Seventy-six years ago this week, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in an emergency address to the U.S. Congress, informed America that on “December 7, 1941 — a date which will live in infamy — the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan.”

How do you heal a divided America? Bob Bauman discusses how the memory of Pearl Harbor can break through our current disunity.

Of course, most living Americans have no personal memory of the Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, of the national shock and fear it produced, or that on that infamous day, 2,403 Americans died and 1,178 were wounded.

Americans do remember September 11, 2001 (9/11). But I doubt most can comprehend the wrenching personal grief in thousands of gold star U.S. homes as 419,000 Americans died in World War II; nor did they witness millions sacrificing and toiling toward the victory that came in 1945.

Do you remember?

A Unity of Purpose in America

Harry R. Kerr, an aged director of the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association in 2011, recounted speaking at a public school and being introduced by a teacher, who said: “Mr. Kerr will be talking about Pearl Harbor.” According to Kerr, one of the students asked: “’Pearl Harbor’? Who is she?”

As a 7-year-old child growing up in Washington, D.C., during the war, I recall fearing air raids, collecting scrap metal and kitchen grease for the defense drive, and saving pennies to buy War Bond stamps at school for the war effort. While my older brother Carl flew bombing runs in a B-17 bomber over Italy and Germany, my father, an infantry corporal in World War I, patrolled our block as an air raid warden.

Despite the suffering abroad and homefront deprivation, those years of terrible warfare produced a unity of purpose in the American people unrivaled in our country’s history. As millions served across the globe in the armed forces, millions also worked in defense industries.

What force galvanized that unique American unity that, with our allies, combined to defeat the Japanese and Nazi aggressors?

That is difficult to define, since each of us may differ. But I suggest that fateful December 7, 1941, united our people in a renewed belief in freedom and liberty: the ideals — however unrealized then and now — on which America was founded.

President Ronald Reagan warned us:

Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.

In June 1858, Abraham Lincoln, then a U.S. Senate candidate in Illinois, gave us a related warning: “A house divided against itself cannot stand.” Lincoln spoke for the end of human slavery, exalting for all the individual freedom for which America was founded.

How do you heal a divided America? Bob Bauman discusses how the memory of Pearl Harbor can break through our current disunity.

Today, in a larger sense, national divisions and disunity imperil our freedom again. An inspiring slogan from World War II still should resonate today: “Remember Pearl Harbor.”

May those thousands who died at Pearl Harbor, and the millions lost in all our wars, rest in eternal peace. We join in Lincoln’s Gettysburg prayer, that they shall not have died in vain.

Yours for liberty,

Bob Bauman, JD

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