Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Learnin' from Old Folk

On Easter Sunday, as we were waiting for the start of church services, my friend Fred leaned over and said to me, "Sixty-six years ago, I was invading Okinawa."
I'm guessing you don't hear that one every day.
Fred is an 88-year-old Marine - "Once a Marine, always a Marine!" - and he was celebrating his 19th birthday the morning the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.
I've learned a lot about the Marines, World War II, and life in general from Fred. You can learn a lot from old folk.
As for that Easter Sunday in 1945, Fred said our leaders thought it would be a "surprise" to attack on Easter, thinking the Japanese would not expect us to attack on a religious holiday.
But he said he went to church at 4 a.m., on a ship, and the Japanese troops - some 130,000 of them - were far from surprised. We lost more than 12,000 lives in the 82-day-long battle, on land and sea.
As I'm reading "Jungle Ace," the story of Col. Gerald R. Johnson, a U.S. Army Air Force fighter pilot during WW II, I asked Fred about something author John R. Bruning shares from Col. Johnson's letters home - his disgust at workers striking for better pay in the USA while men and women were fighting and dying to protect that right.
Fred said his base pay as a fighting Marine was $30 per month.
Fred said the main carping he heard was in the Red Cross tent. The man there was paid over $500 per month to distribute items sent from home to give a little comfort to our military. That man charged the troop nickels and dimes for coffee and donuts.
Fred said he doesn't think much of the Red Cross. I think that's understandable.
I'm glad Fred made it home from Okinawa. I wouldn't have been at that particular Easter lunch with friends and loved ones if he hadn't.
And that's just an example of what I've learned from old folk. Not all has been about war. There are lots of other things, some useful, some sad, some funny.
And even a few head-scrathers ... but they were all worth my time to obtain.
Old folk are a most valuable resource, and it's worth your time to seek them out, give them a hand or just a listening ear, and get all the learnin' you can.