Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hacksaw Ridge tale: Risking all for rights

- ERIC METAXAS

It was the great cataclysm of the 20th century — World War II. America was fighting for its life. Nazi Germany and imperial Japan, totalitari­an nightmares bent on world conquest, had to be defeated.

Millions of Americans took up arms, willing to sacrifice their lives.

And now there’s an amazing, powerful film about one man who was willing to give his life, but whose conscience and deeply held religious beliefs would not allow him to take the lives of others.

Mel Gibson’s new movie, Hacksaw Ridge, tells the story of Desmond Doss, a Seventh-day Adventist from the hills of Virginia, who enlisted in the Army with the understand­ing he could serve as a medic and therefore not violate his firm belief in “thou shalt not kill.”

But when Doss arrived at Fort Jackson, S.C., he was in for a rude surprise. His sergeant, his captain and the judge at the subsequent military hearing didn’t seem to care much for Doss’ conviction­s. Nor did members of his platoon, who accused him of cowardice — and let Doss know how they felt with their fists.

Doss stood firm, despite facing years of imprisonme­nt. “With the world so set on tearing itself apart,” he told the military tribunal, “it don’t seem like such a bad thing to me to put a little bit of it back together.”

Now, I won’t tell you exactly how the Army gave in — that would be a spoiler — but I will tell you this, because, as they say, the rest is history.

Doss went with his platoon to Okinawa and scaled a cliff known as “the escarpment,” which in the film is called “Hacksaw Ridge.” And that is where the floodgates of hell opened. Hundreds of GIs perished in the fight that day. At night, as the wounded lay in agony, Doss went from man to man, dragged them to the edge of the escarpment and lowered them down on a rope one by one. In all, he saved some 75 wounded GIs from certain death.

For his actions, President Harry Truman awarded Doss the Medal of Honor. The only conscienti­ous objector in U.S. history to win the nation’s highest award.

Before I go any further: Hacksaw Ridge is rated R for horrifical­ly brutal battle scenes. It is not suitable for children. But it is an outstandin­g movie. The characters, the dialogue, the drama and the cinematogr­aphy are phenomenal. If you can stomach the scenes of death and destructio­n, you should go see it.

And here’s the major reason why. I’ve never seen a film that so powerfully underscore­s the importance of freedom of conscience.

Writing at the National Catholic Register, Steven Greydanus calls WWII Pvt. Desmond Doss “a hero for our troubled times.”

Times in which florists and bakers are being hauled before civil rights commission­s, being fined, losing their businesses; times in which pharmacist­s in Washington state can lose their licenses for refusing to dispense abortion pills; times in which churches in Massachuse­tts can run afoul of “public accommodat­ion” laws requiring gender neutral bathrooms — we do indeed have a model in Desmond Doss.

Doss quietly and courageous­ly sought to be a good citizen, but he knew where his true citizenshi­p lay. Scorn, the threat of imprisonme­nt, even Japanese bullets could not induce him to abandon his conviction­s.

And most importantl­y, Doss backed his conviction­s with his actions. His humility, his bravery and his willingnes­s to sacrifice his life — even for those who opposed him — won over his harshest critics.

May it be so with us.

 ??  ?? Mel Gibson’s Hacksaw Ridge tells the true story of conscienti­ous objector Desmond Doss (Andrew Garfield), an Army medic who saved dozens of lives during a bloody battle on Okinawa during World War II. Teresa Palmer plays Dorothy Schutte, the nurse Doss...
Mel Gibson’s Hacksaw Ridge tells the true story of conscienti­ous objector Desmond Doss (Andrew Garfield), an Army medic who saved dozens of lives during a bloody battle on Okinawa during World War II. Teresa Palmer plays Dorothy Schutte, the nurse Doss...

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