WASHINGTON (NNS) -- The Navy will join
the nation in commemorating Prisoners of War/Missing in Action (POW/MIA)
Recognition Day Sept. 21, as announced in NAVADMIN 262/12.
National POW/MIA Recognition Day is a
day of observance for all Americans to offer remembrance, honor, and respect to
service members who were prisoners of war and those who remain missing as a
result of the nation's conflicts.
The 2012 national theme, "Until
They Are Home," pays special tribute to the families of these service
members who have sacrificed and endured on behalf of their loved ones.
"National POW/MIA Recognition Day
gives us the opportunity to honor the sacrifices of our POW/MIA service
members, and to reaffirm our sacred promise to our nation to bring every
warrior home," said Rear Adm. Martha Herb, director of personnel readiness
and community support. "This year's theme especially recognizes family
members of our POW/MIA Sailors, many of whom continue to wait for the return of
their loved ones."
All commands are encouraged to host or
support local POW/MIA Recognition Day activities. Suggested activities include
displaying the missing man table in a unit work space and hosting formal
ceremonies in which a former POW or family member of a current MIA Sailor is a
guest speaker.
This observance is also one of six days
throughout the year that Congress has mandated the flying of the National
League of Families' POW/MIA flag. The others are Armed Forces Day, Memorial
Day, Flag Day, Independence Day and Veterans Day.
Today, more than 33,000 Sailors from World War
II through the Persian Gulf War remain unaccounted for. Each year, Navy's
POW/MIA section assists with repatriating Sailors and returning them to their
loved ones for burial in our homeland. The Department of Defense Prisoner of
War/Missing Personnel office (DPMO) is the U.S. government agency that leads
Navy's effort to account for missing service members.
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