Dear Readers, I took a picture of the nativity scene from St. Peter The Apostle Catholic Church. Notice that it shows there is no Baby Jesus in the simple and small crib. However, Angels, the Virgin Mary, St. Joseph, and the Wise Men are praying and preparing for His birth.
The next picture is a delightful one because it shows that Jesus, our Savior, was born the following day, Christmas. This is the reason I chose the following picture.
Friends Celebrating Christmas
Dear readers, at this time of year my mind is full of thoughts not about getting or giving gifts, it is filled with God’s love for us. The Blessed Virgin and St. Joseph took care of Jesus. They were the perfect family, taking care of each other and their son, Jesus. I don’t know if Joseph and Mary knew who Jesus was when He was born. But Jesus was born to save us from ourselves. He was the Son of God. Many times, I wonder if He knew his fate even as a baby. I can’t ignore that Mary and Joseph suffered when they finally learned that Jesus’ was the Son of God and learning from Jesus that He had to fulfill his mission. So, today I thank Jesus for assuming a human form. Through the scriptures I learned how He suffered. He taught us how to be courageous. Thank Jesus for turning his birthday day into a special one, Christmas. I thank Him for being our Redeemer. I suffer from an illness that doctors haven’t figured out what causes it. But I must remember that Jesus suffered and tolerated pain. These thoughts keep me going. He gave me many special talents and I must fight through pain to fulfill them. Mary and Joseph must’ve suffered to see their son tortured and killed. So, on His birthday, known as Christmas, I thank Him profusely for all He has done for us. Join me in prayer to thank Him for what He did for us.
Dear Readers, I usually write long blogs but this one is a short one for Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Dear Virgin Mary, I was blessed to see you on Jaun Diego’s cloak at El Tepeyac in Mexico City, years ago. Today is your feast day. I beg you for your help. My dog, Twister, is seriously ill. Will you please help him get well? In September 2009, he came to our home abandoned and near death. With your help, an efficient veterinarian and Jesus, he recovered. Today, I beg you to help him recover from his current ailment.
Here I am prostrate before your image asking for your help for my little dog, my kitten who has lost his sight, my husband who is also sick, and for my sister who suffers from a mental illness and also for my health (I have a very sharp pain in my spine).
My sister had Covid but today I found out that she has recovered. Thank you, dear blessed Virgen of Guadalupe. Thanks a lot!
Please reach out to everyone who needs help. Thank you very much, Our Lady, for all that you have done for me!
Dear readers, illness has kept me from posting more often on my website. Today, on All Saints Day, I am taking you back to my Latino roots which began in Saucillo, Chihuahua, Mexico, at my grandmother’s house. This was during the period of Diaz Ordas’ leadership. Gustavo Díaz Ordaz Bolaños was a Mexican politician and member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), and served as the President of Mexico from 1964 to 1970. Before his time, Mexican citizens tired of the life that president Madero had afforded them decided to end his regime with strong leadership from concerned citizens. Among these people, Pancho Villa, and thousands of Mexican citizens tired of the dictatorship imposed on them by Madero joined forces with other leaders to put an end to his dictatorship. Emiliano Zapata was one of the leaders. Historians tell us about his assassination. They claim that he was gunned down and that he landed crouched down on his knees with his face kissing the ground. Fortunately, the valiant efforts of these strong, courageous leaders, both men and women, led to the independence of Mexico. (There’s more info on the history of Mexico, so I refer you to:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisco_I._Madero.)
My father who was born in Texas traveled throughout Mexico. He landed a job checking the “Posos Petroleros” (oil rigs). He was very talented and repaired the cotton gins when they were not working. I never found out how he met my mother, but I’m glad they met and got married. My father saved his income and when he returned to Texas, his brother helped him move his family from Mexico to Brownsville, Texas, where I was born. Dad lived to be 86 years old and passed away a few days shy of being 87 years old. During his funeral services in August 1985, the Lockheed L-1011 TriStar operating Flight 191 encountered a microburst when it landed at DFW on August 2, 1985. 137 people died and 25 were injured in the crash. My oldest brother was concerned about my safety because I had to fly back to Fort Worth. I reassured him that I would be okay. The important thing was to take care of funeral arrangements for my father and to comfort my mother.
