Biden Observes Memorial Day With Ceremony At Arlington National Cemetery

President Joe Biden and other officials honored those who gave their lives serving in the United States military with a series of events on Memorial Day, including the traditional wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery.

“Today renew our sacred vow, it’s a simple vow: to remember. To remember,” Biden said in an address at Arlington National Cemetery Monday afternoon. “Memorial Day is always a day where pain and pride are mixed together.”

“For many of you … the hurt is wrapped around the knowledge that your loved one was part of something bigger, bigger than any of us,” Biden said. “They chose a life of purpose. They had a mission. Above all, they believed in duty. They believed in honor. They believe their country. And still today we are free because they were brave.”

“We live by the light and the flame of liberty that they kept burning,” the president added. “So part of them still with us, no matter how long ago we lost them.”

“Our memorial to them must not be just a day when we pause and pray,” Biden said of fallen service members. “It must be a daily commitment to act, to come together, to be worthy of the price that was paid.”

The Biden family was joined at the ceremony at Arlington by Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff, as well as Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Gen. Mark Milley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Biden laid the wreath and saluted it right before a bugle player played “Taps,” the traditional call of the U.S. Armed Forces at ceremonies and military funerals.

“Democracy is not perfect,” Biden said in his Memorial Day remarks after the wreath-laying ceremony. “But it’s worth fighting for. If necessary, worth dying for.”

“Ukraine and its people are on the frontlines fighting to save their nation,” Biden said, evoking the country’s three-month conflict with Russia. “A battle between democracy and autocracy, between liberty and repression.”

The day culminated with the president and first lady planting a tree on the White House’s South Lawn alongside families of service members who have died in service to the country. The magnolia tree will honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice, as well as “the families who carry on their legacies,” according to the White House.

 

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