Imagine....being as young as two years old. For reasons you don't understand, you are being separated from your parents.
You are sent to live with strangers. Every so often, you are moved. Your name is changed. You can't go out during the day. Others can't know you're in the house.
Sometimes you are treated well, and sometimes, you are abused.
There is a war. And you are part of it, but you don't understand why. Or, if you were old enough, you did understand, all too well, why people seemed to want you dead. You knew that sometimes the families who hid you did it out of conviction, but other times, it was for the money that resistance groups somehow found, and paid to them.
Finally, the war is over. Sometimes you are reunited with your parents. Sometimes, you never see them again. Sometimes, almost your entire family is gone forever. Sometimes, you are forced to remain friendly with the very people who abused you.
And, however your saga of hiding ends, the war stays with you for the rest of your life.
The story of a number of Dutch children hidden from the Nazis in World War II is told in an amazing book about World War II called Hidden Like Anne Frank, that I happen to be reading now. Each story is thought provoking, sobering and sad in its own way.
In this book, there are no happily ever afters. There are, instead, many people, permanently damaged by war. You stare into the faces of the children (each child has a photo), and the pictures of those same people, now elderly. You think of your own life. And you are grateful for what you have.
Possibly few of those stories would ever have been written if not for D-Day, June 6, 1944. On that day, some 160,000 Allied soldiers stormed beaches on the coastline of France. Although some 9,000 Allied soldiers were killed or wounded on that day, others began the march across Europe to liberate the people. 70 years ago today.
Now, the surviving soldiers of World War II are elderly, and dying, even though at least one man who parachuted in that day parachuted in again. In our country, they die at a rate of approximately one every two minutes. Each day there are fewer left to tell the tale. On June 4, Chester Nez passed away. He was one of the original Navaho Code Talkers, and the last living one. His battles were in the Pacific Theatre, not the European, but he and others helped make victory possible.
Yet, for almost 30 years, he wasn't allowed to talk about it. He carried his scars inside, just as these children of hiding, grown up, did.
Today, we still have war. We still have children damaged by various wars living all around our planet. We even have child soldiers going to war and fighting, some as young as eight years old. We still have veterans returning from war, scarred for life outside (or inside), and hiding their pain.
One day we will read their memoirs, look into their faces, and we will ask "Why?"
Will we ever have an answer?
Tomorrow, my Sustainable Saturday feature.
Welcome! I hope I bring a spot of calm and happiness into these uncertain times. I blog about my photography adventures, flowers, gardening, the importance of chocolate in a well lived life, or anything else on my mind.
Friday, June 6, 2014
9 comments:
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Sounds like a good read.. will definitely read it :)
ReplyDeleteI just read an article about Chester Nez. I had never heard of the Navajo Code Talkers before. War is horrific and I cannot imagine being in that environment. It does remind me that I take so many things for granted. Great post honoring those who have suffered through war.
ReplyDeleteVery moving post. I don't think we can understand the full horror of such things without living through them and the horror for each person who did was different in any case. But books and listening to those who have been through war can help us to understand better and hopefully to reduce the occurrence of war in the future.
ReplyDeleteThis is an excellent post, Alana.
ReplyDeleteThanks! I wonder how we can help more!
ReplyDeleteKim Patterson
www.thing2doinutah.com
This is a sad true story book. War is not a win win on both sides, innocent people is the victims.
ReplyDeleteThis is a sad true story, innocent and children are the victims of war.
ReplyDeleteWar is so sad. I can never understand why people try to take what isn't theirs, and why the young me of whole countries must fight and die. Thank you for bringing the fate of the children involved to my attention. So many lives ruined. Those of us who live in freedom should be grateful.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a great read Alana!
ReplyDelete