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TO
MY GRANDSONS: NEVER FORGET OUR HEROES
To Zachary and
Nicholas Wansley; Brian and Thomas Yarbrough:
I
have been sharing some thoughts with you at the beginning of each year in
the hope that some of my reflections might prove helpful as you grow to
adulthood. I will continue to do so as long as I have something meaningful
to say, and you show some interest in wanting to hear it.
So
why am I writing
you in the middle of the year? I have a story to tell you that is too
important to wait. It is the story of Pat Tillman, a man who made the
ultimate sacrifice for his country — an inspiring story that reminds us
there are still some heroes around these days.
Mr. Tillman was a very good football player for the Arizona Cardinals. I
didn’t know a lot about him because I don’t pay much attention to
professional sports anymore, particularly pro football. I got tired of
watching overpaid and narcissistic clowns acting like idiots after
catching a pass or making a tackle. Pat Tillman was not like that. He was
a tough competitor who did his job quietly and effectively. Then suddenly
and without notice, he walked away from a career paying $3.6 million a
year to join the U.S. Rangers and help in his country’s ongoing battle
with Muslim terrorists. That is called patriotism, and it is in very short
supply these days. He loved his country so much he was willing to die for
it, and he did. Pat Tillman was killed in Afghanistan last month at the
age of 27. The world is poorer for his absence.
There are many heroes in
Iraq and Afghanistan who have not achieved the fame of Pat Tillman,
ordinary American citizen-soldiers who happen to believe the United States
is a nation worth defending. What are they defending? They are defending a
bunch of self-absorbed and complacent people living off the sacrifices of
generations before them. A nation that no longer acts like it is
indivisible; that no longer believes it is one nation under God. They are
defending people who love their country less than they love criticizing it
and who don’t seem to care that it sends a signal of weakness to those who
have hurt us and intend to hurt us again. They are defending a nation that
rails incessantly about individual freedoms but where less than half of us
exercise perhaps our most sacred freedom — the freedom to vote. Sometimes,
I wonder if we are worth saving. Fortunately for us, Pat Tillman thought
we were. So do his colleagues in our Armed Forces.
What
makes Pat Tillman a hero is that he was true to his convictions. He didn’t
compromise or rationalize his beliefs like many of us do. He didn’t sit on
the sidelines and whine, in football or in life. He exhibited a courage
that most of us don’t have. He cared more about his country than he cared
about himself. These are rare traits in today’s me-first world. You would
be amazed and perhaps saddened to know how many of us don’t really care
about anything but ourselves.
One day, you may face the
kind of decision that Pat Tillman faced. I pray you never have to go to
war, because I cannot bear the thought of you in harm’s way. If I could, I
would give my life ten times over to save yours. At the same time, I want
you to stand for something. I want you to believe in something. And I want
you to be true to those beliefs.
Most of all, love your
country. Don’t obsess on its shortcomings. You live in the greatest nation
on earth. We aren’t perfect, but neither are our critics. My generation
seems uncomfortable with our success because we paid such a small price
for it. Pat Tillman and the other heroes gave their lives for their
country and have put its future in your hands. Handle with care. You can
start by never forgetting what these brave people have done for you. And
don’t worry about the naysayers and critics. They come with the territory.
Love,
Pa
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