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What Do the Living Owe the Dead?  – Mark Caleb Smith

What do the living owe the dead? This question concerns me now because I am getting older, but it also lingers, I think, because we are at war in Iran. The first coffins, draped in our flag, have come home. More will come. Even more shrouds will be made for Iranians, some of them very small. As we count the dead, what do we owe them? The answer begins with telling the truth about why they fell.

Every day I consider, at least for a moment, this question. My grandfather’s military portrait peers at me from a perch in my office. He fell in the Hürtgen Forest in November 1944, killed by a Nazi landmine. His blood flows in my veins, and I have been blessed with a life hard for him to imagine, just two generations removed from the coal mines in which he toiled before the war. The story of his life and death planted within me a simple love for America at its best. He is buried in the Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery in Belgium, and I hope to visit that sacred space.

I’ve visited related spaces. In May 2011, I walked the beaches of Normandy and the American cemetery that sits above them. The bending rows of white crosses sing in their silence, accompanied by the rolling sea. As you step close, each marker bears a name, a rank, a place, and a date of demise; simple lyrics sometimes sing the loudest. For the few who were retrieved but never named, their grave comforts at least believers, for they are “known but to God.” He now sings on their behalf.

The same week, and in the same region of France, I visited the tiny town of La Cambe, which encloses a German cemetery. The village, which surely suffered at German hands, now offers a kind of rest to its enemies. Each soldier is identified by a simple stone on the ground. Each row has five squat, dark, closely huddled crosses. Where there is no identification, the marker reads, “ein deutscher soldat” (“a German soldier”). These blades of grass sing a dirge every ear should hear.

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