.
Originally published on April 23rd, 2007. Sadly, only the number has changed. This year it is 22,993, including 126 soldiers who fell in the past year.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2 minutes of silence, to remember the 22,305 people who fell in battle since the establishment of the first Jewish neighborhoods outside Jerusalem's Old City wall in 1860, the date of the beginning of the fatality count. 22,305 people who never got to grow old. 233 names just this year. Most were young, some were older veterans who finally succumbed to their injuries. Each one is too many. While to some of you in the United States this figure may not seem that large compared to America's losses in World War II or even Vietnam, the entire population of Israel today is only 7,150,000, making this a terrible loss indeed.
Yesterday
my 6 year old son asked me if we would visit him in the cemetary if he
were killed in a war. I cannot express how sad it makes me that he knows
enough about evil in the world to ask that question at age 6.
As the country marks Memorial Day 2007 and prepares to celebrate its 59th year of independence, amid both celebrations and ever present security warnings
it behooves us to remember how dear a price we paid, so that we can try
ever harder to ensure that future generations don't have to.
6 comments:
It has been a sad day but this is one of the saddest things I've heard all day.
Beautifully spoken, Robin.
If only we lived in a world where there was no need for memorials, no one killed by atrocity to be remembered. Everyone who has died was some mother's child, and that breaks my heart!
beautiful post
Thank you for visiting me at Create With Joy! This post really touched my heart so I thought I would comment here.
Any loss is too great a loss... these are not numbers you are talking about...these are people... people who were loved...people who were sons and daughers, husbands and wives, friends and lovers, teachers and students...
My heart breaks for all that has been lost.
Yes, a scary question your son asked. Wish there were no such questions.
Post a Comment