Panel led by Professor Hope Elizabeth May |
On the one
hundredth anniversary of Woodrow Wilson’s request to Congress that war be
declared against Germany the Clarke Historical Library, in conjunction with the
CMU Veterans’ Resource Center and the Center for International Ethics,
sponsored an evening focusing on the meaning of patriotism. In particular four veterans
as well as Professor Hope Elizabeth May spoke about service to America.
The
evening’s honored guests were World War II veteran Staff Sergeant Earl Wickman,
Korean War veteran Sergeant John Schuling, Vietnam War veteran Sergeant Larry
Ashley, and Staff Sergeant T.J. Pierce, who served in Afghanistan. Each gentleman
spoke on what service meant to him. Hope Elizabeth May expanded the discussion
of service by sharing how individuals like Central President E.C. Warriner, who
had been deeply involved in the Peace Education movement of the early twentieth
century, reacted to the war, as well as how Woodrow Wilson, following the logic
that led him to ask America to enter the war, came to ask Congress to support
the constitutional amendment allowing women the right to vote.
Duane
Kleinhardt, director of the Veterans’ Resources Center, set the context for the
day’s remembrance by reading from a note found on the body of Owen Barrett, the
first Central student to die in World War I:
“Somewhere
in France, about to go over the top.
Dear Mother
and Sisters: I know you will be surprised to hear this news but I ask you not
to cry as I have died for the sake of democracy’s freedom for all. I am glad to think that I have had a chance
to sacrifice my life for something worth wile. The Redeemer has given me life
and it is His right to call me back again at His will. I will see you all in the great
hereafter. Love and kisses. Good-bye.”
Two other
Central students died in the Great War, along with more than 11 million
soldiers, of which more than 116,000 were Americans.Introductions by Frank Boles |
Even though
he blamed Germany’s leaders for beginning the war, nevertheless the war was not
really about striking back at those leaders.
“Our motive
will not be revenge or the victorious assertion of the physical might of the
nation, but only the vindication of right, of human right, of which we are only
a single champion.”
Wilson
defined “the vindication of right” by clarifying what the world that America would
go to war to achieve, would look like:
“We are at
the beginning of an age in which it will be insisted that the same standards of
conduct and of responsibility for wrong done shall be observed among nations
and their governments that are observed among the individual citizens of
civilized states.”
The
evening’s remembrance also included a rendition of Taps by Morgan Lillie, which preceded moment of silence for those
who had died, and closed with the singing of the Star Spangled Banner by the Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, a CMU student
group.
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia |
We will
remember the day President Wilson signed the Declaration of War, on April 7, by
a flag raising ceremony at 1:15 p.m. at the flagpole directly in front (north
side) of Warriner Hall. The flag raised
will be the Pro Concordia Labor peace flag which was designed in 1897 and
envisioned by its creator as a universal symbol of peace. You can read more about the flag at http://www.proconcordialabor.com/Flag/.
After the
flag raising, beginning at 2:00 p.m. a discussion will be held in the Park
Library Auditorium regarding the legal response to the Rwandan Genocide, which
began April 7, 1994. The speaker will be Professor Jennifer Trahan, from
New York University, who will share how the international response to the
atrocities in Rwanda has influenced international law, including the creation
of the historic International Criminal Court. For more information about the
presentation please visit https://www.cmich.edu/colleges/chsbs/Abel/Speakers/Pages/Spring-2017.aspx.