| SPIRITUAL
WARRIOR |
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Issue 12 Spring
2001 Editor Bill McDonal |
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US ARMY BURIAL
DETAIL
by Eric Nelson
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My Bn CDR sent this to us a few days ago, it
still brings tears to my eyes when I read it. I send it to you because I
think it's an important part of why soldiers serve their country, both in
your generation and mine. My unit (as you will read below) assumed the
funeral detail mission in Oct, we provide funeral details to any soldier
who has served honorably, whether they have retired, or separated. To
date, we have conducted over 170 funeral services. We PROUDLY remember and
take care of our own.......both past and present warriors. I have included
in brackets the comments as this has made its way through our chain.
(Signed) Eric |
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Below is what I wrote to my
military friends
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All, I am sharing this with all my military
friends - because without a doubt, some of you have been involved with
funeral details. As a First Sergeant, I tell my soldiers again and again
that doing this should be considered an honor and privilege - not the
"short end of the stick". I take volunteers first - only the
sharpest and most highly motivated soldiers are accepted by me. Here at
Mother Rucker, my Battalion is responsible for coordinating and conducting
the funerals for the entire lower Alabama and
Florida panhandle region - this (below) is the payoff. We DO make a
difference.
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Below is my Bn CDR's comments
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Good Afternoon;
I have enclosed a letter, provided by a fellow BN Commander, that I would
like each of you to take a moment and read. One of the many missions this
battalion supports on a daily basis for this Post and our Army is funeral
detail. During each in-briefing session I always field the same question
from every group. "Why are we doing this? This is not why we joined
the Army." I would offer that the opposite is true. This is one of
the major reasons we join. The idea of Selfless-Service [To put the
welfare of the nation, the Army, and your subordinates before your own] is
a powerful force worth considering.
The contributions each of you makes on a daily basis does make a
difference. Never forget that. Always approach your daily missions with a
steadfast desire to fulfill your obligations and do what's right, legally
and morally. I challenge each of you as leaders in this battalion to share
this letter within your respective element. I doubt there will be few dry
eyes in the crowd when the full impact of this message is considered. When
people ask you why you serve.......consider this example as a possible
answer.
Thank you.
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Below is the enclosure
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Subject: Tragedy Changes Opinion of Army
Tragedy changes opinion of Army
Editor's note: The following letter was written by Krista Kelly
McNeill, 16, and sent to her brother's battalion commander
as an open letter to the Army. Krista was the youngest sister of Spc.
Michael J. McNeill of the 317th Engineer Battalion, 3rd Infantry Division
(Mechanized). Following a rotation at the National Training Center in the
California desert, McNeill was preparing vehicles for rail load back to
Fort Benning, Ga., when he was struck by a car.)
It is amazing how a person's life can change in a matter of minutes.
It is amazing how one incident can change your views forever.
In my case it was a death in the family. I lost my brother, Spc.
Michael James (Hogue) McNeill on May 12. This incident has changed my
feelings about the military and military life, forever.
I remember the day my brother got hurt very clearly. It was May 5.
I returned home from school to see my father walking out the door
with a suitcase in one hand and a plane ticket confirmation in the
other. I was informed that my brother had been struck by a car, going full
speed, while he was crossing a street on foot with two of his Army
buddies. He was not expected to make it through the night.
My father left immediately. That is where it all began. From the
minute my father and brother's wife arrived, they were treated like
royalty. The Army was right there by their side, no matter what they
needed. The Army provided them with a place to stay, transportation and
what was needed most of all: a shoulder to cry on.
Before this point, I never thought of military people as being
compassionate and caring. But as I came to learn as things went on, they
are more caring, understanding and compassionate than most civilian
people.
A week passed, and suddenly, on May 12, my brother breathed his last
breath. He had passed away. At this point, I thought that the Army would
no longer be helpful or cooperative with my family. I figured they would
think that since my brother had passed away, that there was no more use in
trying to please anyone. I figured they would try to save money any way
they could. But, as I later learned, this was not the case at all.
They helped my family return home and made them as comfortable as possible
right up until the end. I would have thought that the military would think
about nothing other than their own wants and needs, but once again, they
proved me wrong.
Apparently, they put my brother on full retirement with total disability
before he died so that his beautiful wife and their soon expected child
would be taken care of. This touched me deeply.
The thing that touched me the most was my brother's funeral itself.
The military paid for almost all of the expenses and helped a great deal
with the planning of the services. The day of the funeral is imbedded so
deeply in my heart. It was May 19 to be exact.
Everyone gathered at the funeral home to pay their last respects to
my brother. Michael's body was soon being loaded into the hearse
and proceeded, followed by many cars, to the Lakeview Cemetery.
As I followed the hearse, we entered the cemetery to see a lone man, in
uniform, holding a bugle under his arm. With great discipline and
ceremony, he saluted the hearse as it went by and turned, with the hearse,
180 degrees as it proceeded to the burial site.
At the burial site, the preacher said a few more words, and a silence fell
all about. After the passage of a few moments, seven soldiers in uniform
with rifles shouldered came marching in perfect synchronization and
stopped a short distance away. They raised their rifles and each of them
fired three shots into the air with the sound of each shot piercing my
heart, bringing out all the love and respect that was felt for my brother.
Once again, silence fell about. Then off in the distance was heard a
beautiful noise, rolling off the end of the young man's bugle. Each note
slowly tearing away at me, making it easier to let go. Each note bringing
the remembrance of my brother and how he served his country, his family,
his God.
Intense is the only word to describe those few minutes of pain,
remembrance and love that came with the playing of Taps. The playing
stopped. Then the six soldiers, unarmed, came marching in unison without a
single misstep up to my brother's casket. Perfectionists, they were,
folding the flag ever so carefully that had once lain upon my brother's
casket, making sure not so much as a thread ever touched the ground. A
single Soldier marched up to my brother's wife, Jenna, and placed the flag
upon her lap, presenting it to her on behalf of the President of the
United States, and with great reverence and respect, he stood in a final
salute to her. But then, something very unusual happened. As with Jenna, a
single soldier approached my brother's mother and my father and presented
them with flags also, ones that were already neatly folded and placed in
fine wooden boxes, decorated with the United
States Seal and containing all of Michael's ribbons.
These did not come from the government's money. These came from the
pockets of the men who served with my brother in his battalion. Knowing of
Mike's beginnings and the strange turns his life had taken wherein he had
two families, containing eight sisters, all of whom he loved dearly, they
had raised the money to purchase these for his parents. This showed me
that the military is one big family. In the military, whether you like the
people you are around or not, you do everything in your power to protect
one another and their loved ones. What an honor I found this to be,
to have been a part of Michael's life, someone who had served his country
so diligently.
This event has changed my life and touched my heart forever. I have grown
a deep love for the military and those who are a part of it. I realized
that they are there to help me. The military is one big
family that I may hope some day to be a part of. I hope to one day walk in
Michael's footsteps, my father's only son, on a path also taken by Mike's
father and his father before him. My respect and admiration for the
military has grown immensely.
I want to say thanks to all of the people who have helped me, protected me
and loved me enough to go to war for me, and a special thanks to the men
who have helped my brother's memory live on. This is for you.
Krista Kelly McNeill
Johnson City, Ill.
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