Wednesday, November 11, 2009
 
sponsored by Graue Inc.

Remembering a young soldier's funeral

By Mike Fak

Send a link to a friend

[November 11, 2009]  When my mother died in 2003, I really didn't find much need to make a list of all the things I would like that were a part of the Fak family household for a half-century. I was content to have just a little something that would help me remember mom and my father long ago passed.

RestaurantI did have one wish for some things that I held special, and I didn't have to ask my brother and sisters for them: it was a given by all of them that I would have the three flags that had draped the caskets of the three Fak brothers, Michael, Edward and Kashmer.

The flags, neatly folded, are in triangular wooden cases, and they represent 14 years that the three brothers gave to their country during World War II.

They sit on a shelf in our living room, and although they might not have much symbolism to some people, they do to me as a veteran.

Water

Of course the most stinging memory of one of those flags is that cold December day in 1983 when a funeral director handed me the flag that had covered my father's casket. He said the words, "Please accept this flag as a symbol of a grateful nation."

Those words were nothing new to me. I had to say them to five different families back in 1970.

As an MP working for Army Materiel Command, I was assigned to the secret weapons division on the country's eastern seaboard. Every third month we were pulled off this assignment and placed on what the U.S. Army called "escort service."

Sometimes during these monthlong assignments we had little if anything to do. Sometimes we would be assigned a military funeral. As a platoon leader I had the privilege five times to help a veteran be escorted to his final resting place.

I remember all five of those services with great detail, but I will never forget a moment of that first time when I and my squad helped honor a fallen soldier.

It was January in the little town of Lackawanna in upstate New York. The day was bitterly cold, and both the cold and heavy snows controlled the cemetery where we were asked to be the honor guard.

We were all trained in the proper way to conduct ourselves, but for all seven of us this was our first funeral of a young soldier returning home from Vietnam.

I recall it was so cold that the bugle stuck to the lips of our bugler as he played taps, and how by the third round only one of the M-14s rechambered a round for the volley.

Most of all I remember folding the flag and carrying it over to the young, fallen soldier's family. The soldier's young wife had her head down, her arms wrapped tightly around a little bundle of clothes; that was her son, the fallen soldier's son.

[to top of second column]

The young soldier's father wore an old military overcoat. On his head, pressed down firm against the wind, he wore a VFW garrison cap. As I approached with the flag, the old soldier came to attention and saluted his son's flag. My voice cracked as I handed him the flag. I remember only the words "grateful nation" were intelligible from my lips as the cold tears streamed down my face in the frigid temperatures.

Taking the flag, the old vet pressed it hard to his chest. The way he would have pressed his young son to himself over the years as he watched him grow into manhood and become a soldier.

In that brief moment as the tears filled both of our faces, although years apart in age we became brothers. In that moment we both loved that flag. We both loved the young soldier now at rest in his hometown's graveyard.

As the years have passed, I have found myself busy rushing through my life. I have made many Veterans Day and Memorial Day events, but I have missed many as well.

But whether on a special day of remembrance or just any other day of the year, from time to time this memory comes back to me to relive.

My mind has decided that cold day in New York will be a part of me forever. I am grateful for that memory staying so vivid.

I find no need for a tombstone or grave site to mark my final place on Earth. All I will need is to have my flag with that of the other three Faks who served well and proudly. For me that will be enough. It always is for a veteran.

[By MIKE FAK]

< Top Stories index

Back to top


 

News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching and Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries

Community | Perspectives | Law and Courts | Leisure Time | Spiritual Life | Health and Fitness | Teen Scene
Calendar | Letters to the Editor