Honor Flight - I had a chance to see this last evening - a documentary about bringing WWII veterans from around the US to visit the WWII monument in DC.
I had an opportunity to spend a week in Washington DC in Sept 2012, and of course visited the museums and monuments while I was there. On the morning I decided to go to the Washington Monument and Lincoln Memorial I happened upon the WWII Memorial which is between the two if you are going about on foot. While I was there a group of Honor Flight WWII Veterans started assembling at the monument. I had never heard of this program so I wasn't sure what was happening at first...but I stuck around curious to understand what was going on. These are a few pictures I took while observing the activities. I think this was the singular most moving part of my visit to DC. "Every day is a bonus."
I think Robert Porter has the best smile I've ever seen...then and now. And I went up and told him so.
http://www.honorflightthemovie.com/Honor Flight is a heartwarming documentary about four living World War II veterans and a Midwest community coming together to give them the trip of a lifetime. Volunteers race against the clock to fly thousands of WWII veterans to Washington, DC to see the memorial constructed for them in 2004, nearly 60 years after their epic struggle.
The trips are called “Honor Flights” and for the veterans, who are in their late 80s and early 90s, it’s often the first time they’ve been thanked and the last trip of their lives. The 24-hour journey is full of surprises that deeply move all who are involved. It’s uncommon for World War II veterans to talk about the War, but the Honor Flight experience brings their stories out. Many veterans say, with the exception of their wedding day and the birth of their children, the trip is the best day of their life.
However, success is all but ensured. 1,000 World War II veterans die every day and getting them on an Honor Flight in time is a constant battle. The film features Orville Lemke, a former plumber and beloved father of nine who fights to hold off terminal cancer so he can make the trip, and Julian Plaster, an 89-year-old poet who has survived almost all of his friends and family.
Honor Flight also chronicles the stories of veterans Joe Demler and Harvey Kurz. They raise money for and promote the Honor Flight program to help fly as many of their fellow veterans as possible. Joe, a soft-spoken retired postmaster, was famously pictured in Life magazine as “the Human Skeleton” upon his liberation from a German POW camp. Days from death, he weighed just 70 lbs. His comedic sidekick, Harvey, saw the iconic flag go up at the Battle of Iwo Jima, unbeknownst to the shoppers he bags groceries for at the local Pick n’ Save.
As the Honor Flight trip unfolds, Orville, Julian, Joe, Harvey and others share their stories and wisdom. While the Honor Flight program is meant to give something back to these humble heroes, the sheer goodness they embody and their profound appreciation for life in freedom, transforms the lives of everyone they meet.