PLEASE NOTE:

Copies of all 48 posts in this blog have been merged chronologically with the successor blog:
Remembrance in Spacetime
This dormant blog will remain online as a courtesy to any pre-existing links. — TheBigHenry

Friday, May 25, 2007

Remembrance in Spacetime: Liberty

The displaced persons had boarded the General J. H. McRae (AP-149), an American Army transport, in early October 1949 at Bremerhaven on the north coast of General Eisenhower's American Occupation Zone. The North Atlantic was stormy that October, and its crossing took about two weeks. It was a nightmare.

At the end of the second week of the hellish crossing, the mother scored a jackpot. Though she was a seasick, kerchief-wearing refugee she was, nevertheless, a pretty young woman, and she charmed a ship's officer into giving her a single tablet of Dramamine. She shared it with her son on the deck of the General McRae. The father, as usual, bore his misery stoically. After swallowing the half-tablet, the child's queasiness lifted, as did the morning haze.

And there she was. With torch held high, she beckoned to the ship's human cargo as the General McRae steamed into New York Harbor. She was beautiful, just as they had imagined she would be.

It was United Nations Day in America: October 24, 1949. But it might as well have been the Fourth of July. For the immigrant survivors, it was, as we continued to celebrate it annually, our Day of Liberty.

To Life!

Mass Coverage

The opinions and views expressed herein are those of the person posting them, at the instant of posting, and are subject to change without notice, reason, logic, malice aforethought, due process, or any other process you can think of. Furthermore, they (i.e., the opinions and/or views) do not necessarily reflect the view of this web site's ownership, administrators, moderators, or anyone else for that matter, living, dead, or any other state of existence. Any reasonable or unreasonable potential liability that may not have been expressly disclaimed herein, should, nay must, be assumed to be implicitly claimed or declaimed, whichever is deemed most appropriate. Additionally, more authoritative discussion may be found at Wikipedia: Freedom of speech in the United States, though such specific reference is not to be construed as exclusive, inclusive, or even preferable to any other more, or less, authoritative reference that can be found online, offline, inline, outline, underline, borderline, or paradigm, etc., etc., etc., ...

Trademark ™ 2007 {TheBigHenry}L. All rights reserved.