November 22, 2005
The Thankful Tree
By
Michelle Malkin
"So, what did you do in school
today?" It's the question I greet
my daughter with every afternoon after she returns
home from kindergarten. Usually, she recycles three
jaded answers delivered with 5-going-on-16-year-old
aplomb: "I don't remember," "I did the monkey
bars," and "I drank chocolate milk."
This week was different. She came
home yesterday bubbling about a new holiday art project:
The Thankful Tree. "You trace your hands and cut
them out and then you write what you're thankful for on
the hands," my enthused daughter explained, "and
then you paste them onto a paper tree!" She eagerly
recited her thankful list from memory: "Friends.
Food. My fish, Rainbow. And my
little brother." (Yes, in that order.)
This morning before leaving for
school, my daughter decided we should make our own
Thankful Tree at home and left me this question to
ponder: "What are you thankful for, Mommy?"
Staring at my construction-paper
hand, here's what I have written in the palm: Our
Troops. And in the five fingers, I've written these
names of heroes who we'll honor this Thanksgiving:
Tyrone L. Chisholm, 27, of
Savannah, Ga. An Army sergeant and father of two,
Chisholm was killed Nov. 11 when a string of roadside
bombs exploded near his Abrams tank in Tall Afar, Iraq,
along the Syrian border. He was assigned to the
2nd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment at Ft.
Carson, Colo. His aunt, Delores Baron,
said: "He was really excited about the Army. He
was proud of what he was doing, and he died doing what
he wanted to do: serve his country."
Roger W. Deeds, 24, of
Biloxi, Miss. A lance corporal in the Marine Corps and
father of two, Deeds was among five Marines killed last
week during
Operation Steel Curtain in Ubaydi, Iraq, a terrorist
stronghold also near the Syrian border. His mother,
Joyce,
said: "The Marine motto is 'Semper
Fi -- always faithful.' They have a saying that no
one is left behind. And that's how my son died. . . . He
was faithful to God, country and family."
James S. Ochsner, 36, of
Waukegan, Ill. An Army sergeant 1st class, Ochsner was
killed last week when an improvised explosive device
detonated near his armored Humvee during a supply
distribution mission in Orgun, Afghanistan, near the
Pakistani border. "He was going out to distribute
some goods to the local people," Ochsner's father,
Bob Ochsner of Beach Park, told the
Chicago Sun-Times. "He loved the Afghan
people; he really enjoyed them," Bob Ochsner said of
his son. Sgt. Ochsner believed it was his duty to serve
in the armed forces, Bob Ochsner said.
Donald E. Fisher II, 21, of
Avon, Mass. An Army corporal from a large military
family, he was one of two soldiers killed Nov. 11 when
their convoy vehicle was involved in an accident in the
northern city of Kirkuk, Iraq. "Even as a young child
growing up in Brockton, patriotism surged through Donald
E. Fisher II," wrote the
Boston Globe.
"'We're talking about a kid who, as a kid,
cried because someone stole the flag off our flagpole,'
Donald Fisher of Tacoma, Wash., said of his son. 'He was
very committed.'"
James E. Estep, 26, of
Leesburg, Fla. An Army staff sergeant and father of
three, he was among four soldiers killed when an
improvised explosive device detonated last week near
their Humvee in Taji, Iraq, north of Baghdad. "He
loved the military," said
his brother, Michael. "He loved doing his job."
His sister, Becky Buskill, added: "He died for
a cause he believed in."
Can we bow our heads in union for
one day and give
thanks for our men and women who choose to fight,
refuse to lose, and believe in their mission? Can we do
it without distorting their legacies and pandering to
anti-American elites worldwide and using their deaths to
embarrass and undermine our commander in chief?
This is my prayer and the start of
our new family tradition. In small gestures, deep-rooted
gratitude grows.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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