I’ve been hacking around for the past few days, and will be today as well. So I don’t have as much time as I would like to put together a proper post.
Instead, I’m going to refer you to two outside sources.
Heather King (who is a great writer) did a “Credible Witnesses” piece in this month’s Magnificat about Michael Anthony Monsoor. I can’t find it online, so instead I’m going to quote from his Congressional Medal of Honor citation.
The award was posthumous.
UPS Flight 2976 was flying from Muhammad Ali International Airport to Daniel K. Inouye International Airport in Hawaii. I’m kind of cynical about naming things after people, but if there are two people who deserve to have an airport named after them, it is probably Ali and Inouye.
I don’t know if most people remember Daniel Inouye. He was a long-time senator from Hawaii (until he died in 2012). Yes, he was a Democrat. But the man had cojones like you wouldn’t believe.
He was in the 442nd Infantry Regiment during WWII. You may remember the 442nd Infantry Regiment as “the guys who were of Japanese ancestry and decided to fight for the United States anyway”.
He was leading an assault in Italy on April 21, 1945. From his Congressional Medal of Honor citation:
Wikipedia describes his right arm as being blown mostly off at the elbow: the rifle grenade didn’t explode, but the impact resulted in a blunt force amputation. Wikipedia further describes Lt. Inouye seeing his arm lying on the ground…with a live hand grenade clenched in it.
So what did he do? He waved the men off who were coming to help him, because he was afraid his hand was going to unclench at any moment. Then he pried the live grenade out of his right hand with his left and threw it into a German bunker.
He and Bob Dole met in a rehab hospital after the war and were lifelong friends.
Sen. Inouye was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor on June 21, 2000, along with 19 other members of the 442nd.
