On The Home Front #4
Because of gas rationing, few cars crowded the roads. We used
the street as our playground. We drew the bases for our stick ball games with
chalk, roller skated in summer, and raced our sleds in winter. Throughout the
war years, we had block parties. The police closed off the street to traffic
and residents brought food and drinks to share. A miniature merry-go-round on
the flatbed of a truck entertained the children. An ice cream truck parked at
the sidewalk, the driver rang its bell to attract customers. Musicians played
popular tunes and people danced in the street. Sometimes policemen erected a
boxing ring and youngsters from the PAL (Police Athletic League) duked it out
to the amusement of the men in the audience.
Volunteers
at a table selling War Bonds urged people to do their part to win the war. They
displayed posters of Rosie the Riveter with her sleeve rolled up over bulging
biceps, a bandana on her head to keep her hair out of harm’s way; and a poster
of Uncle Sam, his piercing eyes bored into mine, and his forefinger pointed
directly at me. “I Want You,” it said.
“Yes, Uncle
Sam wants you to buy War Bonds.”
One day in
April 1945, I heard some kids talking on the street.
“The
President died,” they said.
I went to
the kitchen where my mother stood at the stove stirring something.
“I just
heard the President is dead,” I said.
“Who told
you that?” she asked.
“Some kids outside,” I answered. She
looked skeptical.
Our kitchen
window faced the kitchen window of our neighbor. Mrs. Raymond stood at her stove,
stirring something. Mama called over. “Did you hear anything about the
President being dead?”
“Yes, it’s
on the radio,” Mrs. Raymond said.
Mama turned
off the gas on the stove, went to the living room and turned on our radio. She
sat in a chair listening to the announcer telling of President Roosevelt’s
death in Georgia. Tears flowed down her face.
“Why are you
crying? You didn’t know him,” I asked. I couldn’t understand her sadness.
Mama didn’t
answer.
Eighteen
years later, hearing about the assassination of President Kennedy, I understood
Mama’s grief as I sat down and cried.
The war had its upside too. The population
came together in a spirit of patriotism I had not seen again until 9/11. We
were in this together. We helped each other. We mourned the passing of a
neighbor’s son or husband. We rejoiced in the homecoming of another. We sang
and we danced and we bucked each other up. And, oh the songs . . . ”I’ll Be
Seeing You,” “You’ll Never Know” and the poignant Vera Lynn ballad “We’ll Meet
Again” can still bring a tear to my eye.
One month after President Roosevelt’s
death, the allies declared victory in Europe. The joy of celebration felt
restrained by the knowledge that the war still raged in the Pacific. The
invasion of Okinawa left thousands dead. The next battle would be the invasion
of the Japanese homeland. In August of that year the Enola Gay dropped
an atom bomb on Hiroshima, and three days later another dropped on Nagasaki. On
Aug 15, 1945, Japan surrendered. The jubilation was palpable. The air vibrated
with an outpouring of joy. Ticker tape and paper streamers floated through the
atmosphere on currents of laughter and song. The war is over. The war
is over. The boys are coming home. Were there ever more beautiful words?
Andy and Dottie Fahey, brother and
sister, 1945
Throughout the war, my parents
worried about my teen aged brother, Andy. They prayed for the war to end before
he turned eighteen and got drafted into the Army. Japan signed the formal
surrender aboard the USS Missouri on September 2, 1945, one day before
my brother’s eighteenth birthday. My parents felt so grateful their only son
had been spared the horror of fighting in a war.
They couldn’t know that five years later Andy would be missing in action in Korea.
They couldn’t know that five years later Andy would be missing in action in Korea.