Dad and my sister
With his savings Dad purchased a home for my family in Saucillo, Chihuahua. This house which was part of a duplex constructed from adobe bricks and beautiful tiled floors became our family’s vacation house and gave my mother time during the summer to visit her mother and siblings. Unfortunately, that house no longer belongs to us. I don’t know much about its sale. I wish that I would have had enough sense to write addresses and phone numbers of my dear relatives. But at that time, I was young and never thought that I would find myself longing to know how they were.
My mother
We spent summers in Saucillo, and I had a wonderful time with my relatives. While Mom visited her mother and siblings, time passed quickly. I became a teenager and my cousin, a good-looking girl, who was my age, introduced my sister and me to a custom that we didn’t know about.
One Sunday afternoon, we walked in the plaza, after going to church. We put on our Sunday clothes and walked around the kiosk with some of my cousin’s friends. Suddenly I found myself walking alone. I was approached by a slim, handsome, dark complexioned young man taller than I was. I gazed at his handsome face. He was talking to me, but I don’t remember anything he said. I was so surprised that such a good-looking guy would approach me and ask me if I could walk around the plaza with him.
In the meantime, my cousin and her friends stuck around the plaza to keep an eye on the gentleman and me. It got late and the gentleman walked me to my grandma’s house. I think we agreed to see each other as long as I was still in Saucillo. That was the beginning of a friendship. My sister also met another young man. Saucillo was a small city at that time and soon my relatives learned that my sister and I were dating two handsome young men. I don’t know how long we dated that summer. No sex or amorous encounters were involved. We just enjoyed each other’s company and got to know each other.
Jose Aguilar, Maria Murray, and Polo Aguilar in Naica, Chihuahua
One afternoon the young men took us for a ride on their horses. That was a wonderful experience. My mother and some of my aunts sat on chairs outside my grandmother’s house to watch us go by riding the horses. As I said before, I’m not sure how long I spent that summer or other summers in Saucillo. All I can say is that I enjoyed the friendship that I had with my mother’s brothers and sisters. I also learned a lot from my grandmother. She was a hard worker, who constantly got pestered by me. While relatives took a siesta, my grandmother kept on working. She washed clothes and ironed them on the kitchen table. Those were the days when an old metal iron was heated in the potbelly stove and used to press clothes. I was not used to taking a siesta, so I watched her work and cook. I also walked barefoot in the dirt streets in the hot sun, but I was okay. I learned so many things. I learned how to chuck corn and take the corn to the factory to turn it into dough to make tortillas, gorditas de Manteca and tamales. The factory was far from where we lived. We had to cross a highway to come back with a bucket full of masa. I truly enjoyed helping my grandmother with chores. I wasn’t just a visitor. I helped around the house.
Unfortunately, one day my mother decided that we should go home. After all, my dad was by himself and probably missed us. I had a terrible time that evening saying goodbye to the young man that I met while walking around the plaza with my cousin and her friends. Later, in my cousin’s home, I cried so much that I made my nose bleed when I blew it with my cousin’s handkerchief.
The young man and I corresponded, but at that time I was starting my first year in college. I was working on my BS degree and did not have much time to write to him. Letters became sparse and eventually, our correspondence terminated. But I never forgot him. He was kind and respected me. Later, I started my first year working on my master’s degree. I had a week off for Spring Break and took my parents to Saucillo. We spent 3 days visiting relatives. Dad had a wonderful time recalling pleasant times in Mexico. In the meantime, I spent time with two of my male cousins, Jose Luis and Polo Aguilar. I inquired about my ex-boyfriend. Both guys were not too interested in talking about him. They just mentioned that he was still in Saucillo. I suspect that my ex-boyfriend knew I was in town, but we didn’t have a chance to talk. My father had a 3-day rule: “After 3 days, bad company and fish stink.” So, we left after a very brief stay. Back in Texas, I continued to work on an advanced degree. During this time, I met a young man and got married. However, I still remember the young man I met on a beautiful evening in Saucillo while walking on the plaza with my cousin, her friends, and my sister. And I pray that life has been kind to him.
