|
|
DelMarVa Survival Trainings
Daily Features |
|
|
October 30, 2007
Furor After Flag-Folding Ceremony
Pulled From Cemeteries
Folded flag
A group of congressmen has asked the
Department of Veterans Affairs to
reconsider its ban on the
flag-folding ceremony at military
funerals after the agency decided
last month to streamline burials at
federal cemeteries.
The flag folding recitation is a
longstanding tradition which brings
comfort to the living and honor to
the deceased," Rep. Heath Shuler, D-N.C.,
writes in his letter Tuesday signed
by 11 other congressmen. "The
recitations accompanying each fold
pay tribute to the service and
sacrifice of our veterans and their
families, the nation they proudly
serve, and the beliefs that they
hold dear."
Veterans Affairs made the new policy
decision last month, after a
complaint was filed to the White
House. Steve L. Muro, the director
of the National Cemetery
Administration's field programs
office, ordered cemetery directors
to stop the readings.
Click here to read the memo (pdf).
There are no federal laws related to
the flag that assign any special
meaning to the individual folds of
the flag," Muro wrote in a memo
obtained by FOX News.com. "The
National Cemetery Administration
must not give meaning, or appear to
give meaning to the folds of the
flag by endorsing or distributing
any handouts on 'The Meaning of Each
Fold of an Honor Guard Funeral
Flag.'"
And though the next-of-kin can
request the reading at the service,
the ban has caused a furor among
veterans. Members of the American
Legion have been flooding national
headquarters since the decision,
according to Ramona Joyce, an
organization spokeswoman.
To me, it's a slap in the face for
every veteran, every member of the
Memorial Honor Detail and every
family of the deceased veteran,"
said Rees Lloyd, a member of the
American Legion's Memorial Honor
Detail for services at Riverside
National Cemetery in California. At
issue are secondary meanings
attached to the folding of the flag.
As the honor guard makes the 13
folds — traditionally representing
the original colonies — they recite
"the first fold of our flag is a
symbol of life, the second fold is a
symbol of our belief in the eternal
life, etc."
A complaint about the recitation for
the 11th fold — "in the eyes of a
Hebrew citizen, represents the lower
portion of the seal of King David
and King Solomon, and glorifies, in
their eyes, the God of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob" — garnered a
complaint and prompted the ban.
The Sept. 27 ban was an effort to
create uniform services throughout
the military graveyard system,
spokesman Mike Nacincik said, adding
the 13-fold recital is not part of
the U.S. Flag Code and is not
government-approved.
We definitely think is a matter left
up to the families," Joyce said.
"It's a nice ceremony; we've been
doing it for years. Our honor guards
have been doing it.
It's respectful and it's something
the family should be able to choose
to have done if they so wish for
their veteran," she continued.
Lloyd thinks it's a matter of
political correctness gone wild.
The entirety of this issue is an
absurdity that shows political
correctness and secular cleansing
run amok," Lloyd said. "This is
about families of deceased veterans
putting to rest their loved ones. No
one should interfere with their
choices."
The 12th fold recitation is geared
to Christians, saying the fold
"represents an emblem of eternity
and glorifies, in their eyes, God
the Father, the Son and Holy Ghost."
In the Legion's burning ceremony for
the dignified disposal of
unserviceable flags, a chaplain
invokes the name of God with lines
like "as they yield their substance
to the fire, may your holy light
spread over us and bring our hearts
renewed devotion to God and
country," Joyce said.
"When we got back from the war, we
didn't ask for a whole lot," said
Bobby Castillo, 85, a World War II
Navy veteran. "We just want to give
our veterans the respect they
deserve. No one has ever complained
to us about it. I just don't
understand."
Lloyd and Castillo are part of a
16-member detail that have performed
military honors at more than 1,400
services. They were preparing to
read the flag-folding remarks at the
Riverside cemetery when graveyard
staff stopped them.
Charlie Waters, parliamentarian for
the American Legion of California,
said he's advising memorial honor
details to ignore the edict.
"This is nuts," Waters told the
Press-Enterprise by telephone from
Fresno. There are 26 million
veterans in this country and they're
not going to take us all to prison."
Nacincik said that while the
flag-folding narrative includes
references to God that the
government does not endorse, the
main reason for the new rules is
uniformity.
"We are looking at consistency,"
Nacincik said. "We think that's
important."
Rabbi Yitzhak Miller of Temple Beth
El said he understands the ban.
"It is a perfect example of
government choosing to ignore
religion in order to avoid offending
some religions," Miller said. "To
me, ignoring religion in general is
just as problematic as endorsing any
one religion."
Shuler's letter urged Veterans
Affairs to change its mind.
"Please reconsider the policy and
allow the Memorial Honor Detail
volunteers to perform the
traditional flag-folding recitation
if requested by the family of the
deceased," he wrote.
Lloyd said the honor guard would
decide whether to defy the ban next
Tuesday, when it will serve at more
military funerals.
"We are going to abide by the wishes
of the families," Lloyd said. "Not
some bureaucrat in Washington, D.C.
Period."
FOXNews.com's Sara Bonisteel and The
Associated Press contributed to this
report. |
|