

On Memorial Day, we traditionally honor Americans in our military who gave their lives in battle for our country. It is called the “Ultimate Sacrifice,” and they died protecting our freedoms and keeping us safe.

In recent times, we have acknowledged our citizens in uniform who continue to suffer with permanent combat emotional and physical scars. They are alive largely because our battlefield survival is improving dramatically, and our accompanying rehabilitation expands.

This Memorial Day we are thankful they have not made the Ultimate Sacrifice.

National Defense University Press reports: “Analysis of combat casualty care data from 2001 to 2017 for the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq showed decreased case fatality rates—a measure of the overall lethality of the battlefield—to 8.6% from 20% and to 10.1% from 20.4%, respectively. In addition, data reveals the use of tourniquets, blood transfusions, and rapid evacuation translated to a 44.2% mortality reduction.”

However, there is another group of Americans we should remember, honor, and include in our prayers on Memorial Day—those who have been on the “flip side” of history.

Our country’s military widows and orphans are the result of those who made the Ultimate Sacrifice. Back home they are single parents coping with the loneliness, household budgets and absence of a mother or father.

During World War II, there were 292,000 American service members, including 543 women, killed in action. The impact on families was devastating. About 183,000 children lost their fathers in battles overseas. Young children had no recollection of their dads and depended on family stories, mementos, pictures, and letters to provide a link that memory could not.

There was a shortage of teachers from those either drafted or volunteered for military service. Children became latchkey kids who wore door keys around their necks and often returned to empty homes or apartments.

Encyclopedia.com reported widows blunted the emotional hardship in a variety of ways. They sought comfort by moving in with family members. In extreme cases, widows overwhelmed with grief succumbed to alcoholism, suffered severe bouts of depression, or committed suicide.

In our neighborhood, a bomber pilot was shot down and killed leaving behind a pregnant wife and 1-year-old son. Fortunately, the mom eventually found a wonderful veteran who became a great husband, father, and stepfather.

American children were more fortunate than Europeans. About 13 million children became war orphans at the end of World War II. The numbers are more sobering considering the Nazis murdered 1.5 million children, mostly Jewish, during the Holocaust.

Memorial Day is Monday May 27 and is a federal holiday. It originally was observed on May 30, a date chosen because it was not the anniversary of any Civil War battle. In 1971, Congress passed the Uniform Monday Holiday Act, which moved Memorial Day to the last Monday in May. It has created a convenient three-day weekend, and 44 million people will travel in 2024.

It needs to move back to May 30; and it needs to be to thank those who made the Ultimate Sacrifice, continue to suffer from war injuries, and the millions of widows and families who have lost loved ones in war.

We must never forget.

Don C. Brunell is a business analyst, writer, and retired president of the Association of Washington Business. He now lives in Vancouver, Washington, and can be contacted at [email protected].

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