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VETERANS RELIVE MEMORIES OF WAR FOR NATIONAL
PROJECT -- "This is a generation that is humble.
They
went through the Depression and then World War
II.
They don't consider what they did a sacrifice."

Albert Campbell, of Seattle, who
served in the Pacific during World War II, is featured in the
Library of Congress' Veterans History Project. He appears with some
of the medals he received. (photo: JOHN LOK / THE SEATTLE TIMES) |
For more about the Veterans History Project, use
the VA Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourva
benefits.org/sessearch.php?q=veterans+history+project&op=ph
Story here...
http://seattletimes.nwsource.
com/html/localnews/2004005787_vetstories10e.html
Story below:
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-------------------------
Local vets relive memories of war for national
project
By Sherry Grindeland
Seattle Times Eastside bureau
When Albert "Bud" Campbell, of Seattle, was getting out of the U.S. Army,
a young officer asked him to join the reserves and gave him the paperwork.
Campbell tore the papers in two and handed them back.
"I'd seen enough death and destruction," said Campbell, an infantry
captain. Until last week, the 89-year-old World War II veteran didn't talk
about his war experiences in New Guinea and the Philippines.
Norris Bevan, of Bellevue, spent his 20th birthday fighting the pivotal
Battle of the Bulge in Europe. He, too, never shared the horrors buried
under a half-century of normal life.
When he talks about finding the bodies of 150 Americans, captured and then
massacred by German soldiers, he cries. Then there was the small village
where many villagers were executed. Bevan didn't join a veterans
organization because he was done with war. He didn't want to remember his
life in the 30th Division.
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But this fall Bevan and Campbell put aside their
reluctance and told their stories in front of a video camera. Like
thousands of other veterans, they were persuaded to participate in a
massive national project trying to capture a piece of American history
before those who lived it firsthand are gone.
But getting those Tom Brokaw dubbed "The Greatest Generation" to
participate in the Veterans History Project (VHP) at the Library of
Congress has been a challenge. Many are reticent, saying they just did the
job that needed doing. For others it's still too painful to talk about,
even 60 years later.
RJ McHatton, of North Bend, knows how difficult recruiting these veterans
can be. He's one of eight official VHP partners in Washington state and
hopes to complete 100 interviews in the next few months.
He's been to service-club meetings, chambers of commerce and military
groups. "We thought that after the Ken Burns movie, 'The War,' came out,
there would be a swarm of people wanting this done," McHatton said. "We
have not seen the rush yet."
Part of the reason is emotional.
"These are doors the veterans don't want to open again," said Robert
Patrick, director of the VHP at the Library of Congress. "What they went
through is too difficult to talk about."
Others are too modest to speak up.
"This is a generation that is humble," said McHatton. "They went through
the Depression and then World War II. They don't consider what they did a
sacrifice."
Still, since the project began in 2000, the Library of Congress has
received more than 50,000 veterans' stories. More than 30,000 are from
World War II, although the project seeks material from veterans of all
wars.
Most of the $2 million annual budget goes for a staff that includes 12 to
15 archivists who catalog and process the oral histories and donations of
letters, photos, diaries and other memorabilia.
"Because this is volunteer-driven, we get a lot of bang for the buck,"
Patrick said.
The VHP was started, he said, to create a source for research, fill a
chapter in our national history and provide inspiration for the nation.
"The stories we're getting are a great example of what it means to serve
your country," he said. "We enjoy our freedoms because these people
defended our country."
While official partners such as McHatton, who runs a video biography
company called Inventive Productions, turn in professional-quality
materials, anyone is welcome to send in their own stories or those of
family members, he said.
The project has become the largest oral-history collection in the country,
said Patrick, and the material is already a vast treasure trove for
historical writers and researchers.
Burns, the film director, partnered with the VHP to produce "The War."
Another collaborative effort with National Geographic produced two books
from the stories, "Voices of War: Stories of Service From the Home Front
and the Front Lines," released in 2004, and "Forever a Soldier:
Unforgettable Stories of Wartime Service" in 2005. A four-part radio
series, "Experiencing War," aired on 100 Public Radio International
stations.
Tim Mallory, reference librarian at Timberland Regional Library in
Tumwater, said Burns' "The War" prompted an onslaught of calls to his
office. The library will videotape any veteran in Thurston, Lewis, Mason
and Pacific counties. Mallory said they've done more than 150 histories
for VHP.
Like many veterans who agreed to be interviewed, Campbell and Bevan broke
their self-imposed silence at the urging of friends and family.
For his taping, Bud Campbell sat in a comfortable chair in his North
Seattle living room. His wife, Mary, watched from the dining-room table as
McHatton set up a small bank of lights, a microphone and a video recorder
on a tripod. McHatton used flashcards of questions to prompt Campbell.
He talked about being stationed at Camp Roberts in Northern California on
Dec. 7, 1941.
"I was on a weekend pass when Pearl Harbor was bombed," Campbell said.
"They kept saying on the radio that all military personnel should return
to base immediately. I didn't go back until 2 a.m. because I knew we'd
never get off base."
He was 23 years old and overnight his one-year commitment became five. He
became an officer and fought in New Guinea and the Philippines.
"In Luzon we split into three groups. One went up one road, one another
road and my group went through the jungle, up the hills. Each hill was
higher than the last and each hill was a battle," he said.
Once the Philippines were secure, his 33rd Infantry Division trained to
invade Japan. Experts were predicting a horrific invasion battle with
massive casualties. Then the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.
"That's one of the things that bugs me," Campbell said. "There's so little
taught about World War II in our schools. My kids came home from Nathan
Hale High School and were saying we shouldn't have dropped the atomic
bomb.
"I told them, I wouldn't be here and they wouldn't exist if we hadn't.
They never brought it up again."
Those memories are just what McHatton and other historians want to
preserve.
"The children and grandchildren and future generations need to know what
our veterans have gone through," McHatton said.
McHatton is focusing on World War II veterans, an endangered demographic.
Fewer than one-fourth of the men and women who served in the U.S. military
in World War II survive. More than 1,000 die each day.
Sometimes the stories he hears make him laugh; sometimes he cries. The
rewards are immeasurable, he said.
"I haven't done a story yet that I haven't pulled something out for my
personal life," he said. "We're doing the veterans' stories for the
generations that follow.
"Think of what it would be like today to have a video of Abraham Lincoln."
Sherry Grindeland: 206-515-5633 or
sgrindeland@seattletimes.com
Veterans History Project
What: The Library of Congress is collecting oral
histories from veterans about their wartime experiences.
How to participate: Guidelines available by mail: The Veterans History
Project, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, 101 Independence
Ave. S.E.;
e-mail: vohp@loc.gov; Web site:
www.loc.gov/vets.
Who is eligible: U.S. veterans from World War I and II, Korean War,
Vietnam War and the Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts. Also sought are oral
histories from U.S. civilians involved in war efforts.
To see and hear the histories: Some 4,000 veteran stories are online at
www.loc.gov/vets. Visitors to
the Library of Congress can peruse the material.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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