The years went by and many Americans did not travel to Mexico because they were afraid of being gunned down. We didn’t go to Saucillo. It was too dangerous. But I miss the old Saucillo. About fifty years ago, folks could walk on dirt roads to go to their homes, visit the plaza or the movie theater and feel safe. I miss the comradery that existed among my cousins, uncles, and aunts. I could walk to the Conchos River from my grandmother’s house. Sometimes relatives and friends got together with Grandma to have supper. Afterwards, we sang Mexican songs (“Corridos”) that poetically interpreted what had happened during the wars for independence and other atrocities. This was a time for conversation, laughter, and singing. I was expected to sing for the group. (I must have been a decent singer since they always asked me to sing.) I miss the food: beans, carne asada, freshly made flour tortillas, cajeta, and fruit cake that my relatives made. Menudo was definitely not one my favorite foods. As a matter of fact, I only ate the soup and never touched the tripe that was considered a delicacy.
During a conversation, one of my dear male cousins told me that he and some of our relatives were able to cross the Rio Bravo and successfully reach California. Unfortunately, my cousin along with relatives and folks trying to find a better life in the states were captured by the border patrol, detained and then returned to Saucillo. Nobody was tortured, but their clothing was removed so they could be bathed and fumigated. My cousin told me that he felt sorry for a frail, old man who had joined the group to achieve a better life in the states.
There’s more info on my Spanish heritage in Chihuahua and Texas, such as stories about “Quinceaneras”, “El Dia de los Muertos” (All Souls Day) and the tradition of making a pan de rosca which was baked with the Baby Jesus in the dough. The person who got the piece of bread containing the Baby Jesus was responsible for making dinner and a rosca for family and friends at another festivity.
Dear Readers, I have discussed some of my Latino traditions and life, but there’s more info. However, I am not ready to write a memoir. But I sincerely need your help. I don’t know how to reach my Mexican family. I haven’t seen my relatives since those years that American citizens and even Mexican buses traveling on Mexico’s highways were gunned down. I wrote to the mayor of Saucillo, didn’t get a response. Later on, in researching present Saucillo, I learned that she had been assassinated. If you have any recommendations on trying to locate my dear relatives, please pass them along. I love my relatives, Saucillo, Chihuahua, Mexico, and the USA.
Dear Readers, thank you so much for liking my blogs and for following my website. Please forgive me for not writing more often, but my illnesses continue to hound me. It’s difficult to sit, walk, and stand with a painful spinal column and glutes.
When I visited The Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Brownsville, Texas, a few years ago, I saw a statue that reminded me of Michelangelo’s Pieta. I recall feeling sad when I photographed the statue. Full of memories of how Jesus Christ suffered for all of us, I couldn’t imagine how Mary survived seeing her son, beaten, bullied, and crucified. If you have lost a loved one, you know what I am talking about. In my life, when my folks and older brothers passed away, grief took over me. I miss them and sometimes when I need their help to cope with life, I cry. This is one of the reasons I admire the Blessed Virgin. She was a pillar of strength. I am not. My eyes well with tears when I think of my lost relatives and pets.
Jesus had to follow his Father’s wishes. Jesus prayed and cried to be delivered from this sacrifice. He knew what was going to happen, yet he came into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday. The crowds honored him, then life took its course. We owe Him so much.
The Blessed Virgin Mary holding her deceased son in her arms.
This image brings tears to my eyes. I bawl whenever I hear a friend passed away and when I have to euthanatize a pet because of an incurable illness. I suspect Mary cried her heart out when she saw how her son was being treated.
A few years ago, I went to afternoon services on Good Friday at St. Peter the Apostle Catholic Church. I was surprised. I was not ready for a live presentation of Jesus’ death performed by church members. Nobody got hurt, but the presentation was so realistic that when it came to Jesus being crucified, I grabbed my rollator and stormed out of the church. I felt so bad. I could only imagine the pain and suffering the Blessed Virgin and friends experienced.
Although born in Bethlehem, according to Matthew and Luke, Jesus was a Galilean from Nazareth, a village near Sepphoris, one of the two major cities of Galilee (Tiberias was the other). He was born to Joseph and Mary sometime between 6 BCE and shortly before the death of Herod the Great (Matthew 2; Luke 1:5) in 4 BCE. According to Matthew and Luke, however, Joseph was only legally his father. They report that Mary was a virgin when Jesus was conceived and that she “was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit” (Matthew 1:18; cf. Luke 1:35). Joseph is said to have been a carpenter (Matthew 13:55)—that is, a craftsman who worked with his hands—and, according to Mark 6:3, Jesus also became a carpenter.
