55Friday: The “War” edition

We all know what today is and rather than prattle on about how I’m flummoxed that yet another week has raced past me and here we are, ready to write nanofiction, I’d rather focus on the significance of this day. In addition to 55Friday, today is Veterans day.

I learn something new every day. Here’s my chewable vitamin for today:

Q. What is the difference between Veterans Day and Memorial Day?
A. Many people confuse Memorial Day and Veterans Day. Memorial Day is a day for remembering and honoring military personnel who died in the service of their country, particularly those who died in battle or as a result of wounds sustained in battle. While those who died are also remembered on Veterans Day, Veterans Day is the day set aside to thank and honor ALL those who served honorably in the military – in wartime or peacetime. In fact, Veterans Day is largely intended to thank LIVING veterans for their service, to acknowledge that their contributions to our national security are appreciated, and to underscore the fact that all those who served – not only those who died – have sacrificed and done their duty. A complete history of Veterans Day, and why it is observed on November 11, can be found on our Veterans Day History Web page.

Though I tend to cringe whenever I’m exposed to the oeuvre of this holiday’s pneumatic spokesperson (who decides such things?) I am loyal to our military for a million reasons, most of which are inspired by my sole sibling who has spent almost a decade in active duty in the Air Force. Thank you, Veena, for all of your leadership and sacrifice. Thank you for giving yourself to a country that has given us so much. Most of all, thank you for putting a face on an organization which our family never really understood, appreciated or paid attention to until your courageous decision to serve. P.S. Please tell all of your friends, especially those who have been or are in Iraq and Afghanistan that I sweat them, too.

baby sister.jpg
Speaking of sepia soldiers, a gorgeous young desi is on my television screen; he is solemnly helping with Remembrance Day traditions across the pond. I’m watching the BBC World service as they report live from the Cenotaph and all of the broadcasters are wearing a poppy on their lapel, much like our neighbors up north do on this day as well. Suddenly I am sure of what our theme should be, for it seems like a most apposite choice on a day when it would be kind to think of something other than “w00t! A holiday!”

Remembrance.

A quick Google define yields the following information:

Remembrance: the ability to recall past occurrences; memorial: a recognition of meritorious service

As always, you are free to write about anything you wish, but in case you are blocked by a lack of ideas, know that memory inspires the majority of my writing, and I’m sure it can prompt at least 55 words from you, in between the respectful moments of reflection that this day requires (11am in Britain) and deserves (everywhere). Leave your 55 or links to it in the comments below. Thank you. 🙂

:+:

today’s title references this 1983 masterpiece, as well as the related 1987 concert film which is also connected to “remembrance”.

39 thoughts on “55Friday: The “War” edition

  1. She understood that the price of freedom was eternal vigilance, but already she was weary. Would she survive the war or welcome the sweet escape that death would bring?

    Her final preparations for battle were interrupted by a loud announcement from immediately in front of her: “You may kiss the bride” the voice said.

  2. Lady Liberty asked the man, “Do you love me?” His silence said he did. “I love you as well. You are my child. I will always feel your love in my tears and when I smile.”
    She draped a red, white, and blue blanket over him. It was the only warmth she could offer him.

  3. Under this field, his young friends lay asleep. At peace now, lit only by the stars, without the eerie death glow of guns and bombs. He pulled up handfulls of grass – never mind the annual contrition of war memorials. The earth better remembers you, in a million wildflowers, in rolling grassy hills, in mighty oaks.

  4. She spent a few minutes shining the buttons on the jacket, imagining the warmth of his laughter fill the empty room. He needed to look his best today as he wore his uniform to his final resting place. She was going to stand proud and embrace the memories he left. He was a hero at 21. He was her son and he gave his life for freedom.

  5. He sank to his knees, and held himself, rocking back and forth. He heard bullets whizzing past, smelled the metallic odor of blood. He squeezed his eyes shut and wished he could be anywhere else on earth but here.

