Memorial Day Roll Call Honors 148,000 Veterans

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GILLIAN FLACCUS | May 24, 2009 01:53 PM EST | AP

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In this April 22, 2009 photo, Richard Blackaby stands at attention as a member of the honor guard carries the remains of a veteran during a internment ceremony at Riverside National Cemetery in Riverside, Calif. Blackaby, an Army veteran, is among more than 300 volunteers who honor veterans buried in the cemetery by reading their names leading up to Memorial Day each year. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

RIVERSIDE, Calif. — Abts, Richard. Adamski, Walter. Ahlman, Enoch.

The names are whisked away by the hot, gusting wind as soon as they are spoken, forgotten in the stream of the next name and the next name and the next name.

Fuller, Addison. Fuller, Mary. Furlong, John.

The story of America could be told through these names, tales of bravery and hesitation, of dreams achieved or deferred and of battles won and lost.

Taken alone, they are just words, identities stripped of place and time, stripped of rank and deeds and meaning.

But they are not taken alone. They are taken together _ 148,000 names, representing the entire veteran population of Riverside National Cemetery, a roll call of the dead read aloud over 10 days by more than 300 volunteers.

They read in pairs, rotating through 15-minute shifts in the beating sun, in the chilly desert night and in the pre-dawn hours thick with mosquitoes.

Some time on Memorial Day, they will read the last name on the 2,465th page.

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Some read for their country.

Others read for a father lost in battle or a beloved son cut down in his prime.

And one man reads for no one in particular _ except, maybe, for himself.

_____

Richard Blackaby was just 18 and fresh out of high school in 1966 when he was drafted for Vietnam. His father had served as a Seabee in the U.S. Navy during World War II and Blackaby was desperate to follow in his path.

But the Army said no: Blackaby had epilepsy and asthma and was unfit for service.

Twelve years later, Blackaby _ now married with three children _ reapplied to the Army and was accepted to the 4th Infantry Division as a forward observer.

But Vietnam was over and the eager recruit spent the next six years waiting for a war that never came. When he was honorably discharged in 1984, he was a sergeant but had never experienced combat, had never called in a real air strike or fired at a real target.

Nearly 25 years later, Blackaby's missed opportunity weighs on him as he patrols his self-selected battleground: Riverside, the nation's busiest national cemetery. While others gave their lives, Blackaby gives his time _ and a lot of it, nearly 30 hours a week.

Over the years, Blackaby has made his specialty here not among the remembered and the honored, but among the lost, the abandoned and the forgotten. The work seems to fit his story of missed chances and dashed dreams, his yearning to belong to something greater than himself.

Every day, the 60-year-old grandfather with the crinkly, blue-gray eyes slips on the black leather vest that's his personal uniform and stands at attention as the cemetery honors the cremated remains of dozens of abandoned or forgotten veterans.

Every day, he salutes as the National Guard reads the names off the simple wooden boxes filled with ashes.

Every day, he accepts the folded flag for soldiers he will never know _ and then gives it back for the next day's dead.

Dog tags engraved with the names of 145 forgotten veterans dangle from a thick key chain that never leaves his side, a different color for each branch of service. He knows the story behind almost every name.

"If I didn't do it, who would do it?" he says. "I mean, they have friends, they HAVE to have friends. They don't go through a whole lifetime and not have somebody that cares about them."

And, true to form, Blackaby reads names _ hundreds of them _ for the roll call project.

He reads for hours on overnight shifts in the cemetery's eerie gloom, the podium illuminated only by a floodlight. He reads during the weekend afternoons and late into a Saturday night to cover gaps in the schedule.

"Every one that we read off, I feel like I am probably doing their family a favor because they can't be here," he said.

"I'm reading off a whole litany of history. It kind of makes you wonder what's behind each name, what their life was like, what they did."

___

Lamborn, Richard. Lamphear, Everett. Landaker, Jared.

A gust of wind springs up and snatches the last name away.

No one notices it and later, even the volunteer readers won't recall the name of the young Marine or which one of them read it.

All they know is he was a 1st lieutenant, fifth from the bottom on page seven of 2,465.

___

Joe Landaker was the first person to touch his son, Jared, as he slipped into the world on his parents' bed on May 3, 1981, after 36 hours of labor.

From the beginning, Jared was special _ but not in the way most parents would want. His skull was compressed during birth and doctors warned that he might be mentally challenged.

