It's
a pleasure to be here on this beautiful afternoon…for this special
occasion... in beautiful Simpsonville …along side this hallowed memorial.
Today we are gathered here to honor our
distinguished veterans… to pay respect to those here with us today… and
most importantly… those who made the ultimate sacrifice so that we might
have the right to gather freely… at this time… for this purpose….
We're here to remember our veterans one
and all. Those who served
courageously in the Revolutionary war, World War I, World War II, Korea,
Vietnam, the Gulf War and others...
Veterans who served fearlessly; many
trading their blood for our freedom, so that we might not have to do the
same...
And veterans who served proudly, so
that our children and grandchildren could come to know a country synonymous
with the same freedoms and liberties as those for which it was forged...
There is no doubt that all of us in
South Carolina owe our veterans a debt of gratitude-- they have fulfilled
their duty-- now we must in turn fulfill ours...
And though most of us are not soldiers… and though many of us will never serve… our duty is nevertheless very real and very pressing...
For
those men and women who fell beneath a starry standard did not fall so that we
might allow their memory to fade with time...
No, indeed… it is incumbent upon the
rest of us to honor their sacrifice… to repay our vast debt to them in the
only currency in which we can… that of remembrance...
After 225 years of freedom, we as
Americans owe it to generations past to spend a few quiet moments of our busy
lives in reflection and thanks...
Without this celebration their legacy
… their memories… their quiet sacrifices could have been softly lost to
the whispers of time…
Thankfully, this committee did not let
that happen.
And neither should the rest of us.
We must remember on days like this one,
lest we forget. And because of
people like you, more and more South Carolinians are doing just that.
All across South Carolina today, families will gather to say grace over dinner, and thank God above for the brave men and women who in the darkest hours, rose to meet the call to arms, only to fall on distant shores in foreign lands, never to rise again...
Men and women, both old and young will
sprinkle country cemeteries with bouquets of colorful remembrance...
Strangers will pause at century-old
headstones to bow their heads and murmur quiet prayers of gratitude...
And blurry-eyed sons and daughters will
delicately place small flags under watchful faces of weathered marble...
Today, as I join all of you here in
Simpsonville, I want to personally thank each of you, one and all-- for all that
you have done for our country… for our community… and for our State…
And today especially, I want to thank you for remembering those Americans… near and far… who never returned home from war…whose fragile lives were lifted from our midst, but whose memory and whose legacy live on with us, enduring forever...
The world is a better place because they
lived… and because they served...
Today, I join you in remembrance of our
fallen fathers.
I ask all of you to join me in bowing
your heads in a silent sign of respect…
Thank you.
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