A Note for the 4th Of July: A Cemetery that Depends on Alms
On the former US Clark Air Base, walking along the rows of tombstones here offers a
glimpse of the wars that America has fought and the men and women who
waged them.
But most of the grave markers have been half-buried for 20 years, and
there is little hope that the volcanic ash obscuring names, dates and
epitaphs will be cleared any time soon.
Clark Veterans Cemetery was consigned to oblivion in 1991, when Mount
Pinatubo’s gigantic eruption forced the United States to abandon the
sprawling air base surrounding it.
Retired US soldiers, Marines and sailors volunteer to keep watch,
relying on donations to try to maintain the grounds, but they lament
that they’re helplessly short on funds to fix things, and that
Washington is unwilling to help.
“It’s the veterans’ cemetery that America forgot,” said Robert Chesko, a Vietnam War veteran and former Navy officer.
Workers at the cemetery north of Manila recently dug to fully expose a
gravestone for an Army sergeant who died in World War II in the
Philippines. They discovered his wife’s name engraved under his and a
long-hidden tribute: “Daughter, sister, wife and mother of veterans.”
It’s impossible to say what else remains hidden at the seven-hectare
cemetery. It holds the remains of 8,600 people, including 2,200 American
veterans and nearly 700 allied Philippine Scouts who saw battle in
conflicts from the early 1900s to the resistance against brutal Japanese
occupation troops in WWII.
Clark’s dead also include military dependents, civilians who worked
for the US wartime government and at least 2,139 mostly unidentified
soldiers whose marble tombstones are labeled “Unknown.”
As America marks Independence Day, the veterans caring for the
cemetery renewed their calls for Washington to fund and take charge of
the work.
“People celebrate on the Fourth of July but they forgot the 8,600 who
helped make that freedom happen,” said former Navy Capt. Dennis Wright,
who saw action in Vietnam and is now a business executive.
“We’re trying to get the US government to assume responsibility for
maintaining the cemetery so we can get it up to standards… not on
nickels and dimes and donations and gifts,” said retired Air Force Chief
Master Sgt. Larry Heilhecker, who served as cemetery caretaker for five
years until last month.
Clark, a US base for nearly a century, was once the largest American
Air Force installation off the US mainland. It served as a key staging
area for US forces during the Korean and Vietnam wars.
The Clark cemetery, which can accommodate at least 12,000 remains,
was developed between 1947 and 1950, when it was used to collect the
remains and tombstones from four US military cemeteries as American
officials sorted out their dead from WWII and previous wars.
Fort McKinley
An American cemetery at the then Fort McKinley in Metro Manila became
the exclusive burial ground for all Americans and allied Philippine
Scouts who were killed in WWII combat. The 61-hectare cemetery collected
17,202 dead, the largest number of American casualties interred in one
place from the last world war.
Now closed to burials, the stunningly landscaped cemetery became one
of 24 American burial grounds outside the US mainland. Nearly 125,000
Americans who perished in WWI and WWII and the Mexican War are interred
in those US-funded overseas cemeteries, regarded as among the most
beautiful war memorials in the world.
The overseas burial sites are administered by the American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC).
The dead at Clark are not limited to World War II casualties—they
date as far back as 1903. Also unlike the Metro Manila cemetery, it
continues to accept burials.
One US veteran who lives in the area had his son buried here after he
was killed in Iraq in 2005. But Clark is not administered by the ABMC.
Americans leave
The US Air Force managed the Clark cemetery from 1947 to 1991, when
it abruptly left after nearby Pinatubo roared back to life from a
500-year slumber.
Even before the eruption, negotiations with the Philippine government
for a new US military lease on Clark had bogged down after nearly a
century of presence in the Philippines, according to the veterans.
Philippine authorities failed to look after the cemetery. In 1994,
American veterans were shocked to find it had become an ash-covered
jungle of weeds, overgrown grass and debris. Half of its old steel fence
had been looted.
Today, a pair of US and Philippine flags flutter in the wind over the
graves. A recently restored marble obelisk, pockmarked by World War II
gun and artillery fire, venerates the unknown dead.
A small sign at a new steel gate ushers in visitors with a tribute to the war dead: “Served with honor.”
Donations
All the improvements came from donations. Wright’s company spent
$90,000 to construct a new concrete and steel fence and a parking lot
and make other improvements.
An old veteran, confined to a nursing home in Florida, sent one dollar in a touching act, Heilhecker said.
Retired US air Force T/Sgt. Littleton John Fortune has been giving
small amounts from his pension for the upkeep of the cemetery where many
of his friends are buried. He said the worst day of his life came in
2004 when his son, a young Army sergeant, was killed by a bomb in Iraq.
Little ton buried his son at Clark and continues to help the country.
Still, the Clark grave sites look forlorn compared to the American cemetery in Metro Manila.
A US government decision to take control of the Clark cemetery could
shed light on the fate of still-missing Americans, Wright said, citing
the case of a US Army Staff Sgt. Hershel Lee Covey, whose name is on a
Clark cemetery tombstone that declared him as having died on July 17,
1942, in the Philippines.
A check by The Associated Press showed the ABMC lists Covey as “missing in action or buried at sea.”
Outside US mandate
Dashing the hopes of the American veterans, the ABMC and the
Department of Veterans Affairs, which manages 131 US mainland cemeteries
through an agency, both said Clark was outside their mandate.
“Whether the US government should take on responsibility for
maintaining such a foreign, private cemetery is a veterans’ benefits
issue outside the scope of our authority,” ABMC public affairs director
Michael Conley told The Associated Press in an e-mailed reply to
questions.
US Ambassador to Manila Harry Thomas, who has visited the Clark
cemetery twice, praised the American veterans for looking after the
burial grounds, which he said volunteer embassy staff and visiting US
sailors had helped clean up.
But Thomas said the US Congress only appropriated funds for official cemeteries overseas through the ABMC, Thomas said.
Philippine officials have authorized an American veterans’ group led
by Chesko to manage the Clark cemetery up to 2030, and have said they
were open to allowing any US agency to manage it.
“Without them, we wouldn’t have this freedom now,” said Felipe
Antonio Remollo, president of state-run Clark Development Corp., which
oversees the former base that is now an industrial and commercial hub.
Once developed and possibly turned into a war memorial, the cemetery could draw in tourists, Remollo said.
‘We’re getting old?’
Clark’s elderly veterans, some of whom become teary-eyed when
reminiscing days with fallen comrades, worry about who will look after
the cemetery as their ranks dwindle. Two passed away and were buried
last week.
“We’re getting old. We can feel it in our bones, you know, in mind
and everything,” said 65-year-old Chesko. He wondered whether the fallen
soldiers’ sacrifices still mattered to young Americans.
“What bothers me sometimes is, will they still remember?” Chesko said.
The new cemetery caretaker, John Gilbert, said the veterans were not trying to pass the responsibility.
“We’re proud to do it, don’t get me wrong, but we do not have the
resources to do it,” Gilbert said. They would have no choice if
Washington ignores the pleas of the veterans, he said.
“We are not ready to let this cemetery be taken back by the jungle,”
he said. “If we have to do it ourselves, we will do it. We don’t leave
our brothers behind.” AP
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