During childhood, he kept falling off the growth chart. He barely topped out at 5-foot-8.

But Jared, who went by the nickname J-Rod, surprised everyone.

He took calculus in high school, knuckled down in college and got a degree in physics. He signed up for the Marines his sophomore year and graduated from officer training school in Quantico, Va., among the top five in his platoon of 80 men.

By fall of 2003, he was in flight school and on Aug. 18, 2006, Jared shipped out for Iraq as a Marine helicopter pilot flying a CH-46 Sea Knight with the famed HMM-364 Purple Foxes.

"He overcame so many adversities in his life, time after time," said his father, Joe.

On Feb. 7, 2007, a week before Jared was expected home in Big Bear City, his father was watching CNN at 5:30 a.m., getting ready to go to work, when he saw that a CH-46 chopper had been shot down near while on a medical mission.

Two months before, when two Marines died in a CH-46 crash, Jared had e-mailed his parents within two hours to let him know he was OK.

But this time, hours passed with no word.

"They said there were seven people on board, so I waited. I didn't go to work, waited and waited all day long, waited again for his e-mail or a phone call that he was all right," said Landaker, choking back tears. "It never did come."

At 4:15 p.m., a Marine captain, a chaplain and a 1st sergeant came to tell Landaker his son had died on his last mission before coming home.

Since that day, Landaker has been consumed with keeping his son's memory alive. He shares his story with anyone who will listen. He has memorized every detail of his son's life and death. He now knows that the boy who called him "Pops" took 58 seconds to lower his stricken chopper from 1,500 feet to 200 feet; seven seconds faster, and he might be alive today.

"The last thing I want to do is forget about Jared. He comes to my mind all the time, songs, things that you see," said Landaker. "When he was a baby, I'd give him a shower and I'd hold him up and those kind of memories come to mind all the time."

"He's so special to me," he said. "Those Iraqis have no idea who they killed."

The rows of grave markers are cool and smooth in the heat, their numbers obscured by tufts of grass that have crept around the edges of the stone.

Landaker walks, head bowed, along the rows of plots in Section 49B.

"3438. It should be right around here," he says, bending low.

Then Landaker falls to his knees, weeping.

The stories, the details don't matter now: There is no way to unbury the dead, to bring the CH-46 from 200 feet back to 1,500 feet, to reset the clock with seven extra seconds.

"Well, all right son," he says. "Take care, son."

And so he volunteers to help call the roll at Riverside. He will not have an opportunity to read his own son's name, but at least he can ensure that the sons of others are not forgotten.

___

The heat beats down on the volunteers. A dozen spectators press themselves into any sliver of shade _ a tree, the thin shadow of the flagpole, an awning.

In the shade near the sign-in booth, Richard Blackaby and Joe Landaker stand ready to take the podium, two strangers awkwardly chatting before their shared 15 minutes of service.

Landaker wears a white T-shirt printed with Jared's photo; Blackaby, for once, has shed his black leather vest for a dark suit adorned with military ribbons and an American flag pin.

They discover a bittersweet bond: Blackaby escorted Jared's coffin to his military funeral at the cemetery two years before. The two men embrace, then step to the podium.

The names pass between them like fragile treasures.

White, Clark. White, Mary. Whito, Russell.

Their 15 minutes pass, and they step down. Landaker, eyes red with tears, has another piece of his puzzle, another connection _ another story to cling to.

But Blackaby is not finished. He steps forward again, ready to read for those who will never have the love of a father like Jared's. He will be there until 2:30 a.m. on this muggy Sunday and back again the next day and the next day and the next.

He is patrolling the boundaries of the past, filling gaps in this American story and in his own life _ one name at a time.

RIVERSIDE, Calif. — Abts, Richard. Adamski, Walter. Ahlman, Enoch. The names are whisked away by the hot, gusting wind as soon as they are spoken, forgotten in the stream of the next name and t...
RIVERSIDE, Calif. — Abts, Richard. Adamski, Walter. Ahlman, Enoch. The names are whisked away by the hot, gusting wind as soon as they are spoken, forgotten in the stream of the next name and t...
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- Disdain I'm a Fan of Disdain 10 fans permalink
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Thank you. Most of us appreciate your services.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 AM on 05/25/2009
- MadHeart I'm a Fan of MadHeart 126 fans permalink

To my uncle, who served honorably in WWII, the only war in which the US actually fought fascism instead of aggressive "wars of prevention" and for resources. Sadly, he wound up working for McDonnell-Douglas, part of the military-industrial complex, in spite of Eisenhower's warning.

