'Red-Blooded Americans, Fighting for Our Country'
Wednesday, May 16, 2007; Page A14
As a World War II combat veteran, I was both disappointed and concerned that Ken Burns let himself be pressured into singling out Latino contributions in his World War II documentary [Style, May 11].
Our landing ship, which saw considerable action in the Pacific, had onboard people of ethnic origins including Italian, Polish, Latino, Greek, German, Irish, Armenian, British and African. Incidentally, the black sailors involved lived fully integrated with the white sailors, and all were on gun crews.
Had anyone sought, for example, to single out Radioman Campo for attention because of his Latino ethnicity, he, no doubt, would have been perplexed, if not affronted. We would all have described ourselves simply as true, red-blooded Americans fighting for our country.
As to Mr. Burns's documentary, I would support highlighting exclusively ethnic units such as the valiant and effective Army Air Corps/Force Tuskegee pilots in all-black formations, the brave and battle-savvy Japanese American infantry units (in Europe), and the invaluable Navajo "code talkers" attached to the Marine Corps.
WILLIAM LLOYD STEARMAN
North Bethesda
“This is slavery, not to speak one's thought.” ― Euripides, The Phoenician Women
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
William Stearman: Ken Burns Should Not Spotlight Latinos
The debate over Ken Burns' WWII film is heating up, it seems, from this letter published in the Washington Post: