Editor’s Notebook
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Danette Goulet
History as a subject in school, was both a chore and a bore to me. It
was an exercise in memorization. The point was not to learn, but to
remember the dates and places long enough to get to class and put them in
the right spots on the test.
Anything I remember from history classes is a fluke and an accident.
Then there was the history that surrounded me as I grew up in Concord,
Mass. Louisa May Alcott’s house was, to me, the setting of a book -- that
was cool. What did I learn? People were shorter back then. I had to duck
through all the doorways. Wouldn’t my teachers be proud of what I gleaned
from that experience?
Walden pond where Ralph Waldo Emerson lived in seclusion and wrote his
many essays was a chance to be out in the sunshine instead of in a
classroom.
But history, in the form of living, breathing participants is
monumentally fascinating to me.
Since the first time, years ago, that I went to interview a veteran
for a story, I’ve been hooked.
I get a bit of ribbing for my fascination with and passion about the
importance of talking to and more importantly listening to these
historical treasures that are veterans.
I do not intend to make them sound like relics but rather convey their
deep importance to society.
A day will come when the only way to learn about Pearl Harbor will be
to read books or watch documentaries. That day is not yet here. There are
men and women out there, like Frank Weitzeland Donald Weir, who can tell
you about Pearl Harbor. What it felt like, sounded like, smelled like.
They may write their testimonies down so that children in years to come
can know their stories. But the opportunity to hear them tell of the “Day
of Infamy” and watch the expressions flit across their faces is now.
Tomorrow, as we remember the events of that Sunday morning 60 years
ago with these national treasures, let’s also all stop to think about the
men and women fighting now.
For they too, one day, will be the veterans whom we can not afford to
forget. * DANETTE GOULET is the assistant city editor. She can be reached
at (714) 965-7170 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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