Remember Pearl Harbor
“SHREVEPORT, La. — You could hardly escape reminders of it during World War II. And over the course of decades since, Dec. 7 has meant one thing to generations of Americans:
Pearl Harbor. Unprovoked attack. The need to be prepared.
But that message has become muted over the past few years by the thinning of the ranks of the men and women who survived the assault that Sunday morning on U.S. military facilities in Hawaii.
For the first time in years, a request to the community for news on remembrances or memorials, as well as calls to the largest American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars posts and the local War Veterans Home and veterans cemetery turned up nothing.
MORE: For survivor, Pearl Harbor seems ‘like yesterday’
Former Louisiana state Sen. Jackson B. Davis, now 95, who was a Navy officer assigned to intelligence duties, says he has not been asked to talk to any groups this year. “That is unusual. I usually do.”
“It’s the same old story,” Davis said, illustrating his point by taking it to an extreme. “We don’t hear much about Gettysburg anymore, or Bunker Hill. Or when the Normans took over England — we don’t hear much about that.”