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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- mattwin I'm a Fan of mattwin 2 fans permalink

We will have more casualties in the coming months because the Senate chose to protect us from allowing terrerists to reside in our jails and voted down funding for our troops for June, July and August.

Those who support that policy please bear the burden of your support of the policies that denied our soldiers in the face of our common enemy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 AM on 05/25/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 130 fans permalink
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For those who erroneously think our troops in Korea are "protecting" South Korea here are a few facts.

The Republic of Korea Armed Forces is one of the largest standing armed forces in the world . It has a about 3,700,000 soldiers as of 200. 655,000 are active and the rest are reserves.

The ROK military forces are responsible for maintaining the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the South Korea, but often engage in international humanitarian and disaster-relief efforts .It had participated in various peacekeeping operations, and counter-terrorism operations. In the past 50 years, the South Koreans have often supplied boots on the ground for our military operations.

Our troops in South Korea are there for political and diplomatic purposes. It's been that way since the 1960's.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 AM on 05/25/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 130 fans permalink
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OOPS - wrong thread

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:29 AM on 05/25/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 130 fans permalink
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It's a kind of broody day for me. Except for Grenada, I've managed to lose a friend, a lover, a wife or a relative in every conflict we've had since I was born during the Korean War. and, that doesn't count the non-combatants. I still have a friend missing from the Twin Towers. He was there. His family knows that for certain. Now, he is just gone. Not a trace. As someone who has kept the military at arms length since the early seventies, I would think that could hardly be possible given how blessedly few Americans have died in Foreign Wars. But, it seems that I'm not even unique. Six degrees of separation and all.

It's important to remember our soldier dead today. But, let us also remember how unbelievably fortunate we as a nation have been. The World Wars hardly touched our soil. My missing friend joins at least 100,000 missing in Iraq since we invaded. We have had troops stationed in many places around the world, in places like Germany and Korea, for better than 50 years. And, we have managed to avoid the "inevitable wars", the one with Russia and the one with China during that whole time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 AM on 05/25/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 130 fans permalink
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While we remember our dead, remember the dead of our allies. They died in the millions, paying that price for us much as for themselves. And. spare a thought for the poor stupes on the other side who had no more idea why they were in harms way than our troops did. Finally, remember the missing, the civilian dead who never get medals, almost never get eulogies and rarely get a thought

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:01 AM on 05/25/2009
- sufi66 I'm a Fan of sufi66 31 fans permalink
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We have caused the death of many beyond our borders-----mostly for dubious, political reasons.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 AM on 05/25/2009
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Very moving. You should do this for a living.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 AM on 05/25/2009
- mrbiggles I'm a Fan of mrbiggles 2 fans permalink
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Thank you

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 05/25/2009
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You made me cry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 PM on 05/25/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 130 fans permalink
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:35 AM on 05/25/2009
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Dam' you, it's too much.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 05/25/2009
- bobdob I'm a Fan of bobdob 18 fans permalink

148,000 American veterans who died defending the very American principles that dick Cheney is now attacking and attempting to subvert. On this Memorial Day, let us remember those who fought and died defending justice, decency and the rule of law. dick Cheney doesn't deserve to live in the country these patriots fought to defend.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:51 AM on 05/25/2009
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Late last night, I should say early this morning, I read a post from the widow of a WWII vet. She made the argument that torture was considered something that separated us from our enemies. They did it and we did not. We considered ourselves principled nations that had a code of conduct that dignified our defensive intent. She posited that when we sink to torture, we have dishonored our beloved fallen soldiers who fought the battle to prevent barbarism from virally destroying our nations--yes, nations. It is what made our war just. We were fighting to halt barbarism. We were not our enemy.

I sense the A-bomb arguments coming, but I would just like to keep this humble woman's voice alive in our discourse. Torture disgraces our troops, it is wrong and makes us no better than our enemy.

Her name was BlackWidowPilot and I would like to honor her sacrifice this Memorial Day and join the civilized nations, citizens, and humane individuals in denouncing torture as

BAD FOR OUR TROOPS.

Deb

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:32 AM on 05/25/2009
- EconPadawan I'm a Fan of EconPadawan 287 fans permalink
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Here, here. Co-sign. If we trade our morals for sake of security what do we have left? A nation willing to stop at nothing to preserve the illusion of civility?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:19 AM on 05/25/2009
- NMdonkey I'm a Fan of NMdonkey 3 fans permalink

Especially now, in hindsight, it seems even more insulting to our intelligence to refer to these wars as "Iraqi Freedom" and "Enduring Freedom." My heart goes out to the families of the fallen, both American and Iraqis. But it now appears that "Enduring Freedom" may refer to the Bush Administration who pulled it all off without being held accountable for any of the atrocities.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:34 AM on 05/25/2009
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Enduring Freedom = Afghanistan

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 AM on 05/25/2009
- NMdonkey I'm a Fan of NMdonkey 3 fans permalink

