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September 28, 2007
View From Lodi, CA: Does Burns’ The War Ask The Right Questions?
By Joe Guzzardi
The entire television-viewing world is heaping praise on
Ken Burns’ new epic “The
War,” a comprehensive look at America’s
involvement in
World War II through the eyes of those who
experienced it.
But if Americans want to come to grips with who we are
and how we got that way, a different perspective on the
war fought by the “greatest generation” would be
more useful.
To raise objections about The War exposes me to
potential criticism as unpatriotic and ungrateful for
the valiant efforts of our courageous soldiers.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
To begin at the beginning:
The Burns documentary was well done and informative,
especially for those who have only a general
understanding of the war and its consequences.
I’m all for enlightening Americans about history. As
study after study proves, we know next to nothing about
it. Even Harvard graduates, according to a recent
report, only get a
D+ on civic literacy.
My reservations about The War are on two grounds.
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First, I’m concerned that journalism about World War
II has become an industry—and a moneymaking one at
that. |
This doesn’t mean that those who
have profited handsomely from their ventures, most
famously
Tom Brokaw who wrote The Greatest Generation,
its sequel the Greatest Generation Speaks
and hosted a television special based on
his books, aren’t sincere in their admiration for
World War II veterans.
But the market for World War II-related material has
reached its saturation point.
Consider that other World War II books and films
released within the last few years include three by
Stephen
Ambrose D-Day June 6, 1994: The Climactic Battle of World War II,
Citizen Soldiers
and Band of Brothers
which
in turn spawned the Steven Spielberg film
starring Tom Hanks Saving Private Ryan.
For those who prefer
Clint Eastwood to Hanks, they had
two of his 2006 World War II films from which to
choose:
Flags of Our Fathers
and Letters from Iwo Jima.
Even former presidential candidate
Bob Dole, a prominent member of the greatest
generation, published his memoir, One Soldier’s Story
in
2005.
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My second and more pressing objection to The
War is that Burns’ documentary overlooks the
most fundamental question: Why has the U.S. engaged,
decade after decade, in so many conflicts—most of
them long term—in so many different corners of the
world? |
If we Americans are ever going to understand ourselves
then this basic question has to be answered.
In my lifetime, the U.S. has fought wars and lost lives
in World War II,
Korea, the Southeast Asian countries of
Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos,
Somalia,
Afghanistan and
Iraq.
And why, as indicated by the “shock
and awe” campaign waged by the Bush
administration against Iraq, have we learned so little
from those wars?
Hawaii
Senator Daniel Inouye, a decorated World War II hero
who was interviewed in The War” and who
served as a member of the “Go For Broke” 442nd
Regimental Combat Team of Japanese-American soldiers
that fought in Europe, is one of only a handful of
Congressional members
who voted against the Iraq War. Inouye’s war
experiences (he
saw the bombers fly over
Pearl Harbor on
December 7, 1941) no doubt influenced his vote
In an interview about Iraq’s futility, Inouye
told the Congressional Quarterly, “See, we
had
V-J Day, Victory Over
Japan Day;
V-E Day, Victory in Europe Day. I don’t think you’ll
have a Victory in Iraq Day. Who’s going to sign the
papers?”
The Burns documentary has graphic footage of mutilated
bodies, floating corpses and men killed on camera. No
one questions the sacrifices made by those brave
soldiers and others who died in subsequent conflicts.
And as the
Iraq war drags inevitably into the second decade of the
21st Century, more lives will be lost.
I worry that our infatuation with and romanticizing of
World War II may make more wars easier to condone.
Democrats and Republicans alike have authorized hundreds
of billions for wars—some not even directly in our
national interest—but grudgingly spend only pennies, by
comparison, on
health care,
inner cities and
education.
I’d like to see a fifteen-hour series on what America’s
priorities should be.
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English
at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly
column since 1988. It currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel. |