Luke (2:41–52) states that Jesus as a youth was precociously learned, but there is no other evidence of his childhood or early life. As a young adult, he went to be baptized by the prophet John the Baptist and shortly thereafter became an itinerant preacher and healer (Mark 1:2–28). In his mid-30s Jesus had a short public career, lasting perhaps less than one year, during which he attracted considerable attention. Sometime between 29 and 33 CE—possibly 30 CE—he went to observe Passover in Jerusalem, where his entrance, according to the Gospels, was triumphant and infused with eschatological significance. While there he was arrested, tried, and executed. His disciples became convinced that he rose from the dead and appeared to them. They converted others to believe in Him, which eventually led to a new religion, Christianity.
This year, I won’t be able to attend Good Friday services due to my illnesses. But I will be at my church in spirit, praying for our world. So many atrocities have occurred last year and in 2023, and it’s only the beginning of April. This Roman Catholic who loves people and animals is asking for your help.
Dear Readers and followers of my blog. Please join hands virtually or physically and pray for everyone. Pray that our world will be a better one. Thank you and God bless you, Maria Murray.
Dear Readers, please forgive me for not keeping up with my website. I haven’t blogged for about 3 months, but if you are one of my followers, you know that I have fibromyalgia, a dreadful, painful illness that interferes with my writing and other projects. In addition to fibromyalgia, I have spondylolisthesis. My primary care physician ordered X-rays of my abdomen and hips when I started complaining about an unbearable pain in the lumbar area, glutes, and hips. The radiologist reported the problem was my spinal column. Via Pain Management specialists, I underwent two surgeries that unfortunately did not help to alleviate the pain caused by spondylolisthesis.
In addition to the aforementioned maladies, I acquired another one. I fell in my bedroom and broke a bone in my left foot. I did not know that I had broken a bone. Because fibromyalgia (fibro) attacks the muscles in the body, it was easy for me to assume that fibro was responsible for the horrible pain. Since I sleep on my back, I was developing a bed sore on my right heel. It took a while to see a podiatrist. He examined my foot and prescribed a special boot that I use every night when I go to bed. When I mentioned that my left foot hurt, he took some x-rays and discovered that I indeed had a fracture. To take care of the broken bone, I had to wear a boot all day long and remove it at night. I wore the boot for three weeks. After this period, I started to walk with running shoes for three weeks. When this period ended, the podiatrist re-examined my foot. The bone had begun to heal. I was so happy. Jesus had taken care of me. He also helped me self-publish an Early Reader Children’s book: “Merrytenna and Friends… The Pollen-Collecting Mission.” If you are interested in taking a look at my book, you may find it in Amazon’s KDP program in the Children’s section under M. E. Murray or the book’s title.
Why did I use a bee as a primary character for my book? Since I’m an entomologist, I thought sharing my honeybee knowledge with children and their parents in a book that shows honeybees making friends, being kind to each other, and exercising their role as pollinators when they feed on flowers to collect pollen.
I am pleased to write about Merrytenna because she is a charitable honeybee willing to go to great lengths to collect pollen to ensure the survival of the honeybees and especially the Queen, who eats royal jelly, made from pollen. In addition to writing children’s books, I also wrote an 87,000-word supernatural novel.
Dear Readers, please pray for all the folks who are suffering from hunger, illness, losing a loved one, and their country, in this case: Russia invading the Ukraine.
A HEALING PRAYER
O Jesus, Good Shepherd, You heal the sick and the needy. I give You all those parts of my body which have suffered from illness. You know what it is like to endure pain. Look kindly on me today and heal me. Restore me to strength of soul and body.
Give your gift of wisdom to my physicians that they may be guided by the Holy Spirit in all they do. Bless my nurses so that their hands will become Your hands as they touch me. Bless, too, my medication. O Jesus, grant us all Your healing grace of love and peace. Amen.
“A Healing Prayer” was given to me in 2016 by a Catholic volunteer when I was recovering in the hospital from a fall that ended up as a hip replacement. The prayer came from www.maryscall.com. I say it, every day because I need Jesus’s help to take care of myself, my husband, my sister, and my pets. We are not alone. Jesus is always with us. So, I seek His help to deal with pain, daily activities, and my future appointment with a neurosurgeon that’s coming up in a month. Please pray for me. I hope the neurosurgeon can end the pain coming from the spinal column.
Dear Readers, thank you so much for your prayers and for reading my blogs. Best wishes, Maria Murray.