I'm sorry, but I feel that Afghanistan is a lost cause, too. We cannot "win" there-- no one in history could. We are also killing innocent people there. I feel we should have focused on the search for Bin Laden after 9/11, but he is still hiding out somewhere (if not dead of natural causes by now). I have the utmost respect for the men and women making sacrifices for our country. And I worry about the ones who suffer from PTSD and brain injuries, how they will cope when they return.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:18 AM on 05/25/2009
- stella801 I'm a Fan of stella801 22 fans permalink
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This is a day we should all honor our fallen and wounded and be thankful for their service. This is not the time to inject our politics and ideologies. Those kids and fallen soldiers had to put their politics and ideologies aside (especially during the draft).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 AM on 05/25/2009

Why not? Its politics that got them killed, plain and simple. I'm not thankful for people dying so plutocrats, politicians, and despots can keep raping the world under the guise of freedom or some other "godly" designated cause. We should talk about why these people were sent to be slaughtered or their deaths were truly in vain. Silently "honoring" them only ensures more people will die for nothing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:33 AM on 05/25/2009
- stella801 I'm a Fan of stella801 22 fans permalink
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Agreed. I was just trying to keep the tone "nice" for one day. I lost someone in this war and want Memorial Day to be just that.

Like I said above, these kids don't have a say once they are locked in. I'm from the Viet Nam generation and I know the politics of war and the utter loss because of it. My heart goes out to all of those who have perished and their families for the senseless acts of our government and the corporations that control it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:45 AM on 05/25/2009
- glockman I'm a Fan of glockman 41 fans permalink
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So keep the politics where they belong, with the civilian directors of the military (president and congress), and away from those who selflessly do what they're asked.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 AM on 05/25/2009

I agree, Stella.

I fight back tears each Memorial Day thinking of my cousin Mike, who was blown up while he was helping out at a police recruitment event in Iraq three years ago. He was smart, funny, warm, the father of teenage girls, a loving husband. We are utterly heartbroken.

Reading rants about politicians diminishes the honor due to him and the others who served our country. This is MY opinion as one who has lost a cherished family member. To those of you who are not in my shoes, please save your attacks for tomorrow.

Today is about honoring our heros, and that's it. Please everyone, try to show some class today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:28 AM on 05/25/2009

Well wriiten and moving.
Thank You

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 AM on 05/25/2009
- stella801 I'm a Fan of stella801 22 fans permalink
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What happened to the post you responded to? I read it and agree with you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 AM on 05/25/2009

To every man and woman in uniform who serves or has served this country, I say thank you.

Our great Republic has worked for 233 years, and its freedom has been preserved because your unselfish sacrifice.

May God Bless You!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 AM on 05/25/2009
- Montgriz I'm a Fan of Montgriz 36 fans permalink

Iraq, Viet Nam, Aghanistan­...these are not preserving American freedoms..­.in fact, they have limited it....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:00 AM on 05/25/2009
- dwright I'm a Fan of dwright 311 fans permalink
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Just remember that it is not the soldiers that got us into those wars. I don't think this is the right venue to have your discussion, but I do agree with you that freedoms were lost especially in America, but it was the Bush/Cheney Gang not the soldiers that took away our rights.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:46 AM on 05/25/2009
- HamletsMill I'm a Fan of HamletsMill 243 fans permalink
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As a veteran (1st Lieutenant 1969-1971) , I thank you. But our "great Republic" is NOT working. It is owned by the Military Industrial Complex and the Wall Street protected banks who run our politics. The blood of every soldier sent into harm's way for lies and money is upon every American for eternity now both in this life and the next.

President Eisenhower, Supreme Allied Commander in WWII, warned us. As a nation we did not listen. We sold the soul of our nation for thirty pieces of silver.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8y06NSBBRtY

Each one a Christ crucified by unspeakably godless men.

Memorial Day is unspeakably sad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 AM on 05/25/2009
- GrkAm I'm a Fan of GrkAm 19 fans permalink
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This is a weekend for remembering all those who served in keeping our country safe! They paid the price either by their time, or the ultimate price of their lives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:44 AM on 05/25/2009
- teron678 I'm a Fan of teron678 126 fans permalink
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OUR*

anyways ........ you're f00lish to believe you have any freedom ..... as time goes by your imaginary freedom decreases ........ evidence FISA, PATRIOT ACT .. wonder what's next ... in the name of protecting your freedom ... SUCKERS!!!!!!!!! .. LMAO

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 AM on 05/25/2009
- teron678 I'm a Fan of teron678 126 fans permalink
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this was a response to "MrRight77"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 AM on 05/25/2009
- swo68 I'm a Fan of swo68 14 fans permalink

I sure hope this year someone explains to Obama what Memorial Day is about.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:39 AM on 05/25/2009
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Yeah. Id like to see DICK Cheney go to each and every family of all the 5,000+ soldiers that were killed in Iraq, and appologize to them for sending their Sons, Daughters, Mothers, or Fathers, to fight for something that was totally false.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 AM on 05/25/2009
- swo68 I'm a Fan of swo68 14 fans permalink

Not sure where you get 5k+ from. It's more like 4,200, and that includes the ones dying under Obama's watch.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 AM on 05/25/2009
- MrRight77 I'm a Fan of MrRight77 2 fans permalink
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THANKS TO ALL ARE TROOPS FOR ARE FREEDOM!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 AM on 05/25/2009
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