>From The New York TImes, 10 Apr 98, p.A12.

On April 9, the new National Prisoner of War Museum
was dedicated.  The museum is located on the
site of the famous Civil War Confederate Prison
at Andersonville, Georgia, where, according to the
article, 13,000 Union soldiers died of malnutrition and
disease.

    "The... museum emphasizes the commonality
    of the prisoners' experiences in various
    conflicts rather than depicting the uniqueness
    of individual wars.  There are sections
    on capture, on living conditions, on
    communications, on deprivation, on morale and
    relationships, and on escape and freedom." 

    "Their story is the story of a struggle
    against daunting odds to choose their own way,
    to stay faithful to a shared cause, to remain
    human beings in a world where they were treated like
    animals." (U.S. Sen. John McCain, who spent 5 years
    in a North Vietnamese prison)

Such a museum seems to me a *very* good thing.  It's
a good (NYT) article, including some personal reminiscences.

Again, I would call attention to Heinz Kohut's
essay, "On Courage", in _Self-Psychology and the
Humanities_.

\brad mccormick

-- 
   Mankind is not the master of all the stuff that exists, but
   Everyman (woman, child) is a judge of the world.

Brad McCormick, Ed.D. / [EMAIL PROTECTED]
914.238.0788 / 27 Poillon Rd, Chappaqua, NY 10514-3403 USA
-------------------------------------------------------
<![%THINK;[SGML]]> Visit my website ==> http://www.cloud9.net/~bradmcc/

Reply via email to