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Editor’s note: TriWest was proud to champion House Concurrent Resolution 47, which named March 25 as National Medal of Honor Day.
team successes
Sunday marks first Medal of Honor Day
By Leo Shane III, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Saturday, March 24, 2007
WASHINGTON — Vietnam veteran Gary Littrell doesn’t have any events or speeches
planned for Sunday, the first national Medal of Honor Day.
He hopes this is the last time it’s a relaxing day for him.
"I hope that every 25th of March from this day forward I’m in a school, or at a Boy
Scout or Girl Scout event, or a junior ROTC event," said Littrell, a 1973 recipient of
the award and president of the Congressional Medal of Honor Society. "I hope I can
help educate our youth ... foster patriotism and inspire our youth to become worthy
citizens."
Littrell spoke Wednesday at a Capitol Hill reception to celebrate Congress’
designation of the new national day of recognition. The medal is the highest military
honor.
The event drew 31 Medal of Honor recipients together, including the oldest living
honoree: retired sailor John Finn, who manned an anti-aircraft gun in an exposed
parking lot during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
"I never dreamed I would be awarded the medal," the 97-year-old veteran said. "I
was a little curly-haired boy when I enlisted in the Navy in 1926 ... I could never
conceive all of the attention and adulations that all of us medal recipients receive."
Finn said when the attack began he rushed to man the machine gun because he
knew every man needed to react quickly. He said he hopes today’s troops take that
lesson to heart.
Only 112 of the 3,444 medal recipients are living today. Two have been awarded for
actions in Iraq, both posthumously: Marine Cpl. Jason Dunham died after diving on a
grenade to save his fellow troops, while Army Sgt. 1st Class Paul Ray Smith was
killed while protecting his troops as they evacuated wounded soldiers from the
battlefield.
"All of us (medal recipients) were just out there trying to do the best we could for
our fellow troops on the ground," said Ronald Ray, who as a soldier in Vietnam
survived a grenade blast to lead his troops out of an ambush.
"The message is, as long as you protect each other and work to complete your
mission, things will turn out right."
Other medal holders echoed that sentiment, noting that their one day of heroism
was a reflection of years of military training and preparation.
The first Medals of Honor were awarded 144 years ago Sunday to six Union soldiers
who traveled nearly 200 miles into Confederate territory to steal a train in a railway
sabotage attempt.
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