POW/MIA
Ceremony
Props: 1 small round table, 1 chair leaning against
the table, white table cloth, table set for 1, salt
shaker, 1 lemon slice, black vase with yellow ribbon,
black napkin, red rose, water glass inverted on table,
recording of Taps and Billy Ray Cyrus - Some Gave All.
Script:
Those who have served and those currently serving the
uniformed services of the United States are ever mindful
that the sweetness of enduring peace has always been
tainted by the bitterness of personal sacrifice. We are
compelled to never forget that while we enjoy our daily
pleasures, there are others who have endured and may
still be enduring the agonies of pain, deprivation and
internment.
Before we begin our activities this evening, we will
pause to recognize our POWs and MIAs.
We call your attention to this small table, which
occupies a place of dignity and honor near the head
table. It is set for one, symbolizing the fact that
members of our armed forces are missing from our ranks.
They are referred to as POWs and MIAs.
We call them comrades.
They are unable to be with their loved ones and families
tonight, so we join together to pay our humble tribute to
them, and bear witness to their continued absence.
This table, set for one, is small, symbolizing the
frailty of one prisoner, alone against his or her
suppressors.
The tablecloth is white, symbolic of the purity of their
intentions to respond to their countrys call to
arms.
The single red rose in the vase, signifies the blood they
many have shed in sacrifice to ensure the freedom of our
beloved United States of America. This rose also reminds
us of the family and friends of our missing comrades who
keep the faith, while awaiting their return.
The yellow ribbon on the vase represents the yellow
ribbons worn on the lapels of the thousands who demand
with unyielding determination a proper accounting of our
comrades who are not among us tonight.
A slice of lemon on the plate reminds us of their bitter
fate.
The salt sprinkled on the plate reminds us of the
countless fallen tears of families as they wait.
The glass is inverted - they cannot toast with us this
night.
The chair is empty - they are not here.
The candle is reminiscent of the light of hope which
lives in our hearts to illuminate their way home, away
from their captors, to the open arms of a grateful
nation.
Let us pray to the supreme commander that all of our
comrades will soon be back within our ranks.
Let us remember and never forget their sacrifices.
May god forever watch over them and protect them and
their families.
Play Taps and Some Gave All
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YOU ARE NOT
FORGOTTEN SO LONG AS THERE IS ONE LEFT IN WHOM YOUR
MEMORY REMAINS.
The History of 
The Vietnam War POW/MIA Flag
In 1971, Mrs.Mary Hoff, an MIA wife and
member of the National League of American Prisoners and
Missing in Southeast Asia, recognized the need for a
symbol of our POW/MIAs. Prompted by an article in the
Jacksonville, Florida TIMES-UNION, Mrs. Hoff contacted
Norman Rivkees, Vice-President of Annin & Company
which had made a banner for the newest member of the
United Nations, the People's Republic of China, as a part
of their policy to provide flags to all UN member
nations. Mrs. Hoff found Mr. Rivkees very sympathetic to
the POW/MIA issue, and he, along with Annin's advertising
agency, designed a flag to represent our missing men.
Following League approval, the flags were manufactured
for distribution.
The flag is black, bearing in the
center, in black and white, the emblem of the League. The
emblem is a white disk bearing in black silhouette the
bust of a man, watch tower with a guard holding a rifle,
and a strand of barbed wire; above the disk are the white
letters POW and MIA framing a white 5-pointed star; below
the disk is a black and white wreath above the white
motto YOU ARE NOT FORGOTTEN.
Concerned groups and individuals have
altered the original POW/MIA Flag many times; the colors
have been switched from black with white - to red, white
and blue, -to white with black; the POW/MIA has at times
been revised to MIA/POW. Such changes, however, are
insignificant. The importance lies in the continued
visibility of the symbol, a constant reminder of the
plight of America's POW/MIA'S.
On March 9,1989, a POW/MIA Flag, which
flew over the White House on the 1988 National POW/MIA
Recognition Day, was installed in the United States
Capitol Rotunda as a result of legislation passed
overwhelmingly during the 100th session of Congress. The
leadership of both Houses hosted the installation
ceremony in a demonstration of bipartisan congressional
support. This POW/MIA Flag, the only flag displayed in
the United States Capitol Rotunda, stands as a powerful
symbol of our national commitment to our POW/MIAs until
the fullest possible accounting for Americans still
missing in Southeast Asia has been achieved.
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