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  1. #1
    Inactive Member imported_elp6n's Avatar
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    Forgotten POW flag now a memorial

    ALTAMONT, New York (AP) -- A soldier held in Japanese prison camps in World War II secretly painted stars and stripes on pilfered paper hidden from his captors, then held the flag up high to greet American planes flying overhead when his camp was liberated.

    After returning home, Cpl. Millard Orsini consigned the object of his secret work to a closet. He rarely mentioned the war or the moldering flag, and died in 1978 from a heart attack.

    "He was really a hometown hero who got lost in the cracks," said Tony Ferraioli, who led the effort to restore the flag.

    Its dark red stripes and 48 stars have been restored and it now hangs in a frame at the Homefront Cafe, a World War II-themed restaurant in Altamont, Orsini's old home village near Albany.

    Orsini was one of seven brothers who served during World War II. The combat engineer was captured early in the war in the Philippines. In April 1942, he and some 70,000 fellow prisoners were herded into the 55-mile Bataan Death March, during which up to 10,000 marchers died.

    The next 39 months in Japanese prison camps were nearly as brutal. A book on the death march, "Horror Trek," described his punishment in 1944 for stealing potato peels from a trash heap: "(H)e was slugged and beaten by a dozen guards until he collapsed -- then he was kicked in the face."

    He painted the flag on a newspaper-sized piece of pulpy paper, maybe a window shade or wrapping paper, using stolen or creatively mixed oil paints. The craftsmanship is meticulous.

    It is believed that he hid the flag under floorboards while his fellow prisoners kept watch.

    "If he got caught, it would have been the end of him," said his brother, Joseph Orsini.

    Joseph Orsini remembers his brother talking about holding the flag up to greet American planes flying over the newly liberated camp.

    Ferraioli, who was commander of the Altamont Veterans of Foreign Wars post in 2001, decided to honor Orsini during the post's annual "Loyalty Day" celebration.

    Orsini's widow handed over her husband's Purple Heart, Bronze Star and snapshots. She also gave him the folded flag, torn and blackened by mold.

    Locals raised $3,000 for textile restoration. The flag, brightened up, vacuum-sealed and framed, was unveiled at a Loyalty Day ceremony June 2002.

    It hung for a while in local government offices, but veterans felt a more fitting place was the restaurant decorated with Norman Rockwell prints and sepia-toned snapshots of soldiers.

    It's not exactly a museum setting, but owner Cindy Pollard keeps a history of the flag handy and is happy to tell the story of its maker. She'll also show a photo of the seven Orsini brothers in uniform, dated 1947.

    What inspired Orsini to risk his life to make the flag is not clear. Those who knew him say the flag was a simple symbol of his deep patriotism.

    A prisoner of a different war, U.S. Sen. John McCain, tells an anecdote about a comrade who sewed a flag inside his shirt so others could pledge allegiance. After the flag was discovered and the prisoner was beaten, he started to make another one.

    Pollard sees a similar patriotic spirit in Orsini and makes it a point to tell that to children who come to see the flag.

    "I like to tell how much this man loved his country," Pollard said.
    You'll shoot your eye out.

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  2. #2
    Inactive Member PVVikeFan's Avatar
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    Re: Forgotten POW flag now a memorial

    GREAT post
    _________________________________________________________
    HOW'S THAT HOPE AND CHANGE WORKING OUT FOR YA ??????

  3. #3
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    Re: Forgotten POW flag now a memorial

    My cousin was under that missing in action/possibly prisoner of war tattoo. That the military gives you when they just don't know. Dead or alive and missing or POW.
    He and 7 others were rescued when US Marines, overtook the camp area they were being kept in.
    Several North Vietmanese brass wanted them to be in Hanoi when Hanoi Jane visited. To say they weren't mistreated and the US was fighting an unjust war against the People's Republic of Vietman.
    He refused and well as i said he got pretty battered. And the other 7 well only 3 made it out, but it did show how the Vietmanese treated prisoners of war.
    My cousin today still said it was the longest 3 months he had ever knew. But he knew his country would not forget him and the others.
    Im not sure the Marines that hit the camp knew they were there or not.
    But one thing i am sure of. When my cousin heard that yell of any american's here. It made him yell out in joy and in relieve.
    His plans for the upcoming days, was to determine how to plot his own suicide, because he was a radio operations specialist with the marines, and he was valuable to the North Vietmanese if he would break US radio codes and signals.
    He did once and sent US planes on a bombing raid of the Ho Chi Mni trail. A day that lite up the trail. The North Vietmanese probably to this day never knew what happened or how.
    He knew and well that was all that was important at the time, it kept his spirits up, until it was getting time that the beatings were taking their toll.
    Then it was make a decision. Betray my own or kill myself. He chose the latter, well till that one day of liberation came.
    He never knew if it was by mistake, or a planned attack of the camp he was in. Either way. He was just glad to hear that American voice asking if there was any Americans here.
    After 3 months in recovery he returned home from Nam.
    And while working his way back to Virginia from California. He got spit on once by a flower child.
    To all those POW's and those not home yet.
    Thanks Men. Some of us will never forget your sacrifice.

  4. #4
    Inactive Member imported_juggernaut28's Avatar
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    Re: Forgotten POW flag now a memorial

    We will never know the pain and heartache out servicemen go through just so we can be free and away from harm's way. To read about the flower child that spit on him makes me wish they would move out of this country because they don't care what the sacrifice was or the price paid just so they could do what they do everyday. They have no love or compassion for their fallen men and women. Whether we agree or not with the issues of our wars that our men and women go in we should atleast give them respect due to them when they come home.

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