Sunday, August 1, 2010

I'm Proud to Be on This Peaceful Piece of Property

Gravestones at Arlington





Abraham Lincoln Memorial






Memorial for soldiers in the Vietname Was












Kennedy's Gravesites






Bobo in front of the Capital Building





Shanny in front of the Capital Building





Yesterday we went to Washington DC for the day. We probably walked twenty miles when it was all said and done. Both of us have sore feet and blisters today to prove it, but it was well worth the hiking. We did it all, monuments, museums, and even Arlington Cemetery which is profound and moving.

To start off the day, we went to the space museum and the museum of natural history, and the national museum of american history which displayed the enormous flag that was the inspiration to Francis Scott Key for the Star-Spangled Banner. It is so big the stars on it measured two square feet and the flag itself was bigger than the lady who sewed it's house. She had to bring the flag to a brewery to finish sewing it.



After that we walked all over the place, from the Washington Monument across the NAtional Mall and to the Lincoln Memorial. We saw the WWII, Vietnam and Korean war memorials. When we finally got to the Arlington Cemetery where there are more than 32,000 soldiers buried, we were sun-burned, tired and blistered, but how could we complain? We took a tour trolley all around the cemetery, saw where JFK and his family are buried, and saw the changing of the guards at the Tomb of the Unknown soldier.
The tomb of the unknown soldier housed three bodies that were unidentified until the 1980s, when DNA testing was able to identify two of them. The symbolism of the guards protecting the body of the unknown soldier was very moving, to see how they perform the ritual of the changing of the guards with such integrity. I overheard a guy talking about how even during a hurricane four or five years ago, the guards would not abandon their post. They were allowed to take the day off because of the 50 mph winds but they chose to stay. It is so extremely honorable what our soldiers do for us, whether we agree with the wars that we have fought in or not, there are so many people who have lost their lives defending our freedom. If there is anything that going to Arlington has made more clear, it is that we are so lucky to be Americans. We have people who fight for our freedom, instead of other countries where people fight to take that freedom from it's citizens. Something that should so clearly be a natural right, causes so much pain across the world.
Where the Kennedy's are buried, there are beautiful quotes carved into the stones surrounding the gravesites. We tried to get pictures, but I'm not sure if the words came out clearly. One picture certainly came out clear enough, and that is the one that reads Freedom is not Free.

"Arlington" by Trace Adkins
I never thought that this is where I'd settle down,
I thought I'd die an old man back in my hometown,
They gave me this plot of land, me and some other men,
for a job well done.

There's a big white house sits on a hill just up the road,
The man inside he cried the day they brought me home,
They folded up a flag, and told my mom and dad, 'We're proud of your son'.

And I'm proud to be on this peaceful piece of property,
I'm on sacred ground and I'm in the best of company,
I'm thankful for those thankful for the things I've done,
I can rest in peace, I'm one of the chosen ones,
I made it to Arlington.

I remember daddy brought me here when I was eight,
We searched all day to find out where my granddad lay,
And when we finally found that cross,
He said, 'Son this is what it cost, to keep us free'.
Now here I am a thousand stones away from him,
He recognized me on the first day I came in,
And it gave me a chill, when he clicked his heels, and saluted me.

And I'm proud to be on this peaceful piece of property,
I'm on sacred ground and I'm in the best of company,
And I'm thankful for those thankful for the things I've done,
I can rest in peace, I'm one of the chosen ones,
I made it to Arlington.

And every time I hear, twenty-one guns,
I know they brought another hero home, to us.

We're thankful for those thankful for the things we've done,
We can rest in peace, 'cause we were the chosen ones,
We made it to Arlington, yea, dust to dust
Don't cry for us, we made it to Arlington.

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