Through the years, Christmas Day has become commercialized. Gift-giving and receiving gifts have become the norm. Many times, people don’t appreciate the gifts they receive. I came from a poor background, so I appreciate everything nice folks do for me. When I was growing up, I would line up with other impoverished children at the police station to receive a paper sack filled with candies and a toy.
Today I celebrate God’s promise to us that He would send his only begotten son, Jesus Christ, to save us from ourselves. I am no saint, but there are times when I definitely feel depressed and wonder how I am going to cope with fibromyalgia, a broken foot, and spinal column pain. With time, the broken foot will repair, but fibromyalgia and my spinal column pain are forever. Nevertheless, God has given me the strength to cope with these illnesses and others. Faith in the Lord keeps me going. If it weren’t for Him, I wouldn’t be writing and doing other things that healthy people are able to do.
Therefore, I tell myself that today is the perfect day to recall that Jesus suffered more than I have. Jesus endured all sorts of suffering since He was born. Our Saviour was born in a stable that I imagine was not very warm. Jesus’s birth reminds me of my childhood home, a brick house that I suspect was built in 1905. I was born in that house, I suppose, with the help of a midwife. During the winter months, our family tried to warm up the large rooms with old gas heaters that had to be turned off at night to protect the family from a fire, but Jesus didn’t have a space heater when He was born.
And towards the end of His life, Jesus suffered verbal abuse and physical torture. I broke my left foot about nine days ago. I twisted my foot when I fell on the hardwood floor in my bedroom. The pain was excruciating, but I am sure that it did not compare to the pain that Jesus suffered on the way to His final destination, been nailed to a wooden cross. I can only imagine how that must have felt. Today we celebrate his birthday, but we must remember that He chose to be born, even though He knew what was going to happen to Him. Why did he do this? The answer is simple. He loves us. And He will always be doing things for us if we just learn to love Him. So, don’t forget to thank Him for all that He has done for us. Merry Christmas!
Dear Readers: Today I will talk about the Blessed Virgin Mary and the places where she graced us with her presence: Rue de Bac in Paris in 1830 (the Miraculous Medal), La Salette in 1846 and Lourdes in 1858; Pontmain, France (1871), Knock, Ireland (1879), Fatima, Portugal (1917), Beauraing, Belgium (1932), Banneux, Belgium (1933), and in 1531 Our Lady of Guadalupe appeared four times to a humble Native Indian, Juan Diego, on Tepeyac Hill.
Most of you know that I was raised a Roman Catholic. So, today is a very special day. Christ’s mother is looking at me from Heaven as I beg her to perform some special miracles: cure my sister who has Alzheimer’s, protect my dear husband from any illness (He has been taking care of my sister, me, Marty, our cat, and Twister, our foxhound). It is a yearly custom to greet the Virgin at St. Patrick’s Cathedral early in the morning with the mariachi, the Virgin’s fans, and parishioners singing “Las Mañanitas.” This morning was too chilly for me. My fibromyalgia pain intensified. I asked the Blessed Virgin to heal me and other folks who have this dreadful disease. I also asked her to cure my spinal column pain. I need to be well to take care of my family.
Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe
There are several facts that I didn’t know about the Virgin of Guadalupe, so I am including them in this blog.
“The lady from Heaven”
Did you know?
Our Lady of Guadalupe appeared to Saint Juan Diego on December 9, 10 and 12, 1531.
The image left on Saint Juan Diego’s tilma is the only true picture of Our Lady of Guadalupe in existence.
The image has remained intact with all its original vibrancy for 475 years. The natural life span of a cloak made with fiber from the gave or maguey plant is only about 30 years.
The image is a pictograph which could be read and understood by the Aztec Indians.
Our Lady appears as a beautiful young Indian maiden and Queen.
Her eyes are looking down with humility and compassion. She is human, not God.
She is wearing a blue-green mantle (the color worn by royalty) covered with stars.
The stars signify she comes from heaven – the Queen of Heaven. The constellations are in the exact position as appeared before dawn on the morning of December 12, 1531.
Her robe is colored rose or pale red and covered with Aztec flowers, symbolic of an Aztec princess.
In the center of her robe, overlying her womb, is a four petal quincunx flower in the shape of a cross which is the sign of the Divine and the center of the cosmic order to the Aztec. The Virgin’s Baby, Jesus, is Divine and the new center of the universe.
