Albuquerque Journal

Pearl Harbor attack victim heading home

Michael Galajdik will be buried in national cemetery in Illinois

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More than 75 years after Michael Galajdik was killed in the attack on Pearl Harbor, the sailor from Joliet, Ill., will reach his final resting place.

Galajdik, a Navy Fireman 1st Class, will be interred Saturday at Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery in Elwood, Ill. He was 25 when he was killed while aboard the USS Oklahoma during the Dec. 7, 1941, attack by the Japanese military that thrust the United States into World War II.

Crest Hill resident George Sternisha is escorting his uncle’s body from Hawaii and was expected to arrive Friday in preparatio­n for the Saturday funeral services in Joliet.

It is a ceremony that has been years in the making.

“This was my mother’s wish,” Sternisha said Thursday from Hawaii. “I’m glad that I’m able to fulfill it.”

His mother, Anna, had longed to bury her brother, but Navy officials could not positively identify his remains before she died in 1993. The first glimmer of hope that Sternisha’s mother’s wish would be fulfilled came in 2011, when Navy officials alerted Sternisha of their efforts to use DNA to identify the remains of 388 military personnel — including 18 from Illinois — killed at Pearl Harbor. Using DNA and dental records, the Navy in February finally was able to identify Galajdik’s remains.

“I’m feeling closure,” said Sternisha, a Marine with a Purple Heart from service in Vietnam. “It’s been a long journey for me and my family.”

Joliet resident Ginger Schauer Dudek took to social media Wednesday asking people to honor Galajdik by lining the procession­al route from the funeral home to the church. By Thursday, her request had been shared more than 100 times and prompted calls from people who want to participat­e, she said.

“If it was my family, I would want a decent burial and nice closure,” Dudek said. “You’d hate for the funeral procession going by with no one knowing who actually is there and what part he played in history.”

“It’s amazing that they would come out and show respect, support and honor,” Sternisha said Thursday upon learning of the efforts to line the procession route and support his uncle.

 ??  ?? Michael Galajdik
Michael Galajdik

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