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DEMOCRATIC PRESS
RELEASE
November 11, 2009

-------------------------
AKAKA DELIVERS VETERANS DAY SPEECH AT WORLD WAR
II MEMORIAL
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Daniel K. Akaka (D-Hawaii), Chairman of
the Veterans’ Affairs Committee, delivered the following remarks this
morning at a Veterans Day ceremony at the World War II Memorial on the
National Mall:
Keynote Veterans Day Address by U.S. Senator Daniel K. Akaka
Friends of the National World War II Memorial
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
It was a beautiful morning in Hawaii. I had other things on my mind on the
morning of Sunday, December 7, 1941, as I am sure that all of you who
remember it, did. I was seventeen-years-old, studying at the Kamehameha
School for Boys on the island of Oahu.
From the roof of my dormitory, which overlooked Pearl Harbor, I watched
the Japanese planes swarm. Bombs and torpedoes fell
from
those aircraft, delivering a crippling blow to the Pacific fleet. I did
not know what life had in store for me, the Territory of Hawaii, or this
nation, but I knew that the world had already changed.
Some people presumed that the attack on Pearl Harbor would break America
militarily and frighten the public into a corner. They said that Americans
were too caught up in their own concerns and self-interest to make the
sacrifices necessary to win a fight of this magnitude. They would be
proven wrong, by the young people who set their lives and dreams aside to
fight that war; by the families who tended to “victory gardens,” and by
the children who went house to house, rounding up scrap metal for the war
effort.
When that war was over, and millions of men and women prepared to be
citizens again, rather than soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen, there
were doubts again. Some doubted that a generation of veterans could
reintegrate into society without disaster. They were wrong. This is
because when we came home, we returned to a grateful nation, and to a GI
Bill of Rights that – while it did not always run smoothly – reminded us
that we still had our lives ahead of us.
The young veterans that some feared went on to lead what would come to be
known as the “greatest generation” – Presidents, Nobel laureates, and
leaders in their communities. Their defining contribution would not be how
they helped to win a war – great as that achievement was – it was what
they did with the peace they had earned. The countless many that lived
lives of service and sacrifice long after they took off the uniform.
Let us consider them when we reflect at this memorial on this day, the day
first set aside to remember the day the First World War ended.
Their brothers, sons and daughters now fill the ranks of the Veterans
Service Organizations. They advocate not only for the needs of today, but
for the veterans of tomorrow, and for the nation and ideals they risked
everything to defend. The Veterans Service Organizations deserve special
thanks on this day, because of what they stand for and who they fight for.
As we stand here at the World War II Memorial, we who fought that war know
too well that today’s service men and women face challenges similar to
those from our youth. So does our nation. But if we remember the lessons
of World War II: that our warriors can do great things if they return to a
grateful nation that provides them with the care and support they have
earned; and that all Americans have a role to play in winning whatever
measure of peace we gain, we can do more than honor the legacy of the
World War II generation – we can extend it.
Thank you.
-------------------------
posted by Larry Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
-------------------------
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