Veterans grateful for support

Congressman Doug Collins speaks during a Veterans Day observance at Level Grove Elementary School.

Habersham County veterans were honored today during programs at North Habersham Middle School in Clarkesville and at Wilbanks Middle School in Demorest. No other formal community-wide Veterans Day celebrations were held. Air Force Veteran Bennie Smith that’s because the local chapter of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) – which has in the past sponsored Veterans Day services in Habersham – chose not to do so this year in order to free up its members to attend local school events. Smith says, “That way our guys can go to the schools and support the kids.”

South Habersham Middle School held its Veterans Day program on Monday and Level Grove Elementary School held a special flag raising ceremony on Friday (pictured above).

mabe and smith
Grant Reeves VFW Post 7720 Commander Bennie Smith (right) chats with fellow veteran and VFW member Ernest Mabe. Mabe is the oldest living member of the local VFW. He is a veteran of WW II.

Smith says these types of school events are inspiring, “As I was listening to the kids at South Habersham Middle School give some good speeches that they wrote I thought ‘how great it is for the kids to learn about what the soldiers have done and where their freedom comes from.'”

Smith knows a lot about the price of freedom. He served in the Army National Guard in the early 1960s then joined the U.S. Air Force. He was sent to Vietnam in 1964. Smith spent two six-month tours in Vietnam working as a crew chief, managing flights and repairs on U.S. aircraft. He left the military when his last tour ended in 1965.

Fellow Habersham Countian Raymond Hudgins, Jr., also served during the Vietnam War era.

Hudgins was drafted into the Army in 1965. His father was a World War II vet. Hudgins says, “The day I was drafted was the only time I ever saw my dad cry.” Hudgins expected to receive orders to go to Vietnam, instead, he was sent to South Korea. He spent two years there before returning home and settling back into civilian life.

“I don’t know if I would have gone into the military if I hadn’t been drafted,” Hudgins says. The draft ended when the Vietnam War ended in 1973. The United States now has an all-volunteer military force. “These people today who join now have some courage,” he says.

Hudgins and Smith both remember the anti-war protests of the ’60s. “It was disgraceful how veterans from Vietnam were treated,” Hudgins says but he quickly adds, “Times have changed. We haven’t seen this much support for our veterans and soldiers since World War II.”

After the war Hudgins and Smith both went on to raise families and build successful civilian careers. Though they left the service, the service never left them.

The Buddy Poppy is the VFW's official memorial flower and represents the blood shed by American service members. The Poppy movement was inspired by Canadian Army Col. John McCrae’s famous poem, “In Flanders Fields.” Poppies were originally distributed by the Franco-American Children’s League to benefit children in the devastated areas of France and Belgium following WWI.
The Buddy Poppy is the VFW’s official memorial flower and represents the blood shed by American service members. The Poppy movement was inspired by Canadian Army Col. John McCrae’s famous poem, “In Flanders Fields.” Poppies were originally distributed by the Franco-American Children’s League to benefit children in the war-torn regions of France and Belgium following WWI.

Today they are leaders at the local VFW Post 7720 in Cornelia and spend much of their time raising money to support local charitable and veterans causes. Just this past weekend they handed out buddy poppies to shoppers outside local stores. The small red flowers are handcrafted by disabled veterans living in veterans’ homes and distributed by VFWs nation-wide. Though the flowers are free most people who receive them give a donation. That money goes back into supporting programs for disabled veterans and other veterans in need.

The VFW and Ladies Auxiliary passed out nearly 3,000 buddy poppies in Habersham this past weekend. Smith says people were generous, especially members of the local Hispanic community. He says that makes him feel as though they appreciate the freedoms they enjoy here in America. “One little Hispanic girl came up with her family and said, ‘I studied about you in school today,'” Smith recalls. “That just cut me to the core. So I took her and gave her a buddy poppy. ‘Here’s you one,’ I said and she looked so excited and so did her parents.”

That wide-eyed excitement is a far cry from the harsh words and gestures many Vietnam War veterans endured back in the ’60s. Yes, things have changed but one thing that won’t change, Hudgins says, is the need to maintain a strong U.S. military. “If we hadn’t had a strong military after 9/11 we might not still be a free nation.” Now with the threat of terror groups such as ISIS looming local veterans warn our nation must continue to stand on guard.  “The price of freedom was paid on the battlefield in war zones around the world with Americans’ blood,” says Smith. “I just hope there’s not a lot of these terrorists coming across the borders so that one day we wake up and we’re fighting those battles here at home.”