    He felt a hand on his shoulder. “Come on. I’ll help you walk to the wall.”

    (Anna! You must be so proud of your sister! 🙂)

  6. He had lost everything in the long war – his youth, his dignity, even his … manhood. Still, he considered himself lucky to have escaped, no matter the cost.

    He lay in his threadbare bed in the cheap hotel, clutching his divorce papers to his chest and vowing to never again marry a Punjabi woman.

  7. When we were in high school, there was this Metallica video, for the song “One”, that used to play on HeadbangerÂ’s Ball. It used to give me the chills—to the core– and I couldnÂ’t quite put my finger on it. After Erich came back from Desert Storm, I understood why. And more so.

  8. He shamed his parents by enlisting at 17, a desi child of two doctors. Nobody could understand why. “War is hell!” they warned him. In his head, he silently replied “Hell is watching my parents fight every night. Nothing could be worse.” He went off to basic training with a smile on his face.

  9. He could taste the saline grime on his lips; it was hot, or was it just adrenaline? DidnÂ’t matter, he was in the infantry and his brothers were with him. A grenade comes through the window presenting the only option: jump and fall on it.

    It all ends. Everyone is debriefed and training continues. Hooah!

  10. “…remember those who sacrificed, so we could be free” said the principal over the PA.

    Iraj lowered his head, acutely aware that his classmates thought of soldiers, guns, and tanks. But, he only thought of Grandmother, who died almost two years ago, before his family fled.

    Not everyone who dies in war is a soldier.

  11. I could see the flag, torn but fluttering proudly.

    This day is ours.

    The flawless blue sky above me arched to infinity; but as I lay there, all I could see was the face of my beloved.

    With the name of the Almighty on my lips, the blazing sun beckoned, the brilliance finally engulfing me.

  12. Memoir-style 55-word lit:

    How do you say thank you?

    The other day, I sat on the old green couch and watched a documentary about Doris Day. “Sentimental journey meant a lot to the guys,” she says. Black and white images of men, marching in rows, face after face after face after face.

    How do you say thank you?

    *And thank you to the women, too.

  13. Hmm, you’d think after the whole post being about the difference between Veterans day and Memorial Day, I’d do something more appropriate.

    “Where are you going?”

    “I can’t say, ma’am.” He is apologetic.

    “Oh. Isn’t it dangerous?”

    He shrugs. He looks young. His face is handsome, in the way the young are handsome. I like that he is polite: who ever called me ma’am?

    We talk about his family after that, the fathers and uncles who served.

  14. We are in the midst of traveling. A line of people wait. Two men in uniform stand, waiting with the others. Discreetly, we look. Coming home or going abroad? One is young and anxious, the other is older, tanned and radiates ease. We’d like to signal our thanks, but we are shy.

  15. A Soldier Forgotten

    Quietly sitting next to Debbie and Rita at the Hot Rod Bar in College Station, Texas, “Did you see Cadet Harry? He is so hot and calls me Maam.”

    I just canÂ’t anymore. I quietly limp to the nearest strip club a mile away.

    “Was it 1967? Hey, you got girlfriend Vietnam? Me so horny.”

  16. Framed for life So weeps his wife The long stemmed rose Makes her feel morose As she thinks just why He had to die

    A piece of land Money wants at hand Calls him to duty But that aint no beauty Coz nothing can calm There aint no balm Which can heal the scar Of a dear Afar.

  17. He peered over his makeshift bunker; even relatively calm days of combat in the countryÂ’s capital were never pleasant.

    Suddenly, he heard a familiar whizzing sound.

    A few seconds later, he reached out, gurgling, to the blur in front of him, “Help…”

    The boy standing above him stared back in icy silence, counting the seconds.

  18. “Mangat Chacha, chai”, Seema announced.

    Mangat could still smell the burnt skin after 16 years.

    Through grenade smoke he saw body of Kartar. He remembered their promise – “Our girls will always have a father”.

