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Horizontal Recruiters
by MARK BLICKLEY
Five years ago I visited
Arlington National Cemetery for the first (and only) time. As a
reluctant participant in the Vietnam War, I was hoping that my visit to
this "hallowed ground" would offer up some kind of comfort, some sort
of pride, for having served my country during wartime. It provided
neither comfort nor pride for me. I was puzzled by my reaction. The place is 612 acres of beautifully
landscaped graves and monuments. It's situated right on the banks of
the Potomac River, and offers a majestic view of Washington, D.C. My
initial reaction was of awe and a feeling of connection with the names
and dates etched on tombstones and mausoleums. But as I explored the
cemetery, there were signs strategically placed on pathways that I read
admonishing me to keep silent and to be respectful of the dead. At
first I read these signs as a nice way to respect the men and women
buried underfoot; then these signs annoyed me because of their
commanding tone, and finally they angered me because I felt as if I
were back in the service, and some belligerent officer was once again
barking out at me how to think and how to behave.
This anger made me feel uncomfortable at Arlington; I thought it
was my displaced feelings of resentment at having had to put on a
uniform even though I found out after my tour of duty that I needn't
have gone into the military because of my father's death when I was
nine, and being the only surviving male in a household of four females
would have exempted me from service as I was my mother's only source of
support. But boys from the Bronx didn't get any kind of anti-war
counseling that would illuminate such information; college students and
college-bound students had middle-class counselors available to them,
not the urban poor. So as I trudged through acre after acre of funereal
splendor, I thought my growing repulsion to Arlington was simply a
matter of personal "sour grapes," independent of the visual and
historic landscape where I had deposited myself.
I was wrong. It suddenly dawned on me that the signs admonishing me
to behave in a certain way weren't so much to insure proper respect for
the dead, but a kind of recruitment poster for potential and future
servicemen. In my mind the phrase eternal rest suddenly turned into parade rest,
the military term for being at ease while still in a military
formation. I felt that every corpse interred at Arlington was there to
seduce living boys to join up and experience the wonders of heroic
service to one's country. When I discovered that Arlington National
Cemetery was open 365 days a year, from sunrise to sunset, it disturbed
me. It seemed as if the dead never had a time to be dead, that they
were continually on display, continually in formation to perpetuate a
recruiter's dream of power and glory.
Heroic service is the key. Hero. The mythological hero envisioned
and praised in ancient literature, where immortality wasn't considered
taking up residence in an afterlife, but having the deeds of the hero
repeated and praised by living generation after generation.
It's not a coincidence that an internationally renowned military
cemetery, barely a hundred years old, and the national depository of
the military dead of a nation only two hundred years old, is
architecturally rooted in the ancient past of Greece and Rome, where
the heroic ideal was born and flourished. It's not America one enters
when you pass the gates of Arlington, it's the ancient world of
Thesueus in Athens, which the cemetery's centerpiece, the Custis-Lee
mansion, imitates and the white marbled, roofless, memorial
amphitheater copied after both the theater of Dionysus at Athens and
the Roman theater at Orange, France, that according to the Encyclopedia Britannica ".the proportions and distances convey the charm of an old Greek ruin." But this unique American historical monument has become, in addition, a
huge recruitment center rooted in the glorious mysteries of ancient
legends of death and sacrifice. My feeling that one of the subtler
purposes of Arlington National Cemetery is in military recruitment was
greatly strengthened when I discovered that the United States
government maintains 114 national cemeteries, but Arlington is the only
one under the jurisdiction of the United States Army. The remaining
cemeteries are administered by the Veterans Administration. Why is
Arlington the only military cemetery in the nation administered by an
active branch of the military? Does the United States Army, which
employs thousands of recruiters that work vertically, see these
Arlington dead as important and powerful horizontal recruiters?
"The.burial.serve to translate the individual's life-crises and
life-deeds into classic, impersonal forms. They disclose him to
himself, not as this personality or that, but as the warrior. Generations of individuals pass, like anonymous cells from a living
body; but the sustaining, timeless form remains. By an enlargement of
vision to embrace this super-individual, each discovers himself
enhanced, enriched, supported and magnified."
Joseph Campbell, in his book, The Hero With A Thousand Faces,
is describing the role of burial in the life of ancient, tribal
warriors, but is there an Army recruiter in late 20th century America
that wouldn't kill to be able to induce an experience of that magnitude
on a daily basis? Arlington National Cemetery does evoke that type of
experience every day of the year, from sunrise to sunset. The
overwhelming majority of the 230,000 corpses interred there are not
heroes, but "ordinary" citizens like the visitors viewing them. But
planted within this classically structured cemetery, these acres of
ordinary individuals become inspiring "super-individuals" perpetuating
the validation of the festival dead.