I remain a worker for peace and it's a sad day indeed to remember the wasted lives in wars I've seen in my lifetime of those who fell into the trap of believing they were "fighting for our rights" and innocent civilians who were killed in those countries. To what end, to what end?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 05/25/2009
- JulieSA I'm a Fan of JulieSA 165 fans permalink
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Today is not for politics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:37 AM on 05/25/2009
- ohiomark I'm a Fan of ohiomark 118 fans permalink

Our fallen veterans fought for the right for people to bash their own country and for the people who wave the flag and everyone in between.

This is a day to honor them.

Freedom is a wonderful thing. Let's enjoy it while we can.

God bless our troops!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 AM on 05/25/2009
- rroy I'm a Fan of rroy 8 fans permalink

On Sep't 17th,I will celebrate my 84th birthday.During my lifespan I have served in the military in two wars,and saw a fair amount of combat in one-WW2 Pacific Theatre-and relatively little in the other-Korea-.
During my lifespan,I have also seen our enemies become our allies,and former allies become our enemies,along with people who have never done a thing to my country become victims of our misgided zealotry.
In other words,human beings,all factions of the Species Homo Erectus, have never run out of reasons for wanting to kill,maim,and cause extreme miseries to others of the species.
The way I see it,they never will !!!

So,I guess of the few certainties in life,the fact that we will always have memorial days is one of them!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 05/25/2009
- Disdain I'm a Fan of Disdain 10 fans permalink
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Thank you. Thank you four your services and sacrifices to our great nation. Without men and women like you we would not enjoy the freedoms we have today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:15 AM on 05/25/2009
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What a powerful post! And what incredible perspective.
Thank you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 AM on 05/25/2009
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Very well stated. People are quick to forget that Saddam was our friend while he fought against Iran for 8 years. It was only until he invaded Kuwait and threatened our oil supply that he became enemy number one. The best way, in my opinion, to honor our armned forces is to remove them out of Iraq and Afghanistan. Enough blood has been shed there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 AM on 05/25/2009
- yakaria I'm a Fan of yakaria 16 fans permalink
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Thank you for your service to our country!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 05/25/2009
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Thank you for your long and extraordinary service! :-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 05/25/2009
- raker I'm a Fan of raker 74 fans permalink

I detest war euphemisms like "the fallen" to mean people who were killed in war. Respect the dead by remembering their lives and deaths honestly. I loath moralistic Hollywood names for immoral military conflicts, like Operation Iraqi Freedom. It's pornographic. It's grossly disrespectful to sanitize and disnify the misery of war. And I say to hell with the WW2 vets who are either silent on torture or applaud it. The not-so-gre­at-after-a­ll generation. Happy Memorial Day.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 AM on 05/25/2009
- k6007 I'm a Fan of k6007 230 fans permalink
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Here's to all our brave men and women who've given their lives in the service of this country. From the honor that fuelled the RevolutionaryWar, to the unknown trechery that was irq.

Long Live America, the land of the free and the home of the Brave.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 AM on 05/25/2009

Thank you for your wonderful post. Nice sentiment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:47 AM on 05/25/2009
- JulieSA I'm a Fan of JulieSA 165 fans permalink
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No, it's not. Today is not for politics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:33 AM on 05/25/2009
- Disdain I'm a Fan of Disdain 10 fans permalink
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Here here!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:15 AM on 05/25/2009
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Thank you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 AM on 05/25/2009
- Defunct I'm a Fan of Defunct 13 fans permalink

Operation Failure

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:12 AM on 05/25/2009
- Defunct I'm a Fan of Defunct 13 fans permalink

Operation Failed Freedom is more like it.

This memorial day my thoughts go to those families who have had loved ones killed in an illegal war. And for those who still have loved ones fighting this illegal war of choice. Instead of the war ending more will die for the occupation of a sovereign nation. More have died than those on 9/11. The murderers walking free bragging about their choice to send innocent humans to die for their whimsical desires.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 AM on 05/25/2009
- whatthel I'm a Fan of whatthel 250 fans permalink
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co-sign

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:22 AM on 05/25/2009
- JulieSA I'm a Fan of JulieSA 165 fans permalink
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Today is not about politics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:58 AM on 05/25/2009
- NuMexMama I'm a Fan of NuMexMama 3 fans permalink
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Please don't forget the "Forgotton War" - The Korean 'Conflict' - so called. My brother Harry G. Johnson served there as a U. S. Army Combat Engineer - he came home - he still has shrapnel coming out of his skull. Thanks to all the 'forgotten' Veterans who served our country in Korea.

