Postby Dante » Sat May 08, 2010 8:25 am
To young people, death is often the furthest subject from their minds and few do not understand the gravity of it's effects. As a consequence, unless they are very introspective, they often times don't recognize when something like this would be considered sacred. When ones deals with youth, one deals with immaturity, but often times simply from ignorance. But you have the opportunity to give them perspective by leading them, as your older colleague could have done. They need to be reminded of one another's mortality, reminded that one day the person they are dancing and playing with today could be on that plaque tomorrow. That is the memorial's lesson to them.
Even still, from another perspective, the memorial is a celebration of the lives of those firefighters in as much as it is a place to honor their deaths. So from the other perspective, these are the next generation of youth learning to become part of the fire service as you have noted, and so the memorial reminds us to celebrate their lives while that fragile thing called life is still given to us to celebrate. That is the memorial's lesson to us.
Then from a final perspective, this is a memorial for firefighters, those heroes who are there in the times when we don't know what to do to save our own lives. They are the guardians of life - and life includes dancing and sorrow. In one way or another who knows how many of these young people's lives are living today on account of the efforts of firefighters and their service. So to see these young people alive, which isn't to see them still and silent (the dead lay still for all time, the living move and play) is perhaps the greatest testament to their impact upon the world and memorial of their life's work. Life is their legacy, even in death. That is the memorial's knowledge to those who have gone and followed the path which it honors.
FKA Pascal