A few weeks ago, I visited Pearl Harbor and the USS Arizona memorial. I wasn’t sure what to expect. My father was in the Navy during WWII at Normandy and later in the Pacific. I wanted to honor his service and the legacy of my parents’ generation who sacrificed and died to preserve our democracy.
I stared into the water at the rusting sunken ship, which is a gravesite for more than 900 sailors. I wondered if they were young like Dad who signed up at 21, or if they had any idea what they were getting into when they joined the Navy. Pearl Harbor was a large naval base, but in 1941, it probably seemed like they were in the middle of nowhere, doing nothing important. Until it was bombed.

In his later years, Dad said matter-of-factly, “War is hell.” He didn’t favor patriotic parades or ever make a big deal out of his service. Much as he hated war, he was also profoundly committed to preserving democracy.
Standing on deck of the memorial with the breeze rippling the water and lifting my hair, I didn’t feel a deep connection to Dad. Instead I felt frustrated, angry, and deeply sad that 85 years later, our country’s democracy is crumbling. I want to apologize to all the people who sacrificed and died so we wouldn’t see a day when the Current Occupant would engage us in a senseless war, trash our relationships with our international allies, and run roughshod over citizens’ constitutionally protected rights.
I am worried about our country’s future. We certainly weren’t perfect 10 years ago or 20 years ago, but at least democracy was viable and mostly functioning then.
More recently, I heard Yo-Yo Ma perform with the Minnesota Symphony Orchestra, and the music was as exceptional and moving as I expected. When he came out to play an encore, he alluded to Minnesota’s ordeal with ICE and our impressive community spirit. The audience clapped long and loud, grateful to be seen and acknowledged. Ma described the piece by Pablo Casals he intended to play. He said the music gets so quiet it almost disappears and there is fragility in the moment, but the music grows and fragility becomes strength.
I am choosing to believe that as fragile as our democracy is right now, too many of us believe in it to let it disappear, so it will grow strong again.
Comments
8 responses to “Choosing to Believe”
Love how you describe our democracy — so fragile, but incredibly tough and strong all at the same time. The USS Arizona Memorial really is something to see. When we visited it, years ago I had similar some similar thoughts to you. Patriotism isn’t about lip service or parades. It’s standing up, supporting neighbors, and fighting for our fragile democracy!
Thank you for your thoughts. I never thought we’d be in this spot, but we are and we have to keep fighting.
We in Rochester NY see you and are so inspired by all in Minneapolis. As a Sanctuary and Democratic city, we fear we’re next for Ice invasion but we’re ready. F Ice. Our shared defiance is what your father and all before him fought for. Keep writing and keep fighting
Thank you—means a lot. I hate the idea of 🧊 invading your city too, but won’t be surprised. So hard to get rid of them. Still 650 agents in the metro area 🤬 The other day I was thinking how being hopeful is a decision, a choice. No longer a naturally occurring experience. I used to be an optimist. Now on a good day, I’m a realist. But we all have to keep fighting—it’s too important not to. So glad we’re in this together.
👍🏼 👏🏼 🙏🏼
Thank you!
What an excellent essay, one of the best in this series.
Thank you–means a lot