Having lived in the DC area for 22 years now, I’ve been to Arlington National Cemetery on a number of occasions. You can’t go there and not be awestruck by the sight of the uniform rows upon rows of white headstones. I’ve been their as tourist, tour guide, and as a staff aide (at a memorable memorial service for RFK that is a whole nother story).
But recently, Arlington has stopped being just a resting place for strangers, or famous people I knew of, but who never knew me. This summer, two people I knew, and who knew me, were buried at Arlington. I can’t claim to have been especially close with either of them. One was an employer, the the other a co-worker in the same employ. Friendly acquaintances at best. Regardless, I knew them.
Last August I joined hundreds of fellow current and former Kennedy and Senate staffers on the step of the U.S. Senate, to pay our final respects as Senator Kennedy’s funeral motorcade stopped briefly on it’s way to his final resting place at Arlington.
Bill Cahir was exactly the sort of person I could expect to run into at Sen. Kennedy’s annual Christmas parties. We had both worked for Kennedy at about the same time. After the Hill, Bill worked as a reporter, but after the attacks of 9/11 he enlisted in the Marines at the age of 34 and served two tours in Iraq. He returned and ran for Congress, during which I did some work on his campaign and re-connected for a short time. He lost that election, and deployed to Afghanistan in the spring of 2009. Bill was killed on August 13 at age 40. Earlier this week, his wife gave birth to their twin daughters.
The day after Thanksgiving, my daughter Katie and I visited Arlington Cemetery. We were tourists, visiting Arlington House for a National Park Service Passport cancellation. We were volunteers, tracking down and photographing a few headstones to fulfill requests on the Find-a-Grave web site. We were students, searching out how many different religious symbols we could spot. And we were mourners, visiting Sen. Kennedy and Sgt. Cahir’s graves. Two guys I kinda knew. Bill was just a little more than three years younger than me. Not far from his grave in Section 60, we found another recent burial of a young woman just three years older than Katie. We both fell silent at that realization.
And on the way out, I again visited Bill, because I kinda knew the guy. And I don’t think I’ll ever be able to go to Arlington again without visiting him and paying my respects.
For further reading:
Letter to the Unborn Twins of a Fallen Marine
Politics Daily, 8/31/09
‘In a few months…this could be us’
The Washington Post, 12/12/09