November/December 2005
FEATURE |
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Missing & Found
VVA's Rochester Honor
Guard at The Wall
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BY MICHAEL KEATING |
Ten years ago, a POW/MIA Marathon
Team ran from Rochester, New York, to the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial on the national Mall. VVA Chapter 20’s Color Guard
attended the race’s beginning at the Rochester Vietnam Veterans
Memorial. “And we thought,” said Ray Melens, “‘Wouldn’t it be nice
if we could meet them in D.C.?’ So we did.”
In each of the intervening years, a special honor guard selected
just for this duty has traveled the 400-mile distance between
Rochester and Washington to perform brief ceremonies at The
Wall and at Arlington Cemetery honoring America’s POW/MIAs.
This elite group is selected from Chapter 20’s Honor Guard and
Marching Unit.
“It’s an honor to be selected,”
life member Eugene (Geno) Lenyk said. Wives and friends join the
group on the trip and help them when they arrive. They assemble
under the trees by Constitution Avenue, then march out onto the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial grounds, precise and austere, their
silence punctuated by Melens’s muted cadence.
The Honor Guard visits the Women’s
Memorial, the Three Fightingmen, salutes the flagpole with its
massive American and POW/MIA flags at half-mast, then assembles at
the apex of The Wall. After a wreath-laying and some brief
words, the Color Guard withdraws, leaving a single standard-bearer
with the POW/MIA flag.
Few people know of the ceremony,
fewer still have seen it. “It’s lonely duty,” Melens, now the
marching unit commander, said. “It’s such a little-known day. But
we just keep doing it.” Although done without fanfare, on its
third year local media accompanied Rochester’s Honor Guard to
The Wall.
Back in Rochester, a local Gold
Star Mother saw the coverage and contacted the chapter. She wanted
to go to The Wall, but she was hesitant about going alone.
Escorting her the following year to view her son’s name, said
Lenyk, “was a very special occasion.”
At the conclusion of the ceremony, the Honor Guard crosses
Memorial Bridge to Arlington Cemetery. Two repatriated MIAs from
Rochester rest there. Even fewer people witness the commemorations
there, “but we do it as formally as at The Wall,” said
Lenyk.
The careful, exacting ceremony
honors those two—Rexford John DeWispelaere and John Edward
Crowley—who returned and the ten local men who remain missing.
“We do it for the guys,” Lenyk
said. “It’s God watching.”
VVA chapters interested in participating in POW/MIA Remembrance
Day ceremonies at The Wall can contact Geno Lenyk at
gnl3153@rit.edu
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