    Just as Mangat smeared Kartar’s blood all over him and played dead, he heard voices above “Let’s go sahib, rebels are died”.

  19. My 55. This is such a cool idea! She was enamoured by the idea of being married to a servant of the nation, one with ideals, a desire for change, and most importantly, solutions. He was never around; she understood. She tolerated his reticence and absentmindedness at home, comforting herself with the hope that she had sacrificed her life for her countryÂ’s sake.

  20. When he sensed the unsaid words hanging in the air like a noisome fog between them, he knew that it was over.

    He remembered the time when she jumped out of the train clutching her little nightbag, smiling, like a pre-Valentine chocolate advertisement in the crisp, clear, dewy bright morning — now irrevocably in the past.

  21. He looked down for one more time. From ten thousand feet high, the city looked shrunk – the narrow alleys disappeared and the calmness had taken over – it was almost like the city was abandoned, or he would have liked to believe that. The screen flashed in front of him – target locked. His trembling hands reached the deployment lever. The plane shook a little as the heavy weapon unleashed into the sky. He remembered the previous evening – walking through the market, giving candies to the children – who among them would be dead now – his heart wept. He stared into the empty sky while the noises in the headset seemed cryptic. But, soon, the same cryptic voices seemed to make sense – he followed the parade of planes ahead of him.

  22. The saint gazed down from the fortress, the evening sunlight glinting off the polished steel chakra around his turban. He could see Jujhar clearly, the youth standing alone, sword drawn, fearlessly facing the massed phalanx of soldiers.

    A single man will challenge 125,000…..

    Return Home, my son. Your grandfather and elder brother await you there.

  23. The warriors encircled the walled city. They called this land Dakkan, meaning “Right Hand” in their language; the name hinting at their long migration from the north-west.

    In his chariot, their blue-eyed king refined his strategy. One day he would be called “Breaker of Forts”, God of Rain, in songs still unsung, scriptures still unwritten.

  24. najeeb, i’m not deleting it. i liked it. 🙂 feel free to write a 55 if you feel like you didn’t fulfill the assignment properly. 😉

    jai singh- you slay me. swoon.

  25. Nalwa! Nalwa!

    The pathans looked upon the fortÂ’s ramparts. The clashing of swords silenced, replaced by astonished voices proclaiming the name of their enemyÂ’s feared general.

    The general, dying, watched as the pathans fled on his emergence. When death finally consumed him, his still standing and lifeless body bore instant tribute to his magnificent legend.

  26. Thekingsingh — Epic, poetic stuff, buddy 😉

    Sikhgirl & Anna — Thank you so much for the feedback and your kind words – greatly appreciated as always. A few more 55’s from me follow below…..

  27. I stood on the hill next to the Emperor, our troops arranged in disciplined formation. We could already see the barbarians in the forest ahead, chaotic, armed with primitive weaponry.

    “For the glory of Rome”, we were told…..

    Surely ‘honour’ means more than this, I thought, as I gave the order to start the bombardment.

  28. The Rana slashed with his khanda, swathed in the saffron robes of martyrdom like the tens of thousands of Rajputs fighting alongside him; the opium fuelling their ferocity against the Sultan’s army.

    Padmini must have commited jauhar by now, he thought, the grief overpowering.

    All this, because of a momentary glimpse of my wife’s reflection…..

  29. General Sayyid Beg stared back at him, face to face at last; a living saint in the garb of a soldier, a Guru with the bearing of a king.

    This jihad is an abomination…..

    The battle thundered around them.

    No more hypocrisy…..

    Committing his fate to the will of Allah, he swung his horse around.

  30. Prithviraj felt his heart gradually failing, the wreckage of their armies symbolising the ashes of the alliance; the Sons of Princes defeated by betrayal.

    Women, gold, land…..That is all these fanatics care about, cloaked in the guise of religion…..

    Bitterly, he remembered Mahmud’s capture last year, released on the promise of never returning. More lies…..