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"Official Missing Man Table & Honors Ceremony"
Moderator:
As yo u
entered the dining area, you may have noticed a table at the front,
raised to call your attention to its purpose -- it is reserved to
honor our missing loved ones [or missing comrades in arms, for
veterans].
Set for six, the empty places
represent Americans still [our men] missing from each of the five
services -- Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Coast Guard –– and
civilians. This Honors Ceremony symbolizes that they are with us,
here in spirit.
Some [here] in this room were very
young when they were sent into combat; however, all Americans should
never forget the brave men and women who answered our nation's call
[to serve] and served the cause of freedom with honor.
I would like to ask you to stand,
and remain standing for a moment of silent prayer, as the Honor
Guard places the five service covers and a civilian cap on each
empty plate. [NOTE: if you do not have an honor guard
participating, place the hats on the empty plates as you are setting
up the table.]
Honor Guard: (In silence or with
dignified, quiet music as background, the Honor Guard moves into
position around the table and simultaneously places the covers of
the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force and Coast Guard, and a
civilian hat, on the dinner plate at each table setting. The Honor
Guard then departs.)
Moderator:
Please be seated ....... I would
like to explain the meaning of the items on this special table.
The table is round -- to show our
everlasting concern for our missing men.
The tablecloth is white --
symbolizing the purity of their motives when answering the call to
duty.
The single red rose, displayed in a
vase, reminds us of the life of each of the missing, and the loved
ones and friends of these Americans who keep the faith, awaiting
answers.
The vase is tied with a red ribbon,
symbol of our continued determination to account for our missing.
A slice of lemon on the bread plate
is to remind us of the bitter fate of those captured and missing in
a foreign land.
A pinch of salt symbolizes the
tears endured by those missing and their families who seek answers.
The Bible represents the strength
gained through faith to sustain those lost from our country, founded
as one nation under God.
The glass is inverted -- to
symbolize their inability to share this evening's [morning''s/day''s]
toast.
The chairs are empty -- they are
missing.
Let us now raise our water glasses
in a toast to honor America's POW/MIAs and to the success of our
efforts to account for them.
TABLE SET UP:
- A round table
- White tablecloth
- Place setting for 6 (or single
place setting), preferably all white
- Dress hats for each branch of
service, and one civilian (plain) ball cap (the hats hare placed
in the center of the dinner plate)
- Wine glasses - inverted
- Salt shaker
- Slice of lemon on bread plates
with a pile of spilled salt
- Small bud vase with a single
stem red rose
- RED ribbon tied around the vase
- Candle - lit
- Empty chairs
A
Version for Use at Military Installations
MODERATOR:
Lest We Forget...
As you entered the Mess this
evening, you may have noticed a small table in the place of honor.
It is set for one. Please let me explain. The military caste is
filled with symbology. This table is our way of symbolizing the fact
that members of our profession of arms are missing from our midst.
They are commonly called P.O.W or M.I.A. We call them "BROTHERS".
They are unable to be with us this evening and so we remember them
because of their incarceration.
This table set for one is small,
symbolizing the frailty of one prisoner alone against his
aggressors. REMEMBER!!
The tablecloth is white,
symbolizing the purity of their intentions to respond to their
country's call to arms. REMEMBER!!
REMEMBER, the single rose
displayed in a vase reminds us of the families and loved ones of our
comrades-in-arms who keep the faith awaiting his return.
REMEMBER, the red ribbon
tied so prominently to the vase is reminiscent of the red ribbon
worn on the lapel and breast of those who bear witness to their
unyielding determination to demand a proper accounting of our
missing.
REMEMBER, a slice of lemon
is on the bread plate to remind us of their bitter fate.
There is salt upon the bread plate,
symbolic of the families tears as they wait. REMEMBER!!
The glass is inverted--they cannot
toast with us this night. REMEMBER!!
REMEMBER--all of you who
served with them and called them comrades, who depended upon their
might and aid, and relied upon them, for surely, they have
not forsaken you.
The Missing Men Table Ceremony is
widely used by Veterans Organizations and even certain military
events. The more often this ceremony is seen, the more moved a
heart will be, and the more action people are taking to resolve the
fate of our POW/MIAs. Please consider using this ceremony at your
next event! |