You’re a 72-year-old Army Special Forces veteran. You’ve seen combat up close and personal. You’ve been injured on the battlefield and you performed so heroically in September 1969 that the Army awarded you the Distinguished Service Cross for valor.
But something was missing. Some of the brass thought you deserved the Medal of Honor, the nation’s highest military award. You didn’t get it because, reportedly, someone high up in the chain of command didn’t want to grant the honor to an African-American.
The battle occurred 45 years ago, in Vietnam. Your name is Melvin Morris and when the phone rang one day this past year, you picked it up and the president of the United States was on the other end of the call.
He invited you to the White House to receive the honor you richly deserve. You and several others from will be honored. It is late, but no less deserved.
http://blog.al.com/wire/2014/02/florida_man_shocked_to_learn_o.html
Morris is one of only three Vietnam War veterans who will be present to receive their Medals of Honor. All told, eight living veterans will be on hand. The rest of them are now deceased. Some of them died on the battlefield. Some of the veterans date back to World War II and the Korean War.
It will be an unusual ceremony, honoring veterans of African-American, Hispanic or Jewish heritage who were denied the honor because of their race, ethnicity or faith. President Obama and the Pentagon want to make it right and have scheduled this event for March 18.
Melvin Morris said he was shocked when he got the phone call. He said he fell to his knees.
But like virtually all heroes, he had gone on with his life. “I never really did worry about decorations,” Morris said.
Well done, Mr. Morris — and welcome home.