Posted on 04/18/2020 7:58:04 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Honor without honors
About four weeks ago, David Amador dropped by the Alfredo Gonzalez Texas State Veterans Home in McAllen to visit his father Robert, a U.S. Army veteran who suffered from dementia.
David visited his father several times a week. When Roberts health was better, they would go for long drives, sometimes out to South Padre Island or Boca Chica Beach, or maybe just down the road to Applebees. One time they went all the way up to Martindale.
David kept visiting his father as his health declined. Hed bring him some food and a newspaper.
My dad knew the day when I would come by, David said. Because Id bring him a copy of The Monitor. Hed get The Monitor and hed look at the date. Hed say its Tuesday already, or Its Saturday already?
Robert would ask how long hed been there. Hed ask when he was leaving. Pretty soon, dad, David would say. Robert would talk about his brother, whod died in the Vietnam War.
David would flip through the sports section. Robert read the news.
That day four weeks ago was the last day David talked to his father. Robert was recovering from a kidney infection.
The last moment I had with my dad was taking him that fajita taco and watching him eat it, David said. And then he said, Im going to go to sleep. And those were the last words I had with him.
Shortly after that visit, the veterans home notified David that the facility was closed to outsiders because of the pandemic.
He didnt have any phone in his room, much less could he really converse, he was growing tired, David said. I would call the nurses at the front desk and ask how dad was doing.
The nurses would report that Robert was doing OK. Sometimes David would drive to the home and sit in the parking lot, just to be near his dad.
On April 10, David got a call from the home notifying him that his father had taken a turn for the worse. The next morning Robert died at the age of 86.
Robert didnt have COVID-19, but his last days and the way his life was memorialized were dictated by the impact of the pandemic. David says he even thinks the isolation contributed to his fathers health declining.
Robert didnt know about the coronavirus or about any pandemic. As far as he knew, David just stopped showing up one day.
Those veterans who are there, they dont know whats going on. They dont know why theres a lockdown. They dont even think there is a lockdown, David said. Do they get lonely? Yeah, my dad said that many times. When I would come by and take him lunch or just go sit with him, he would say, Im glad youre here.
Amador family members sit apart as they mourn their father and grandfather Friday in Pharr. (Delcia Lopez | dlopez@themonitor.com) Davids brother owns a funeral home. David and his brother went to the veterans home that Saturday, donned facemasks and went to pick up their father.
The staff stopped what they were doing and they lined up and played taps as we were taking dad home, David said. They draped the flag over him and a World War II veteran escorted my dad out.
Theyd talked about this day before, about what itd be like. Robert was a military man through and through; he served in the Korean War, and the sound of taps filled him with pride. Naturally, he wanted to be buried in the Rio Grande Valley Veterans Cemetery, next to his brothers in arms.
He was looking forward to being there. We went out there many times on those drives, David said. Wed walk out there. Wed walk and he would read the headstones of all these fallen veterans that served their country, and he would take the time to read the headstones.
Robert was buried in that cemetery Friday, but it wasnt the funeral he would have expected. Because of the pandemic, Roberts funeral was deprived of many of the traditions his service had earned him.
No one played taps. There was no flag presentation. No volley of rifle fire.
Basically with COVID-19 all were doing right now is direct internments until they open everything up and they feel its safe to expose our honor guard and the family, said George Rice, Veterans Land Board on-site representative. Its postponing the honors that they deserved and theyve earned.
Rice said many funeral homes are holding veterans remains until the pandemic ends. A veteran, Rice says watching the deaths of war heroes go by without full honors is painful.
It hurts, but I understand the reasoning behind it. A lot of our honor teams are up in their later 70s, so obviously theyre at tremendous risk but as a veteran, its difficult to watch, he said.
Pallbearers, who are the deceaseds son and grandsons, wear mandated masks but cannot practice social distancing as they carry the casket to the grave Friday at the Rio Grande Veterans Cemetery in Mission. (Delcia Lopez | dlopez@themonitor.com) David says his father would have been upset by missing out on those honors.
Theres an entourage of people who didnt get a chance to come here due to the circumstances, David said. I know my dad was looking forward to that. I know my dad was looking forward to the escort, I knew that he was looking forward to having that military escort of friends, comrades, and the salute from his comrades.
David says when the pandemic ends, Robert will be honored with a full ceremony worthy of a veteran. Until then, hell be left with a profound sense of emptiness brought on by a new reality in America, a reality in which a son can be robbed of his last few weeks with a father he cherished, and a reality in which a veteran can be buried without the recognition he earned.
We dont have that closure yet. We cannot celebrate this moment, because theres a pause because of this pandemic that has put a hold on all of us in the United States. Theres no closure, he said. We havent really said goodbye.
...The next morning Robert died at the age of 86.
Robert didnt have COVID-19...
**************************************
Thats because he died in Texas. Had he died in New York or New Jersey the authorities would have made sure he was a probable COVID-19 death.
This should have never been started, but IMHO it needs to end.
May Robert Amador, US veteran, who has now “been promoted to Eternal Glory”, Rest in Peace Forever in the sheltering arms of The Savior.
Yours, TMN78247
USA, Retired
Rest in peace, Mr. Amador, reunited with your brother and your brothers in arms.
are we going to hear about every vet that died, every funeral that didn't take place or wedding?....its over saturation meant to keep us depressed...
.
Yes, Vets, they are so annoying... taking up undeserved credit.
Agreed.
I wish we could hear about every single veteran.
But, at least, in reading this man’s story, we can understand what’s happening with many veterans right now.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.