The warning stands
- Share via
Never forget.
Word War II veterans who were in Pearl Harbor the day the Japanese
attacked have spent decades relaying this message.
It is a warning, a cry for vigilance.
It was a sleepy Sunday morning in Pearl Harbor, on the Island of
Oahu, Hawaii. There had been no formal declaration of war.
And while thousands of service men and women slept, ate breakfast,
read the Sunday paper and relaxed, the Japanese Imperial Navy
attacked.
There were 2,395 men and women killed that morning, 1,178 wounded
and 1,102 remain entombed in the USS Arizona.
For many, there is no way to forget -- parents or grandparents
lived through the war and relate stories. But for younger generations
it is a time far removed. It is history just like the Civil War is.
And so veterans have gone to schools, spoken to classes, told
their stories and relayed their message of vigilance.
For many it is a message that resonates more since Sept. 11, 2001,
when America again came under attack. For others it makes Dec. 7,
1941 seem even further in the past.
Neither should be forgotten, and one does not supercede the other.
With each year that passes the number of Pearl Harbor survivors
dwindles.
Andrew Weniger, who was working on Hickam Army Airfield at Pearl
Harbor when the Japanese launched the attack, is among a shrinking
number of Pearl Harbor survivors.
Weniger, the president of the Orange County Chapter of the Pearl
Harbor Survivors Assn. estimates that between 5,000 and 4,000 Pearl
Harbor survivors are left, down from 18,000 a decade ago. This year,
about 1,000 Pearl Harbor survivors are believed to have died.
Their message must live on. Their stories must be told and
listened to.
On this, the 63rd anniversary of the attacks, Weniger and others
reached out to students.
“We don’t want them to ever forget what others have sacrificed for
this great country,” he said.
But their message is not just a history lesson. It is a cry to be
ever vigilant. As we fight a new enemy, their message of vigilance
should be heeded.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.