Memorial Day is a time for Americans to connect with
our national history and core values by honoring those who gave their lives
fighting for this country.
It’s said that this special day to salute fallen
Americans was born during the Civil War in Mississippi when a group of grieving
mothers and wives who were placing flowers on graves in a Confederate cemetery
noticed a neglected graveyard for Union soldiers.
Knowing these ignored tombstones marked the resting
place of young men equally loved and missed, the Southern women cleaned the
Union cemetery and decorated the grave sites with flowers. In 1882, Decoration
Day became a national holiday. Later, the name was changed to Memorial Day.
In 1996, Carmella LaSpada, founder of No Greater Love, a nonprofit organization dedicated to memorializing fallen soldiers and
victims of terrorism, met with a group of schoolchildren on the Mall in
Washington, D.C. When she asked them what Memorial Day meant, they said,
“That’s the day the pool opens.”
Deciding that children should know why they’re free
and who paid for their freedom, she generated an idea for a moment of
remembrance, which Congress adopted in 2000. Today, you and your family can
honor the National Moment of Remembrance by pausing at 3 pm local time to observe
in your own way one minute of silence to contemplate or pray in honor of our
fallen members of the military.
During my minute I’m going to think about and thank
the thousands of American troops who are in harm’s way in Iraq and Afghanistan.
About the author: Michael Josephson is one of the
nation’s most sought-after and quoted ethicists. Founder and president of
Josephson Institute and its CHARACTER COUNTS! project, he has conducted
programs for more than 100,000 leaders in government, business, education,
sports, law enforcement, journalism, law, and the military. Mr. Josephson is
also an award-winning radio commentator.
This article was published by the Josephson
Institute.
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