Wednesday, December 7, 2011

A Quiet Man.


There was the man who sat on the same side of the church with me at St Mary's Star of the Sea. He was about 80 years old a couple of years ago when he passed. But I knew him for about three or four years before he left us. He was an old school Italian from Carroll Gardens and had been around forever. He had worked on the docks and knew my uncles and had the typical life of an Italian guy from Carroll Gardens. He went to Catholic school and went in the service and came home and got married and had a couple of kids. Worked as a longshoreman till the work dried up and went on the guarrantie where he would badge in and get his minial check that the union deal got him. He occasionaly picked up the collection when a regular usher was absent. After Mass he did what all the neighborhood guys did. He walked past the hipster dofous assholes eating brunch at Prime Meats and the other yuppie joints to go to "Good Food" to pick up the makings of Sunday dinner. We would always say hello and occasionally I would reach for something on the top shelf for him because he was pretty short. I knew a lot about him. Or at least I thought I did. But he had a secret. Or at least something he never talked about. He had been on the Arizonia on December 7, 1941.

Most everyone in church didn't know that because he never talked about it. But after he passed Father Chris spoke about him at Mass. He said he had often talked to him and told him he was a hero. He deined it and said that the men who died that day, his buddies were the real heros. He had enlisted when he was 16 with phony papers and was serving on the deck that fateful day and was one of the lucky ones. He managed to escape with his life and served out the war in the Pacific. He never bragged. He never pushed his views on anyone. He never made a big deal about it. He was a simple guy. A patriot. A man who saw a job and did it to the best of his ablitiy. He served.

But to me he was a hero. Just like guys like RogerJ and AllenS and all the rest of the men who are in the front lines today protecting us while we type away on our ipads at Starbucks and argue and whine what some dopey professor has to say when all that shit don't matter.

I went to Mass this morning to remember him and lit a cancle in his honor. There were several other people there as well. We remember him as a quiet man. But as a hero.

God bless all those men who lost their lives on that fateful day and all the men who lost their lives since then defending our precious Union. May God hold them in his heart and may perpetual light shine upon them.

We can never do enought to honor their sacrifice.

16 comments:

Darcy said...

Amen.

Anonymous said...

Humbling, it's too easy to lose sight of the real sacrifice and hardship that generation endured.

I had the honor of taking care of old gents from that generation in one facility I worked in, the guys that were still alert would sometimes share memories from that time, the pictures of them in uniform with their brides after a quick wedding ceremony or when they came home from the war revealed a younger viril version of the old frail guy before me.

Makes one realize how fast life goes by, how our own experiences compared to the generation before us pales in comparison. How much we owe in gratitude to the ones who didn't come home, the ones who did and still into old age cried at a painful recollection.

My old Army Air Corps buddy that gave me that USS General Langfitt bulletin and men and women of that generation are mostly gone now, it's up to us to remember them , thanks Trooper for doing just that so beautifully.

kjbe said...

Well said.

Lyssa said...

Gave me chills. I came over here looking for something light for a break. But I kept reading. Well said, my friend.

Trooper York said...

I know that chickenlittle went to the Memorial when he went to Hawaii as I did. Everyone who gets a chance should go. It is like a church. You can still see oil coming up. The battleship Missouri is also nearby.

I just think we forget too quickly. sometimes in the getting and spending we lay waste our powers.

ricpic said...

There are so many thoughts that come to me about patriotism. And they're all jumbled up. More like images than thoughts. Frank Sinatra singing The House I Live In. The young lean Sinatra: from the people singing about the people. My Dad: an almost speechless patriotism: some kind of helpless identification with the people who live hard lives but have hope for their kids. I can still remember the look on his face when we were driving through Brownsville on a hot summer's day and we passed kids on a sidestreet playing in the spray from an open fire hydrant: Love and Pain smashed together in his face. The motion picture From Here To Eternity. Patriotic not because of its anger or love or maybe because of its anger and love expressed in a helplessly American way. It's that helpless total identification. That's patriotism.

Fred4Pres said...

RIP. Amen. Well said Trooper. Well said.

I was in Honolulu 12 years ago on business. When I finished with my meeting, I decided to go to Pearl Harbor. It was December 7.

The line for the Arizona memorial was way long (they said it would likely close before I could get to see it), so they directed those of us ariving to go to the USS Missouri instead (as an option). I did so.

The guy leading the tour for our group (they break you into groups of about twenty or so) was a Pearl Harbor survivor. He was a great guy and while not really into talking about that particular day (as it pertained to him) other than to say it was horrible, he had great stories about serving during that time.

The Missouri (where the peace treaty with Japan was signed) is parked immediately behind the Arizona. So it is the perfect memorials of the Alpha and Omega of the war. From the bow of the Missouri you overlook the Arizona, which is clearly visable from the surface. Oil is still discharging out (at least it was that day).

It was a very moving day for me, and it saddens me that fewer and fewer of these men are left. Soon there will be no live witnesses to those events.

I thank of of them who served.

ndspinelli said...

I just pray we have a bit of the honor and toughness of those guys. Good post.

Trooper York said...

We can only try to honor them and do the best we can.

The kids in Iraq and Afghanistan are doing them proud.

God bless them and keep them safe and let them come home to their families.

Anonymous said...

YES, Trooper, let them all come home safe, sooner than later.

chickelit said...

So it is the perfect memorials of the Alpha and Omega of the war. From the bow of the Missouri you overlook the Arizona,...

Fred, I put a photo of that up link.

Fred4Pres said...

Thank you to all who served, at any time. We owe you a huge debt.

Thanks chicken for the link and for sharing. I tried to leave a comment, but I am not authorized for your place.

Roger J. said...

Well said Trooper

AllenS said...

Thank you for the kind words, Trooper.

Tank said...

Good job Troop.

I always have to remember to separate out the heroes who serve in the military from the idiot politicians who often misapply and misuse them all over the world.

The "Quiet Man" is the old fashioned hero. Served. Did his job. Came home. Went on with his life. Didn't spend the rest of his life re-living what he did when he was 20, or telling everyone how great he was, or expecting everyone to favor him in some way.

A hero.

My Dad was the same. Most were. A lot of young guys I meet today too.

chickelit said...

Sorry about that Fred--I've got my anti-J defenses up over there.