I Cried Tears For Dresden
Though I never knew them, though
they died months before I was born, I
cannot help but
to still feel the pain of those innocent people of Dresden who suffered
so unjustly,
unfairly, and totally without fault on February 13, 1945. They make me
think of abused
children suffering for something that they do not understand. Abused
children in a small
way share with those
now
departed
souls of Dresden the total unjustness of this world. Innocent people
would not in a fair
world, a decent world, be made to suffer.
They died this night. So many of
them. Bombs raining down upon
their heads like manna
from hell - the heads of defenseless women and children for the most
part. Babies in their
cribs. Sobbing children in their mothers arms. Little girls without
blemish, little boys
full of anticipation at the excitement life promised them. The girls
became blemished
heaps of burnt flesh. The promise was broken by life to the boys. There
would be no future
for them.
Even now, across time, distance,
culture, language, and ocean,
I hear their cries. Ten
thousand per second raising their helpless, tortured voices for mercy.
No mercy. No
relief. Only painful death from planes with United States written on
them.
Why did my father’s generation do
this? How could they kill
all these people -
then not know about it?
My father a decorated, battlefield
commissioned, combat
hardened infantry veteran of
Roosevelt’s army, told me as I lay at his feet as a small child
listening that
"Hitler was bad but the German people were good." The Germans were
"very
smart" they just had a bad leader he said. He was proud of his role as
a soldier in
defeating Germany. And if soldiers are without responsibilities for
their role in history
then he had more right then many to be proud of his many decorations.
Then in 1984 after discovering the
horrible truth about
Dresden I spoke to my father
about it. I told him more people were killed there in a single night of
fire and bombing
then in England during the entire war. He said "that is a lie." He
refused to
believe
me. I stressed to him that
they were innocent people. He became angry with me. I asked him why
they were killed. His
anger boiled over and he said I was believing Nazi propaganda. I said
to him "there
are no Nazi’s daddy you killed them all, there are only people who
study
history" while pulling an Encyclopedia Americana from the
shelf. The
encyclopedia while only admitting to a numerical fraction of the dead
at Dresden was yet
sufficient to exceed England’s total bombing dead.
"These were refugees fleeing the
communists" I said, becoming
angry myself.
"Why did Roosevelt order it done?" I demanded of him.
He read it and became silent. He
read it again while running
his fingers along the
words carefully touching the numbers as if to make sure they were there
and real. It then
dawned on me. He did not know! He had lived through this time and
because of a constant
flood of propaganda from America’s news media this horrible war crime
and others like
it had been kept from him.
I could see this troubled him, for
it was from him that I
acquired the proclivity of
taking up the fight for the down trodden, those abused unfairly. He was
a kind man and
would have never knowingly participated in such cruelty. I left for
home then feeling
sorry for Dad. I left him to think in peace. My anger at his being a
part of those who did
this horrible thing abated.
I swear I will not forget the crime
against innocent people at
Dresden. I will not
forget who is responsible. I will not forget! I am but one small life.
One dim light in a
world covered with the darkness of cruel machinations by evil men. But
this little light
of mine, I will let it shine! For only by doing so do I serve my reason
for existence, for
life, for eternity.
I read as a young person that "all
that is necessary for evil
to triumph is for
good men to do nothing." Those words became a part of my soul, my life.
Love is put
to the test when one takes on the suffering of others - when one
becomes a voice against evil for those who have none, a
target of abuse for doing nothing but standing for justice.
There is no reward save knowing you
have done that which is
right. And there is hope.
Hope that others will make the light that truth is a part of their
life, their existence,
so that together we become a bright ray for the future. A light unto
the feet of all our
fellow men who stumble.
In distant Dresden park they
lie in their graves now. Rest my
unknown friends, you
downtrodden and despised of this world. Though we could not speak the
same language if we
stood before each other, though I never knew your names, and while your
faces I can only
imagine, you are my departed loved ones. My heart beats for yours. My
mind remembers for
yours. My tears for yours...
Louis Beam

These corpses aren't
Jewish
SO THE MEDIA DON'T CARE!