Her hands are joined in prayer and, therefore, she is not God but clearly there is one greater than she and she points her finger to the cross on her brooch.
Her fur cuffs symbolize royalty.
She wears a black maternity band signifying she is with Child.
A black cross is on the brooch around her neck. This signifies she is a follower of the God of the Spanish Missionaries, Jesus Christ who died on the cross for all.
She stands in front of the sun. The sun symbolizes the greatest Aztec god – Huitzilopochtli. She announces the God who is greater than their sun god.
She stands on the moon. The crescent moon symbolized the Aztec god Quetzalcoatl, the feathered serpent moon god. She has clearly crushed and defeated him.
An angel with eagle’s wings supports the Mother of God. The eagle was the “bird of the sun.” Here the eagle is the servant of the Virgin. She holds her mantle in one hand and robe with the other, signifying the Son she bears is from both heaven and earth.
To date the image cannot be explained by science.
The image on the tilma was able to do what up to that time the missionaries were not able to do significantly. Namely, clearly explain Christianity to the Indian people. The proof is in the fact that after the apparitions, eight million natives of Mexico converted to Catholicism from 1531 to 1538.
Guadalupan Expert: Msgr. Eduardo Chávez Sánchez
Msgr. Eduardo Chávez Sánchez is co-founder and rector of the Institute for Guadalupan Studies, and is a canon of the Basilica of Guadalupe. Born in Mexico City, he studied philosophy and theology in the Institute for Ecclesiastical Studies at Mexico’s Conciliar Seminary. He was ordained on Aug. 15, 1981, in the Archdiocese of Mexico. He holds a diploma in philosophy from the Universidad del Valle de Atemajac in Guadalajara and, a doctorate in Church history from the Pontifical Gregorian University.https://videos.sproutvideo.com/embed/d39dd9bb131ae5c65a/16dcbacb7a14eb41https://videos.sproutvideo.com/embed/449dd9bb131bedc4cd/00a9862158a9924b
Dear Readers: Have a wonderful day! Don’t forget to thank Our Lady of Guadalupe for all the things she has done for you, even though you may not know it.
Dear Readers, the following information is taken from the Navy History and Heritage Command.
USS Arizona (BB-39) ablaze, immediately following the explosion of her forward magazines, 7 December 1941. Frame clipped from a color motion picture taken from onboard USS Solace (AH-5) (80-G-K-13512).
World War II came to the United States of America on Sunday morning, 7 December 1941, with a massive surprise attack by the Imperial Japanese Navy. “Like a thunderclap from a clear sky,” Japanese carrier attack planes (in both torpedo and high-level bombing roles) and bombers, supported by fighters, numbering 353 aircraft from six aircraft carriers, attacked the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor in two waves, as well as nearby naval and military airfields and bases. The enemy sank five battleships and damaged three; and sank a gunnery training ship and three destroyers, damaged a heavy cruiser, three light cruisers, two destroyers, two seaplane tenders, two repair ships and a destroyer tender. Navy, Army, and Marine Corps facilities suffered varying degrees of damage, while 188 Navy, Marine Corps, and U.S. Army Air Force planes were destroyed. Casualties amounted to: killed or missing: Navy, 2,008; Marine Corps, 109; Army, 218; civilian, 68; and wounded: Navy, 710; Marine Corps, 69; Army, 364; civilian, 35. Japanese losses amounted to fewer than 100 men and 29 planes.Sailors, Marines, and Soldiers fought back with extraordinary courage, often at the sacrifice of their own lives. Those without weapons to fight took great risk to save wounded comrades and to save their ships. Pilots took off to engage Japanese aircraft despite the overwhelming odds. Countless acts of valor went unrecorded, as many witnesses died in the attack. Fifteen U.S. Navy personnel were awarded the Medal of Honor — ranging from seaman to rear admiral — for acts of courage above and beyond the call of duty, ten of them posthumously.
Japanese forces were astonished at the quick reaction and intensity of U.S. antiaircraft fire. That more Japanese aircraft were not shot down had nothing to do with the skill, training, or bravery of our Sailors and other servicemembers. Rather, U.S. antiaircraft weapons were inadequate in number and capability, for not only had the Japanese achieved tactical surprise, they achieved technological surprise with aircraft and weapons far better than anticipated — a lesson in the danger of underestimating the enemy that resonates to this day.
