Vietnam Veterans Memorial
The Vietnam War was a formative time in Marty and my coming of age and a defining moment for our generation. It was impossible to grow up during that era without feeling the tension, uncertainty, protests, and deep emotions that surrounded the conflict.

Visiting the Vietnam Veterans Memorial is an emotional experience. Rather than towering statues or grand structures, the memorial is a simple black granite wall etched with the names of more than 58,000 Americans who lost their lives or remain missing from the war. The memorial was commissioned by the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund. A national design competition was held, and the winning design came from Maya Lin, a 21-year-oldarchitecture student at Yale University. The memorial was dedicated in 1982.
What makes this memorial so powerful is the way the polished black stone reflects both the names of the dead and the living visitors standing before them. As you look at the wall, you see yourself alongside the endless list of names, creating a moving reminder that history is never entirely separate from our own lives. Families leave flowers, letters, photographs and personal notes, turning the site into both a memorial and a place of healing.
The memorial is part of the National Mall and Memorial Parks within the National Park System. Located near the Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall, it had become one of the most visited sites in the country.
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial is an artistic expression of loss, sacrifice, remembrance and reconciliation. Walking beside the wall, reminds us that wars are never simply events in history books. They are deeply human experiences carried forward through generations.
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