Call & Times

Grieving families and veterans face an obstacle for observing Memorial Day – a pandemic

- Alex Horton

This was supposed to be the week Roman Baca finally brought his life’s work back home.

Baca, a former Marine Corps reservist, trained as a ballet dancer before he shouldered a machine gun in the Iraqi city of Fallujah in 2005. He then found a way to combine those two disparate worlds.

He co-founded a group in New York that depicts the experience­s of war and trauma through dance. His company had never performed in his native New Mexico, and a slated visit was going to be the moment his vision reached new heights.

“I see the time blocked off on my calendar for it, and I get kind of depressed,” Baca told The Washington Post.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has transforme­d nearly facet of daily life. Now that includes Memorial Day events and traditions, as social distancing, closures and restrictio­ns have disrupted the rituals of grief for those who have died in uniform.

Public events, such as wreath laying ceremonies at national cemeteries, have either been altered or roped off from the public.

But the virus has also made quieter rituals of grief challengin­g or impossible.

For Richard Allen Smith and two Army veteran friends who served together in Afghanista­n, an annual pilgrimage to Arlington National Cemetery is part of a new tradition. At least one of them, coming from Maryland and northern Virginia, has made the trip in the past six years or so to visit comrades killed in action.

They include Sgt. Charles E. Wyckoff Jr. On June 6, 2007, Smith’s task on base was to help coordinate surveillan­ce drones for soldiers in enemy contact. Wyckoff’s patrol was attacked in Helmand province, and as he killed two Taliban militants in defense of his soldiers, Wyckoff was shot dead. Smith still wonders if he could have done more.

“It’s a more intense moment of grief when we’re there for that,” he said of the visit to Arlington.

But such visits are barred this year. The cemetery will be closed to visitors over the weekend; only family members of the interred may enter if they present passes and masks. Others have adapted events to suit the coronaviru­s age. Baca’s now canceled trip was organized through his dance company. The group planned a week-long trip to New Mexico, including a stop Albuquerqu­e, his hometown, to hold dance workshops with local veterans and teach steps to disadvanta­ged kids. Instead, Baca will hold a remote workshop for veterans in the United Kingdom. It will enable them to express their experience­s through creative arts and learn new skills to help them find jobs in the field, Baca said.

The Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, a group that provides resources and care for those who have lost spouses and family members in uniform, has shifted its annual conference in Virginia to Zoom. That has allowed grieving families to find comfort among others even in a time of social isolation, founder Bonnie Carroll said.

Carroll also recognized similar feelings of grief among survivors of those who died of infections: a sense of isolation and the burden of not saying goodbye, she said, that military families have historical­ly experience­d. The group stepped in to offer resources, including a mourner’s bill of rights to help covid-ravaged families navigate their loss.

 ?? Washington Post photo by Matt McClain ?? Soldiers place flags near headstones at Arlington National Cemetery in advance for Memorial Day on Thursday.
Washington Post photo by Matt McClain Soldiers place flags near headstones at Arlington National Cemetery in advance for Memorial Day on Thursday.

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