Even if we didn鈥檛 know them, our lives today are shaped by the sacrifices of the people who came before us, speakers at last week鈥檚 Memorial Day Ceremony said.
The ceremony honored the 136 Gold Star Aggies who died in military service to the United States, and was held Thursday (May 23) outside the Memorial Union, the building named in their honor.
鈥淚t鈥檚 my honor to pay respect and recognize the courageous Americans who died in war while defending our nation and our ideals,鈥 said Chancellor Gary S. May. 鈥淚鈥檇 also like to acknowledge those who came home from war with scars, both physical and mental, and those who never came home, with fates that are still unknown.鈥
Shared connections
The ceremony鈥檚 keynote speaker was Michael Bradford, vice provost and dean for Undergraduate Education, who served in the Navy for 10 years. He told attendees about a time when he met a man who had served on the same submarine he had, but years earlier. He asked the man, who was Black, what job he鈥檇 held on the submarine.
鈥淎nd he said, 鈥榃ell, the only thing we could do back in my day, young man, was to be a porter for the officers in the officers鈥 cabin,鈥欌 Bradford said.
Bradford, who is also Black, worked as an electrician on the submarine and later a member of the Navy鈥檚 military police 鈥 jobs he said wouldn鈥檛 have been available to him without the sacrifice of the elder sailor.
鈥淪o folks that we don't even know are operating in spaces that allow us to be who we are today,鈥 he said.
In his remarks, May acknowledged his own barrier-breaking family member, a great-uncle who served as one of the Tuskegee Airmen.
Those who gave all
Bradford also acknowledged the Aggies whose sacrifices cost them their lives 鈥 those who, in the words of William Shakespeare鈥檚 Henry V, charged 鈥渙nce more, unto the breach.鈥 He said Memorial Day and the memory of those sacrifices has a power to unite Americans.
鈥淲e all put aside whatever separates us and we stand side by side and back to back when called upon, and we certainly operate in that space to honor those who stepped in the breach for us,鈥 he said.
One of those Aggies was Sean Endecott Elliott 鈥09, a Marine Corps pilot who died in a plane crash in Mississippi in 2017. As part of the Memorial Day Ceremony, students associated with the Veterans Success Center read aloud the names of all 136 Gold Star Aggies.
Taylor Ledbetter, a second year political science major, read Elliott鈥檚 name aloud.
After the ceremony, she met Elliott鈥檚 parents, who traveled to the ceremony with other family members. Ledbetter grew up in Carlsbad, where Elliott attended high school, and her father was a 23-year veteran of the Marine Corps. She spent several minutes talking with Elliott鈥檚 mother about their shared connections, and expressed her gratitude and condolences.
鈥淚t was really touching,鈥 she said of meeting the Elliotts. 鈥淚 was trying not to tear up.鈥
Ledbetter recalled her father鈥檚 many deployments, and said it鈥檚 vital to honor those lost in military service.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 really important that we remember them.鈥
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Cody Kitaura is the editor of Dateline 不良研究所 and can be reached by email or at 530-752-1932.