VOICE ONE:
Welcome to THIS IS AMERICA in VOA Special English. I'm Faith Lapidus
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Steve Ember. Memorial Day 2007 is our subject this week.
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VOICE ONE:
Personal sacrifice and service to a nation might seem like the last things
Memorial Day is about.
For lucky workers, the holiday means the freedom of a three-day weekend, the
traditional start of the summer travel season. For many businesses, the Memorial
Day weekend means a time to lower prices to get more people to come in.
Yet, across America, Memorial Day still holds meaning as a day to remember
the men and women who have died in military service.
This is the fifth Memorial Day since the start of the Iraq war. More than
3,400 American troops have died in Iraq since March of 2003. About four hundred
have died in Afghanistan since military operations began there in October of
2001.
VOICE TWO:
Cities and towns across the United States hold Memorial Day events. And while
the holiday has a serious meaning, the observances often include family
entertainment in addition to events like military parades.
In Fayetteville, North Carolina, the Glory Days celebration includes a
bicycle race, an apple-pie eating competition and music. Fayetteville has a
strong connection with the military. The city is neighbors with the Army base at
Fort Bragg and Pope Air Force Base.
VOICE ONE:
Ann Zetterstrom is a retired Army captain. Her plans for Memorial Day include
attending a ceremony at Freedom Memorial Park in Fayetteville. She says she has
been very much looking forward to this holiday with her family.
Her husband, Erik, is a lieutenant colonel in the Army. This will be the
first Memorial Day that he spends with their two-year-old daughter, Britta. He
returned home in February after twenty-two months in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Ann Zetterstrom says it is a great relief to have her husband home safely.
She thinks it is easier to be the one deployed, even in harm's way, than to be
the one waiting and worrying, she says. But she knew what she was signing up for
when she married another soldier.
Being the mother of a soldier, however, is a different story. Her son, Brian,
is a lieutenant in the Army. He is currently stationed in Germany. But he is
preparing for deployment to Iraq in the fall.
His mom supported his interest in military service. But, she says, "I just
got one man home safe and, now, here goes the other one."
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VOICE TWO:
On May 20, a ceremony called a "Time of Remembrance" took place on the
grounds of the Washington Monument. The event brought together more
than 3,000 family members and friends of service members killed in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
The children of those service members received a Gold Medal of Remembrance.
The event also recognized families of those killed in military service
throughout American history.
This was the second year that the ceremony has been held. It was established
by the White House Commission on Remembrance.
VOICE ONE:
In the year two thousand Congress passed a law to establish a National Moment
of Remembrance on Memorial Day. The law asks Americans wherever they are to stop
for one minute at three o'clock in the afternoon in an act of national unity.
Yet Congress created some disunity when it moved Memorial Day to the last
Monday in May to create a three-day weekend. That happened under a 1971
law, the National Holiday Act. Some people support a campaign to return Memorial
Day to its traditional day of observance -- May 30.
Memorial Day began as a way to remember soldiers killed in the Civil War. On
May 30, 1868, flowers were placed on the graves of Union and Confederate
soldiers at Arlington National Cemetery. The war to prevent the Confederate
states of the South from leaving the Union was fought from 1861 to 1865.
VOICE TWO:
Arlington National Cemetery is a military burial ground but also a final
resting place for people of national and historical importance. Each year more
than four million people visit the cemetery. It is located in Arlington County,
Virginia, across the Potomac River from Washington. Next to the cemetery is the
Pentagon, the Defense Department headquarters.
Part of the tradition of an American military funeral is the playing of a
bugle call known as taps. Taps is also played at Arlington and other burial
grounds during ceremonies on Memorial Day.
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VOICE ONE:
The Washington capital area has a number of military memorials.
At the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, people look for the names of family members
or friends. The memorial lists the names of more than 58,000 Americans who were
killed or declared missing-in-action.
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial, known as the Wall, opened in 1982. Two black,
shiny stone walls, each about seventy-six meters long, are set into the earth.
They meet to form a wide V.
Many visitors leave flowers or personal remembrances. To copy a name, they
rub a pencil on paper over the letters cut into the stone.
Nearby is a statue of three soldiers. They are looking toward the names.
Another statue honors the service of women in the war.
The Vietnam War ended in 1975. Many soldiers coming home faced the anger of
Americans who opposed the war. So a Vietnam veteran named Jan Scruggs organized
an effort to remember those who never returned. The result is the Wall.
VOICE TWO:
Near the Vietnam memorial is the Korean War Veterans Memorial. It opened in
1995.
The Korean War lasted from 1950 to 1953. The memorial honors those who died
and those who survived. "Freedom Is Not Free" is the message cut into the wall
above a Pool of Remembrance. There are listings of the numbers of American and
United Nations forces killed, wounded, captured or missing, more than two
million in all.
On one side of the Korean War Veterans Memorial is a
stone walkway. It lists the names of the twenty-two countries that sent troops
to Korea under United Nations command. On the other side is a shiny stone wall.
Sandblasted into the wall are images from photographs of more than 2,500 support
troops.
There are statues of nineteen soldiers who look like they are moving across a
battlefield. The statues are gray and lifelike, although a little bigger than
life size. Artist Frank Gaylord made them out of stainless steel. They capture
the eye and the imagination.
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VOICE ONE:
The newest of the major memorials in Washington is the National World War Two
Memorial. It opened in 2004 between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington
Monument on the National Mall.
The memorial is a large, open area built of bronze and granite. In the
center, at ground level, is a round pool. Water shoots from a circle of
fountains in the middle.
Around the pool are fifty-six stone pillars. They represent each of the
American states and territories at the time of the war, plus the District of
Columbia.
On two tall arches are the names of where the fighting took place. One says
Atlantic; the other says Pacific. The United States entered the war after Japan
bombed the naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December seventh, ninety
forty-one.
Sixteen million men and women served in the American military between 1941
and 1945. More than 400,000 of them never came home.
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VOICE TWO:
Our program was written by Caty Weaver and produced by Mario Ritter. Internet
users can find archives of transcripts and audio files of our programs at
voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve Ember.
VOICE ONE:
And I'm Faith Lapidus. We hope you can join us again next week for THIS IS
AMERICA in VOA Special English.
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