by Airman 1st Class Cliffton Dolezal
19th Airlift Wing Public Affairs
3/21/2013 - LITTLE ROCK AIR FORCE BASE, Ark. -- "Amazing
grace, how sweet the sound," rang from procession vehicles on a chilly
and early morning, March 16, 2013, as the second annual Arkansas Run for
the Fallen commenced. Families gathered on the sides of streets with
signs and American flags to pay their respects as the droning of
bagpipes passed them by. The sound of that song, stirred bitter sweet
emotions that only the families of the fallen heroes know.
"The sacrifices that their brave sons and daughters made will never be
forgotten so long as blood courses through my veins," said Senior Master
Sgt. Bubba Beason, 19th Logistic Readiness Squadron First sergeant and
creator of the run. "I told the volunteers for this year, (which
included bikers, runners, state police, as well as military personnel
and civilians), to remember who and what they were running for. I said
their pain from running six miles is nothing compared to the pain these
families have to endure for the rest of their lives. You are running
because these fallen service members no longer can."
The two-day event began in Ozark, Ark., after a small ceremony and the
singing of the national anthem. This year, runners were grouped in
four-person teams. One runner carried the American flag, the second, the
Arkansas state flag, the third, the Remember the Fallen flag, and the
fourth a smaller American flag attached with the biography of the fallen
service member.
Every mile, for 132 miles, a member of the running group read the
biography, rendered a salute and placed the smaller American flag in the
ground at the location of that fallen service member's designated
memorial site. Once the final runners reached the state Capitol, the
ending ceremony included a guest speaker, thankful remarks from Beason,
the reading of a letter from a mother to a fallen son, the reading of
the names of the fallen and a 21-gun salute.
This run gives family members of the fallen a method to heal and a way
to celebrate tragic lose. Many times Beason said he has received emails
from gold-star mothers expressing how much the run means to their
family. Beason explained that a gold-star mother is the mother of a
fallen service member, whereas a blue-star mother is the mother of a
service member who's still alive.
"When you get to see a gold-star family for the first time and you put a
flag in the ground and see the family break down in tears, you realize
while you're doing something so simple by running a mile and putting a
flag down, it's so much more for the families because in their hearts
and their minds they know their loved one is not forgotten," said
Beason.
Beason said he wants the run to continue to grow.
"Two weeks after these people die, the only people who remember are
their family, which is an injustice," he said. "I've got passion for
this. To me, this is a self-reward to make sure that the families
realize that we're still trying to remember them for what they did. I
would hope that there would be someone out there to keep my memory
alive."
As a gold-star mother read her letter aloud to the crowd, she gave
everyone there one final thought to take with them. She said, "I hope
what I have just done is put a picture in your mind of a solider from
Arkansas, one of our boys, because that's who we honored yesterday and
today in those runs. Those are the people that have fought for our
country and have fought for our nation and I am blessed to be the mother
of one.
Sunday, March 24, 2013
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