Also honors to my other 3 brothers who served our country between 1960 - 1976.

God Bless all Veterans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 AM on 05/25/2009
- Disdain I'm a Fan of Disdain 10 fans permalink
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We may not all know how to show if but we are grateful for the sacrifices. Thank you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 05/25/2009
- glockman I'm a Fan of glockman 39 fans permalink
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For my grandfather who fought in Italy in WWII as part of Operation Shingle.

For my uncle Dee, a Korean Vet and POW of that conflict who once told me he ate dirt to stop the hunger.

And for my father, also a Korean Vet. And the only one of the three still alive.

I love and thank them, along with all other veterans. I may not always support how politicians treat the men and women of the armed forces, or the silly conflicts they fabricate that get these men and women killed. But I'll never look down on a vet who serves honorably. Remember, they serve under the direction of our civilian leaders. Take out your frustration on them, not the military.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:58 AM on 05/25/2009
- Disdain I'm a Fan of Disdain 10 fans permalink
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Ditto.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 05/25/2009
- dwright I'm a Fan of dwright 295 fans permalink
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First, I would like to honor the soldiers for their bravery and commitment.
Specifically,
I would like to honor my dad who fought in WWII in the Pacific - he was wounded twice; once on Tinian then on Saipan. He joined the day after his high school graduation.

I would like to honor one of my ancestors who fought in the Civil War with the Ohio Regiment - he was injured in Antietum yet went home to farm and lived a long life.

I would like to honor all of my friends and neighbors who fought and lost much in the Vietnam War.

I would like to honor one of my former students that is a marine right now. He frequently came back to talk to my high school students about the war/s in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:43 AM on 05/25/2009
- sufi66 I'm a Fan of sufi66 30 fans permalink
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Only one war justifies any of these deaths: WW2. The rest were political fabrications devised by sick politicians in concert with a gullible public.

Memorial Day is always a sad affair. Yet we still fail to learn that the guns of war only benefit the makers of the guns.

Looked at another way, imagine all the money that could could have funded real public concerns (health, social research, and food to name a few) instead of thrown down the rat holes of general's pensions and pompous egos.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:59 AM on 05/25/2009
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Sadly yes! 12 years ago I photographed a small city Mem Day parade. I was all choked up and goose bumpy watching the diverse Americans, and their Patriotism­..........­......
12 years later; in my 8th decade of life I tuned in the National Mall Memorial Service on "public"?TV, last night. I couldn't watch it for long.
I have never witnessed such a maudlin, display of denial and lemming like mass bahavior in my life.
( I can't speak for individuals, but for the "leaders", who were stoking illiciting, hypnotizing, the emotional response of the crowd.)
I'm sure there was genuine grief, but I perceived also a displacement of recognition, that OUR FREEDOM, which these "fallen heros" were supposed to be defending, is rapidly becoming a myth!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 AM on 05/25/2009
- Dredd I'm a Fan of Dredd 15 fans permalink
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Veteran Andy Rooney has a futuristic view for a Memorial Days.

http://blogdredd.blogspot.com/2009/05/andy-rooneys-awesome-memorial-day.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:41 AM on 05/25/2009
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 136 fans permalink

At least on Memorial Day, I hope the nation remembers the thousands of servicemen who died because Bush and Cheney lied us into a war with Iraq. At least for me it is not enough to praise those who did their duty, if we do not also criticise those who stupidly and misguidedly got them killed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:55 AM on 05/25/2009
- JulieSA I'm a Fan of JulieSA 165 fans permalink
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Today is not about politics. The other 364 days are. You blew it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:56 AM on 05/25/2009
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 136 fans permalink

As a veteran, coming from a long line of veterans, I have the right to speak out against the criminals who have caused the needless deaths of my fellow veterans, who have ruined our standing in the world, who have caused the needless deaths of so many civilians, and who have ruined our economy. If you don't like it, tough.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:12 PM on 05/25/2009
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