As a child I didn’t fully comprehend the grief that they shared. They talked about a lot of other relatives I had never met. They were just names to me then. It wasn’t until I started working on my family tree that I began to understand who he was and the tragedy of his story.
I imagine Uncle George and Aunt Olga were apprehensive as their only son enlisted, but I can't imagine their unbearable grief when they received the awful news about his death--painful news that spread throughout the family.
I had never asked where Sonny was buried, just imagining he was buried in Atlantic City. Then one day as I was perusing military records, I found not only a record of his burial but a picture of his grave.
There was his memorial, just one white cross in row upon row of crosses in Africa American Cemetery in Carthage, Tunisia. He had never made it home. Not only had Sonny and his tragedy become real to me, but then I thought of all the other families who had received the same unbearable news. All those young souls, full of life, silenced too soon.
So on this weekend when we lift up all those who have given their lives, I remember Sonny and all the others, like college friends who were killed in Vietnam, and so many others gone too soon.
I always think of Sonny and post his photo along side my father's on Memorial Day. I have friends in Winston-Salem where he was when attending Wake Forest. I wonder if there is a memorial to WWII there?
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tribute, Jane. My mother remembered him as well as she went down to help at the hotel when her "cousins" were there. Fond memories of Uncle George and Aunt Olga. Did you know Uncle George paid for part of my college education? Family
Thanks, Alice. No, I didn’t know that about Uncle George—good man.
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