By Ben Stein on 6.6.05 @ 12:09AM
They often range from age five to fifteen.
On the Saturday night before Memorial Day, the cost of the war
on terrorism were wearing red T-shirts. They were in a small
ballroom on the second floor of the Crystal City Doubletree Hotel
in Northern Virginia, within sight of the Pentagon.
There were about 250 of them. Children of men and women who had
been killed in the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan and in
training. They were maybe from age five to fifteen. They were
handsome. They were pretty. They were cute. They had haunted eyes,
some of them, and some of them cried. One family had five kids, and
the oldest, a beautiful 15-year-old girl, could not stop
crying.
They were being watched over by about thirty mentors, who were
good-looking men and women from the Air Force, Navy, Marines, and
Army Honor Guard at Arlington National Cemetery. They serve as
mentors and guides for the kids as the kids mourn their loss.
The kids had just gotten back from a field trip and were in a
giddy, but still haunted mood, as they ate pizza. I spoke to them,
hugged them, smeared my tears away as I could. I told them how
pretty they were if they were girls and how brave and handsome they
looked if they were boys.
A spectacularly cute little red-headed girl named Dawn slithered
around me and pretended to be a dog to be patted. Or is it
petted?
I told the kids their parents had died to save this country, to
give kids in Iraq and Afghanistan the chance to choose their lives
and to have the freedoms we take for granted. I told them there
were not enough words in the English language to thank them enough
for what they had done. For the sacrifice they had made. I told
them their fathers and mothers had died doing God's work.
Then I signed autographs, mostly on the kids' T- shirts for
about an hour.
I WISH I WERE ELOQUENT enough to tell you how brave these kids were
and what a price they are paying. To lose a father while the rest
of us complain about taxes and the stock market and the price of
real estate. Quite a sight. Quite a concept.
How can we possibly repay them? How conceivably? There is
nothing we can do. But be grateful and keep them in our hearts
forever.
I walked with my friend Marina Malenic, ace in WMD, to a far
larger ballroom, where the widows, mothers and fathers, fiancees,
widowers maybe, of the men and women who were killed were
gathered.
I sat with the head of the great organization, Tragedy
Assistance Program for Survivors, Bonnie Carroll, who conceived of
TAPS when her AF general husband was killed in training in Alaska
many years ago. Maybe it was 1998. She is a pretty, extremely smart
woman, with a heart as big as a Cadillac. We sat also with several
women who had lost their husbands. They were all brave, all sharing
their experience, strength, and hope with each other. One woman
next to me said I did not need to feel sorry for her on the death
of her husband in the Mosul bombing. "I got to live with him for 22
years," she said. "I was blessed."
Everyone there wore a button with a photo of the man who had
died. The men looked impossibly healthy, fit, optimistic. They
could not possibly be dead, and yet they were.
Several wives spoke of their last talks with their husbands,
about what it was like when the Chaplain came up the driveway. Some
read letters from their husbands talking about how happy they were
to be helping the Iraqi children.
Bonnie spoke, perhaps the most moving speech I have ever heard
in person, a difficult act to follow. She used to work with Reagan
and maybe that explains her amazing ability to get in touch with
truth.
Then I spoke and gave a little talk about how we could live
without the stock market, could get on without Hollywood or new
cars, but could not last a week without our armed forces and the
armed forces could not last a week without the military family. "To
most," I said, "the war on terrorism is an abstraction. But there
is blood all over this room."
They gave me one standing ovation after another and I left the
stage dizzy with gratitude. These women -- overwhelmingly women --
are paying a fearful price so the rest of us can get on with our
daily selfishness and greed without hindrance.
So that the witches of Beverly Hills and Fifth Avenue can go on
with their shopping, these women lost their husbands. Mothers and
fathers were there, too. One came up to me, a crusty couple,
husband a Marine, and showed me a dollar bill from his late son's
wallet when the son was killed in Iraq. The edges were covered in
blood.
HOW CAN WE THANK these families? How can we possibly praise enough
the sacrifice they and their husbands have made? How can it ever be
enough?
Yet, they have something the rest of us rarely have: meaning.
They know why God put them on earth, why they live and suffer. They
never doubt their worth.
Bonnie drove Marina and me back to The Watergate. I felt as if I
had been with the finest people on earth that night, the ones in
God's image.
Mostly, I see the dregs of human selfishness. When I am around
the military -- the Honor Guard, the families, the kids, the
parents, the ones who are the thin line between life and death for
freedom, the ones who make our lives worth living, I have hope for
the human spirit. The best of the human spirit is alive and well
inside those red T-shirts.
topics:
Taxes, Hollywood, Military, Iraq, Alaska