A post at TRT site ... thought it worthwhile to re-post here.
As an aside from my own "experience" on seeing Saving Private Ryan, at the end, Ryan begs his wife to tell him that he has lead a good life ....
There are a great many ways to do that. May that you choose such that in 20 years, you can have have a loved one say that you did.
"" (movie review from newspaper in Maine)
"In a battlefield cemetery each marble cross marks an individual crucifixion. Someone - someone very young usually - has died for
somebody else's sins.
The movie "Saving Private Ryan" begins and ends in the military cemetery above Omaha Beach. By sundown of D-Day, 40,000 Americans had landed on that beach, and one in 19 had become a casualty. Director Steven Spielberg made "Saving Private Ryan" as a tribute to D-day veterans.
Shocked by and wary of his depiction, I bought a copy of Steven Ambrose's book "D-Day." The story of the Normandy invasion is a story of unimaginable slaughter. Worse than I ever knew, and I thought I knew something about it.
The air was full of buzzing death. When the ramps opened on many of the landing craft, all the men aboard were riddled with machine gun
bullets before they could step into the water.
The war touched everyone. The entire starting lineup of the 1941 Yankees was in military uniform. Almost every family could hang a service flag in the window, with a Star embroidered on it for each son in uniform, a
Gold Star for those who had made the ultimate sacrifice. In the early hours of D-Day, with the outcome of the battle still in the balance, the
nation prayed. Ambrose tells us that the New York Daily News threw out its lead stories and printed in their place the Lord's Prayer. "I
fought that war as a child," a historian on television said the other night. I knew what he meant. So did I. We all saved fat and flattened cans and grew victory gardens. But we did not all go to Omaha Beach. Or Saipan. Or Anzio. Only an anointed few did that.
The men of World War II are beginning to leave us now. In my family, six have gone and two are left. We have lost the uncle who was on Okinawa, the cousin who worked his way up the gauntlet of Italy and the cousin who brought the German helmet back from North Africa.
These men left us with a simple request. You can hear that request in the final minutes of "Saving Private Ryan." In the film, a squad of rangers is sent behind enemy lines to save a young 101st Airborne Paratrooper whose three brothers have been killed in battle. And when Captain Miller, the Ranger Commander is mortally wounded, he asks Pvt. Ryan to bend over so he can whisper to him.
"Earn this," he says
.
And that is the request of all the young men who have died in all the wars-from Normandy to the Chosin Reservoir to Da Nang to the Gulf.
"Earn this."
When the movie ended, the theater was silent except for some muffled sobs. But the tears that scalded my eyes were not just for the men who had died on the screen and in truth. Or for the men who had lived and grown old and were baffled about why they had been spared.
I walked out into the world of Howard Stern, Jerry Springer and "South Park." Into the world of front-page coverage of Monica Lewinski and the stain on her dress from Oval Office semen.
"Earn this," was still ringing in my ears. And the tears in my eyes were tears of betrayal." ""
As an aside from my own "experience" on seeing Saving Private Ryan, at the end, Ryan begs his wife to tell him that he has lead a good life ....
There are a great many ways to do that. May that you choose such that in 20 years, you can have have a loved one say that you did.
"" (movie review from newspaper in Maine)
"In a battlefield cemetery each marble cross marks an individual crucifixion. Someone - someone very young usually - has died for
somebody else's sins.
The movie "Saving Private Ryan" begins and ends in the military cemetery above Omaha Beach. By sundown of D-Day, 40,000 Americans had landed on that beach, and one in 19 had become a casualty. Director Steven Spielberg made "Saving Private Ryan" as a tribute to D-day veterans.
Shocked by and wary of his depiction, I bought a copy of Steven Ambrose's book "D-Day." The story of the Normandy invasion is a story of unimaginable slaughter. Worse than I ever knew, and I thought I knew something about it.
The air was full of buzzing death. When the ramps opened on many of the landing craft, all the men aboard were riddled with machine gun
bullets before they could step into the water.
The war touched everyone. The entire starting lineup of the 1941 Yankees was in military uniform. Almost every family could hang a service flag in the window, with a Star embroidered on it for each son in uniform, a
Gold Star for those who had made the ultimate sacrifice. In the early hours of D-Day, with the outcome of the battle still in the balance, the
nation prayed. Ambrose tells us that the New York Daily News threw out its lead stories and printed in their place the Lord's Prayer. "I
fought that war as a child," a historian on television said the other night. I knew what he meant. So did I. We all saved fat and flattened cans and grew victory gardens. But we did not all go to Omaha Beach. Or Saipan. Or Anzio. Only an anointed few did that.
The men of World War II are beginning to leave us now. In my family, six have gone and two are left. We have lost the uncle who was on Okinawa, the cousin who worked his way up the gauntlet of Italy and the cousin who brought the German helmet back from North Africa.
These men left us with a simple request. You can hear that request in the final minutes of "Saving Private Ryan." In the film, a squad of rangers is sent behind enemy lines to save a young 101st Airborne Paratrooper whose three brothers have been killed in battle. And when Captain Miller, the Ranger Commander is mortally wounded, he asks Pvt. Ryan to bend over so he can whisper to him.
"Earn this," he says
.
And that is the request of all the young men who have died in all the wars-from Normandy to the Chosin Reservoir to Da Nang to the Gulf.
"Earn this."
When the movie ended, the theater was silent except for some muffled sobs. But the tears that scalded my eyes were not just for the men who had died on the screen and in truth. Or for the men who had lived and grown old and were baffled about why they had been spared.
I walked out into the world of Howard Stern, Jerry Springer and "South Park." Into the world of front-page coverage of Monica Lewinski and the stain on her dress from Oval Office semen.
"Earn this," was still ringing in my ears. And the tears in my eyes were tears of betrayal." ""