Justice Joseph Story stated in an address at a cemetery dedication
in 1831, that contemporary Christian attitudes and practices concerning
burial were, unfortunately, not the equal of those of earlier heathen
cultures, and to prove his point he briefly surveyed the burial customs
of the Egyptians, Greeks, Hebrews and others. "Our cemeteries, rightly
selected, and properly arranged, [could] be made subservient to some of
the highest purposes of human duty. They [could] preach lessons, to
which none [could] refuse to listen, and which all that live must hear."
Participating in this recruitment poetry of the tombs is the most
visited site at Arlington, John F. Kennedy's grave. Inscribed on the
wall near his grave is this quote from this Inaugural Address: "In the
long history of the world, only a few generations have been granted the
role of defending freedom in its hour of maximum danger." The irony of
such a quote coming from Kennedy is that during World War II, as a
naval officer, Lt. John Kennedy was the only P.T. boat commander to
lose a boat by enemy ramming in the entire Pacific theater. Through the
intervention of his powerful father, Joseph Kennedy, Lt. Kennedy was
able to turn his impending court martial for gross neglect of duty into
an act of inspirational heroism that propelled him into Congress and
eventually into the role of the nation's Commander-in-Chief. John
Kennedy concludes his public career as Arlington's number one military
recruiter.
As I delved deeper into the history of Arlington National Cemetery,
I was surprised to find that the issue of racial identity is also alive
on this hallowed ground. From 1864 until 1890, it served as the site of
an encampment for freed slaves, known as Freedman's Village. Freedman
Village resulted from Lincoln's emancipation of all slaves living in
the District of Columbia on April 16, 1862. Given Washington's
proximity to the Southern States, many fugitive slaves-as well as those
liberated by advancing Union troops-found their way to Washington in
search of a new life. Overcrowding and disease forced the government to
relocate many different camps (including one inside the U.S. Capitol
Building) to Arlington as a temporary refuge for freed slaves, but the
camp grew to be known as Freedman Village, providing permanent housing
and other community services to liberated black men, women and children
for nearly thirty years.
At its inception, the village came under the military jurisdiction
of the U.S. Army and was governed by a military commander. Many
residents complained that life under military rule was not much better
than slavery.
After the war, the desire to assist freed slaves lost a great deal
of its support among the general public and fewer and fewer resources
were made available to the villagers. Neighboring residents complained
of the crime associated with the village and of the financial burden
they were forced to assume as federal assistance to the villagers was
reduced. By 1890, the villagers were no longer considered refugees from
slavery, and Freedman Village was dismantled and the residents were
forced to leave.
Thus, more than three generations before Franklin Roosevelt's
administration, a harsh welfare "state" was founded at Arlington
National Cemetery in answer to the new and bothersome race problem the
Civil War had created. The negative result from this noble experiment
proved to be a microcosm of contemporary racial strife. I'm at a loss
to explain why this earliest of governmental precedents concerning the
race question wasn't factored into 20th century policy decisions. I
imagine that some invaluable insights could be gained by studying how a
Freedman Village, in the course of a single generation, could evolve
into a Freedman Prison. I suspect that the truth of this failure has
been discreetly buried under humanely inscribed Arlington Cemetery
monuments that applaud the government's benevolent establishment of
Freedman Village to help the down-trodden African-American victims of
the Civil War.
Discreet burials of another kind were performed at Arlington. There
existed a policy of segregating black warriors from white that lasted
for nine decades. The expulsion of living black residents from cemetery
grounds in 1890 was replaced with the expulsion of deceased black
residents by depositing their corpses in a separate area, away from
their white counterparts. Segregated even in death, black soldiers were
denied the same hero status given to whites. This "Freedman Village of
the Dead" existed until 1948. It's only been fifty years since our
black servicemen and women have been afforded the privilege of serving
our nation as horizontal recruiters.
Arlington National Cemetery is a kind of theme-park whose theme is
our national, and to a lesser extent, racial identity. Disney World may
be the theme-park brainchild of Walt Disney, but Arlington is the only
national cemetery out of 114 that is under direct control of the United
States Army, and it's not even the largest national cemetery. It's the
theme-park brain child of the Pentagon that serves the future much more
adroitly than the past it claims to represent.
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