While damage to the U.S. Pacific Fleet’s battleline proved extensive, it was not complete. The attack failed to damage any American aircraft carriers, which had been providentially absent from the harbor. Our aircraft carriers, along with supporting cruisers and destroyers and fleet oilers, proved crucial in the coming months. The Japanese focus on ships and planes spared our fuel tank farms, naval yard repair facilities, and the submarine base, all of which proved vital for the tactical operations that originated at Pearl Harbor in the ensuing months and played a key role in the Allied victory. American technological skill raised and repaired all but three of the ships sunk or damaged at Pearl Harbor. Most importantly, the shock and anger that Americans felt in the wake of the attack on Pearl Harbor united the nation and was translated into a collective commitment to victory in World War II.
Remembrance Resources Resources for Pearl Harbor remembrance events may be found in our Pearl Harbor Remembrance section.
Why Pearl Harbor? In the video sound bite below, Naval History and Heritage Command historian Robert J. Cressman discusses Japan’s strategic objective for the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Click the links below for additional sets of video sound bites to hear Cressman answer questions about other aspects of the attack. Videos may be downloaded from DVIDS.
The Navy Department Library Online Reading Room contains an overview of the Pearl Harbor attack; that page also provides most of the links given above. Published: Fri Dec 03 15:42:15 EST 2021. Please pray for the brave armed forces who helped us win the war! Thank you to the men and women who served their country under such horrible conditions.
Dear Readers, this has been a bad year for many folks, including me, but I am not going to gripe about the constant fibromyalgia and spinal column pain that keep me from writing and enjoying life. I have gotten behind on my blogs. I missed talking about many events, including Halloween, All Saints Day, and All Souls Day. This does not mean that I have forgotten the saints or people who were part of my life.
Veterans Day is coming up. On this day we should honor our departed relatives, friends, and all the men and women who fought for our country to make it what it is today. In my family, there are 2 Army veterans: Victor, my older brother and Bob, my husband, and a marine, my brother-in-law. They deserve our respect and thanks.
Now, I will switch gears to another time and place. Although, I am sick with fibromyalgia and spinal column problems, I am fortunate to be alive. Years ago, when I was probably a 7-year-old kid, I was at Boca Chica beach, about 30 miles from Brownsville, Texas, celebrating an outing at the beach with my family. At that age, I was not bothered by the heat at all. Now, if I’d just walk along the beach, I would sweat profusely.
My parents, especially my mother, enjoyed weekend outings at Padre Island or Boca Chica. Rocky, an Airedale-German Shepherd mix, did not like the water and spent the day digging under our car so that by the time we were ready to leave, we were stuck in the sand and had to figure out a way to dig the car out. Lobito, a terrier mix, loved the water and would swim to my brothers, Victor and Hector, where the water was already up to their chests. In the meantime, my sister, mom, dad and I spent our time in the shade provided by the car or on the edge of the ocean where the waves would come in and out and sweep us towards deeper waters. We had an innertube from a car tire that I used to float on the water which could have been 2 feet deep.
Suddenly, I found myself laying on the sand close to the ocean. My older brother was kneeling beside me. I opened my eyes and caught a glimpse of the innertube. It had floated a long distance from us and disappeared. We lost the innertube but I was alive. My brother probably was responsible for saving my life, but I was a kid. I don’t recall thanking my brother for saving my life. I didn’t even realize that I had almost drowned. What I remember is being in a peaceful, painless darkness. I don’t know if he had to resuscitate me. All I remember is seeing the innertube disappear, then later getting up to get closer to the lashing waves, and seeing my brothers swimming in the deeper waters with Lobito.
In today’s blog, I didn’t choose a flag to celebrate Veterans Day. I chose a lovely thistle flower to thank veterans for their participation in all our wars and to thank my brother for saving my life. He never mentioned it, and he also didn’t mention going to Vietnam, but I strongly suspect that he did. With tears in my eyes, I thank you, Victor and Jesus Christ, for saving my life and others’ lives. God bless our country’s veterans.
Dear Readers: my poem, a description of the moon, was accepted for publication in Three Line Poetry on September 28, 2021. I’m truly excited because I’m a poet and a fiction writer! Many thanks to Mr. Glenn Lyvers for accepting my submission. If you would like to read my poem go to Threelinepoetry.com and click on Issue #57. Scroll down until you see my name: M. E. Murray.
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