Posted on 01/05/2017 12:29:08 PM PST by Kaslin
Navy veteran Jerry Wayne Pino died on Dec. 12th in Long Beach, Mississippi. He was 70 years old.
We dont know that much about Jerry. He was born in Baton Rouge and joined the Navy in New Orleans. He was a petty officer third class in Vietnam. Thats the extent of his biography.
No family. No friends. He died alone.
Jerrys body lay unclaimed for several weeks at Riemann Family Funeral Homes.
No one stepped forward, funeral home worker Cathy Warden told me. He just didnt have any family.
Miss Cathy explained the situation to her colleague Eva Boomer and together they decided something must be done to give this veteran a proper send off.
Something had to be done with respect, Miss Cathy said. We had to give him what he deserved. Nobody should go alone.
Miss Eva, who is also a veteran, wondered if some of the boys at Long Beach High School might be willing to serve as pallbearers. It was a longshot, though, seeing how most of the students were out on Christmas break.
But Miss Cathy called her teenage son Bryce who in turn texted some of his friends and within a matter of minutes, six young men had volunteered to serve at a strangers funeral.
Nobody should go alone.
It was the right thing to do, 17-year-old Bailey Griffin told me. He served our country. He fought for our rights. For him to be buried with nobody there was just sad. I told myself I was going to do it and I did it.
They buried Petty Officer Third Class Jerry Pino on a Tuesday. The sun was shining and there was a cool, gulf coast breeze meandering through the Biloxi National Cemetery. An honor guard stood at attention.
The boys were smartly dressed in khaki pants and Sunday shirts and neck ties. They solemnly took their places on either side of the flag-draped coffin and escorted a man they did not know to his final resting place.
I went out there for the service and cried the whole way through, Miss Cathy said. He had no one there. This veteran had nobody standing there but these boys.
But what happened at the end of the funeral was incredibly moving and poignant.
The flag that had draped Jerrys coffin was folded and presented to the six young men from Long Beach High School, home of the Bearcats.
It touched my heart, she said.
Its just proof that moms and dads are doing something right in Long Beach, thats what Miss Cathy said.
Our community is teaching these boys from the heart how it should be how to care, she said.
They are still trying to figure out what to do with the flag that draped Jerrys coffin. Its being encased in glass along with a plaque that bears his name.
Theres talk about putting the flag on display at the high school or perhaps inside the locker room where four of the pallbearers play football.
It would be a fitting tribute to a man who died alone but who was buried surrounded by his fellow countrymen.
And oh what a lesson for the rest of us demonstrated by a group of young boys from Mississippi who committed in their hearts that nobody should go alone especially a veteran.
Thank you so much for posting this. Brought tears to my eyes. And it gives me hope for the youngsters’ generation.
My eyes are a bit misty. Good kids. God bless them.
Or, you could say, God has already blessed them.
Thank you for this post.
How do we multiply these six to overcome the Chicago four?
Bravo!
Great kids!
RIP, brother.
They sure are
We are no longer a Blue state but we took care of our vets even before the change.
No, these six pallbearers are MEN. They may not know it yet, but they crossed a threshold when they stepped up.
This organization could probably use some support- I think that I will send something soon. (I haven’t as yet, really know nothing about them.)
Hope does exist.
No, these six pallbearers are MEN. They may not know it yet, but they crossed a threshold when they stepped up.
Amen, well said.
“Theres talk about putting the flag on display... inside the locker room where four of the pallbearers play football”
Hope they do this. Kudos to these young men, the families who raised them.
A nice story for a change.
Yes. Refreshing.
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