By Terri Moon Cronk
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, June 23, 2014 – The memory of those killed
during a Sept. 16, 2013, shooting rampage at the Washington Navy Yard will
always burn brightly and the wounds will carry on for a lifetime, Navy
Secretary Ray Mabus said today.
Mabus spoke at a Navy Yard ceremony held to honor the three
women and nine men who died that day after a contract employee entered the base
and opened fire, as well as to honor the courage and sacrifice of numerous
others.
“As a family, we grieve and continue to grieve,” Mabus said.
“We gather here again as a family to recognize the heroism of those we lost and
the heroism that confronted evil on that day last fall.”
When the shooting began, employees of the Naval Sea Systems
and Naval Facilities Engineering commands ran into danger to aid and protect
others, the Navy secretary said. He also cited the colleagues, friends and
strangers who saved others from peril and comforted one another.
“The courage we witnessed on the 16th of September did not
end with the closing of that terrible day,” Mabus said, adding that people
began returning to work the following day, and that three days later, most of
the Navy Yard was reopened.
“Thousands represented here today, whose lives had been in
real peril just three days before, were back doing the vital work of our
nation. That courage endures,” he said.
Navy Yard employees embody the mottos Semper Fortis --
“always courageous” -- and Semper Fidelis -- “always faithful,” Mabus said.
Navy Adm. Jonathan W. Greenert, chief of naval operations,
said Navy Yard personnel comprise sailors, civilians and families.
“We are all shipmates,” he said. “Last September [when]
tragedy struck, shipmates demonstrated courage. Since that day, you have all
embodied resilience [and] determination to continue the mission.”
Navy Yard employees, both military and civilian, are the
foundation of American sea power, Greenert said.
“Your nation turns to you now in this period of our world,
and the future, more than ever before,” the admiral added. “You have unmatched
dedication, teamwork and patriotism, and I’m honored to call you my shipmates.”
About three dozen awards honored fallen Navy Yard
employeesand surviving co-workers, an official at the ceremony said.
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