Mike's Flag
(Condensed from a speech by Leo K
Thorness, recipient of The Congressional Medal of Honor. )
You've
probably seen the bumper sticker somewhere along the road. It depicts
an American Flag, accompanied by the words "These colors don't run."
I'm always glad to see this, because it reminds me of an incident from
my confinement in North Vietnam at the Hao Lo POW Camp, or the
"Hanoi Hilton," as it became known.
Then a Major in the U.S. Air Force,
I had been captured and imprisoned from 1967-1973. Our treatment
had been frequently brutal. After three years, however, the beatings
and torture became less frequent. During the last year, we were
allowed outside most days for a couple of minutes to bathe.
We
showered by drawing water from a concrete tank with a homemade
bucket. One day as we all stood by the tank, stripped of our clothes, a
young Naval pilot named Mike Christian found the remnants of a
handkerchief in a gutter that ran under the prison wall. Mike managed
to sneak the grimy rag into our cell and began fashioning it into a flag.
Over time we all loaned him a little soap, and he spent days cleaning the
material.
We helped by scrounging and stealing bits and pieces of
anything he could use. At night, under his mosquito net, Mike worked on
the flag. He made red and blue from ground-up roof tiles and tiny
amounts of ink and painted the colors onto the cloth with watery rice
glue. Using thread from his own blanket and a homemade bamboo needle,
he sewed on stars.
Early in the morning a few days later, when the
guards were not alert, he whispered loudly from the back of our cell,
"Hey gang, look here." He proudly held up this tattered piece of cloth,
waving it as if in a breeze.
If you used your imagination, you could tell it
was supposed to be an American flag. When he raised that smudgy
fabric, we automatically stood straight and saluted, our chests puffing
out, and more than a few eyes had tears. About once a week the guards
would strip us, run us outside and go through our clothing. During one of
those shakedowns, they found Mike's flag.
We all knew what would
happen. That night they came for him. Night interrogations were always
the worst. They opened the cell door and pulled Mike out. We could hear
the beginning of the torture before they even had him in the torture
cell. They beat him most of the night.
About daylight they pushed what
was left of him back through the cell door. He was badly broken; even
his voice was gone. Within two weeks, despite the danger, Mike
scrounged another piece of cloth and began another flag. The Stars and
Stripes, our national symbol, was worth the sacrifice to him.
Now,
whenever I see the flag, I think of Mike and the morning he first
waved that tattered emblem of a nation. It was then, thousands of
miles from home in a lonely prison cell, that he showed us what it is to
be truly free.