A local man was one of those killed by an Islamic
extremist this month at Frankfort International
Airport in Germany. The German-born Kosovo Albanian was targeting
American servicemen on their way to Afghanistan.
Airman 1st
Class Zachary
Cuddeback, 21, was at the wheel when the
religious fanatic boarded the military bus, cried “God is great” in
Arabic, and opened fire. Two airmen died and two more were injured
before the shooter’s gun jammed.
I say, local “man,” but Zac Cuddeback
still had those boyish good looks of someone fresh out of
high school. Someone still trying to find himself, and hoping the
Air Force would aid him in that all-important quest.
It was no surprise that Zac was behind the wheel. Friends
say he spent half his time fixing cars. Driving, playing hockey (he
played for a season on Old Dominion University’s hockey team), and
serving his country were all he ever wanted to do.
At the local newspaper, we argued over the wording of the
headline, and whether to label this an act of terror, as in “Terror
Strikes One of Our Own.” Was this an act of Islamic terror, a
religious killing, or simply cold-blooded murder? Later, at the
memorial service, the local pastor called Zac’s killing a
“senseless act of misguided religion.” I guess that’s one way to
put it.
A week later, Zac’s remains were returned home to Scott
Air Force Base. Zac was an Army brat, and his family asked he be
buried, with full military honors, next to his grandfather, at the
air force base where Zac had been born just 21 years
before.
HERE, IN THE TOWN of O’Fallon, Illinois, each time a
fallen soldier returns home you find the same reaction: hundreds of
people come out of their homes to honor the airman and his or her
family. Those who don’t turn out are the ones who never do, those
who are too busy at the office, or too tuned into the television,
or too wrapped up in the chaos of their own lives.
The turnout was even greater than usual for Zac. It was
easy to see why.
O’Fallon is a military town. Almost everyone you meet is
ex-military. So it was no surprise that thousands of people turned
out as Zac’s coffin was transported along the highways, through the
residential streets, and down the flat country roads, all lined
with American flags, thousands upon thousands of them, stretching
on to the horizon. The day was windy and warm, the only sound the
March wind snapping through the flags. Zac’s procession was
escorted by the local fire department, police, and 200 Patriot
Guard Riders from across the Midwest, the mufflers on their Harley
Davidson motorbikes respectfully muffled for the
occasion.
There was a secondary reason for the big
turnout.
Along the parade route, relegated to a patch of weeds
cordoned off with yellow police tape and surrounded by Illinois
state troopers, stood six members of the Westboro Baptist Church,
of Topeka, Kansas. I counted one man, two women and three clueless
small boys. One of the boys held a sign that read, “Thank God for
Dead Soldiers.”
The employees of the nearby Circle K gas station had
erected a banner next to the Westboro bunch that read: “God Bless
Our Troops.” Across the highway, about 100 people had gathered for
a counter-protest. They too had signs, only theirs read “God and
hate don’t mix.”
One counter-protester seemed to speak for all her
neighbors when she jerked her thumb at those across the street and
said, “This funeral is for a man who died for their right to be
ignorant.”
That’s basically what the Supreme Court said in its recent
decision in Snyder
v. Phelps. We have a
guaranteed right to be stupid. In the long run, it is probably best
we don’t make a crime of being ignorant.
After the procession passed, I climbed in my truck and
started back to the office. I was thinking about the obvious
parallels between the Muslim extremist and the Westboro bunch, and
trying not to sink to their level by hating them. It wasn’t
easy.
I got back to the office late and filed my story and
punched out for the day. Immediately I began thinking about my next
story, a piece about two dozen teachers being laid off. I suppose
it is natural and expected that we move on with our lives and don’t
think about the daily sacrifices these young men and women make.
That is, until the next parade.