OPINION:
Last weekend I heard, while visiting the New Jersey shore, an astonishing number of vacationing Americans — all well-intentioned, to be sure — greet their fellow vacationers with a cheerful: “Have a Happy Memorial Day.” That cannot be right. The more I think about it, that greeting sounds as misguided as, on another solemn day: “Have a Happy Good Friday.” Memorial Day is a time to remember the fallen soldiers and sailors. It is a time for reflection. So do we say: “Have a Reflective Memorial Day?” That is not right, either. Yet what is right? Is there anything we can say that is appropriate?
Memorial Day solemnizes the sacrifices made by men and women in uniform who fought in the defense of our country and paid the ultimate price. It is not Veterans Day, which solemnizes the service of all who wore the uniform in defending America, but the day that honors only those who died defending the American way of life, life in a free society.
The appropriate tribute for Memorial Day is the field of graves to the fallen, in acre after acre of cemeteries with little red, white, and blue flags all standing at attention before each grave of a fallen vet. Memorial Day is a sad day and it is a serious day. Without those graves with their freshly cut flowers and little flags on the last Monday of May, America would probably not be free today. War is hell, as the phrase has it, but it is an unavoidable hell and on Memorial Day it is inescapable to reflect on just how awful and unavoidable that hell is. Wishing vacationing Americans a “Happy Memorial Day” is about like replacing the graves of Memorial Day with barbecue pits.
Yet as I say everyone at the Jersey shore was all well-intentioned, which is for the best. After all, most Americans know that there is no alternative to the war we wage against terror. The terrorists are irrational barbarians. They do not even bother with putting out plausible propaganda. We are all to convert to radical Islam or we will be killed. No even a Quaker, not even a pacifist, could settle for that outcome from this war. If ever there was a just war, this long bloody conflict is it.
I cannot think of a more brutal enemy than ISIS. Nor can I think of a more irrational opponent. They really do believe that they can return the world to the dark ages. The only thing just governments can do is to execute them as soon as possible. This is something that every sensible person in the Middle East must believe. That is why Donald Trump’s speech to the 50 or so Middle Eastern leaders gathered in Saudi Arabia was of exigent importance.
A week later he flew home to pay tribute to our noble dead on Memorial Day. At Arlington National Cemetery he said to the assembled gathering, “Thank you for joining us as we honor the brave warriors who gave their lives for ours — spending their last moments on this earth in defense of this great country.” It was an extremely moving speech, and he ended with, “Today we also hold a special vigil for heroes whose stories we cannot tell, because their names are known to God alone — the unknown soldiers.” It was a beautiful speech: sad, dignified, just right. I read it three times in search of an appropriate greeting for Memorial Day. I did not get a hint as to what the appropriate greeting on Memorial Day should be. Do not feel bad, Mr. President, there is not a hint of it in the Gettysburg Address, either. I looked.
Probably there is no greeting that is appropriate for Memorial Day. Possibly this is one of those occasions for which there are no words to do the day credit. Can you, my readers, come up with any? All we can be sure of is that on this Memorial Day, many American heroes were no longer with us. On future Memorial Days, many more will also be gone. War is always hell, but sometimes it summons the best in people. Without the hell of war American freedom would be doomed.
• R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr. is editor in chief of The American Spectator. He is author of “The Death of Liberalism,” published by Thomas Nelson Inc.
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