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Independent Charities Seal of Excellence is awarded to the members
of Independent Charities of America and Local Independent
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America
Supports You Freedom Walk 2008
National Freedom
Walk Ends With Musical Tribute
By Samantha L.
Quigley/American Forces Press Service |
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Grammy-winning country music group The Oak Ridge Boys
perform a musical tribute at the Pentagon following the
fourth annual National America Supports You Freedom Walk
in Washington, D.C., Sept. 7, 2008. Nearly 10,000
walkers participated in the one-mile walk from Arlington
National Cemetery.
Defense Dept. photo by Samantha L. Quigley
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high res image
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WASHINGTON,
Sept. 7, 2008 - Nearly
10,000 people walked the mile between Arlington National
Cemetery and the Pentagon’s South Parking lot here to
commemorate the events of Sept. 11, 2001, as part of today’s
fourth annual National America Supports You Freedom Walk.
More than an hour after the walk began,
the walkers watched as a well-known country music group took to
the stage to perform a musical tribute.
“Did we mention the Oak Ridge Boys are here, and Secretary
[Gordon] England, and the Oak Ridge Boys, and cabinet members
and the Oak Ridge Boys?” asked Marine Gen. James E. Cartwright,
vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, as he addressed the
crowd.
Before turning the microphone back over to Fox News Channel
Anchor Kelly Wright for the group’s formal introduction,
Cartwright took a minute to thank a few groups.
He thanked those who are deployed on the nation’s behalf for
“all of the things that they do, whether in uniform or civilian,
to support this nation and serve so that we can get up every day
free. Thank you to them.”
He went on to include another group: families.
“I’d be remiss if I didn’t pick up on one other group, the group
that supports us … so that we can serve, in uniform and as
civilians, this nation,” he said. “Their contribution should
never be forgotten.
 “Did I mention the Oak Ridge Boys are coming out?” he joked with
the crowd.
Shortly the air was filled with a familiar melody and the
crowd’s unified voices as the Oak Ridge Boys led them in the
national anthem.
The musicians followed that up with their patriotic song,
“Colors.”
“It’s one that’s red as the bloodshed, blue as the wounded,
white as the crosses on our soldier's graves,” they sang as they
reached the chorus. “Through the rain, through the sun, these
colors never run.”
“Now I've seen people treat her like she was some old rag,
clueless to the human sacrifice,” they sang referring to the
flag. “But you'll always find a mother, a widow, a child, a
sister or a brother with a carefully folded teardrop in their
eyes.”
For some, those teardrops weren’t necessarily attached to a
loved one’s passing, just the fear of the possible.
“I was sitting on the balcony of our building at 6th [Street]
and Pennsylvania Avenue, watch the planes in the air not knowing
if they were ours or if they belonged to a terrorist,” said
Leeann Hall, as she remembered the Sept. 11, attacks. “My
daughter was in school in Arlington, and I could see the planes
flying near there. I thought, ‘Just stop. Just get away.’”

It’s that fear, the thought of what could have happened, that
prompted Hall to participate in the walk. “I don’t want people
ever to forget the terror we felt on that day and the importance
of our freedom,” she said.
Her daughter, Samantha, now 14, was just in second grade on when
terrorists hit the Pentagon.
“I don’t really remember, to be honest [what it was like that
day,]” she said. “I’m not sure I really grasped what was going
on, but now I definitely understand how severe and scary it
really was.”
Another thing she understands is that the troops need continued
support from back home. By participating in the walk with her
mother, she showed that. “They’re protecting us and their
families, and we just really need to appreciate that and how
fortunate we are to have people who care,” she said.
Regardless of the solemnity of the walk, both mom and daughter
were excited to hear the Oak Ridge Boys, and they weren’t alone.

Shelley Marshall, with Military Officers Association of
America’s Scholarship Fund, was elated that the group was
performing. “I’m thrilled,” she said. “I’m a country fan and … I
think we’ve got the best seats in town!”
MOAA, as well as 25 other organizations that support America
Supports You, were on hand to provide information to the walkers
about what the groups do and how individuals can get involved.
The majority of the walkers and all of those representing the
troop-support groups enjoyed the Oak Ridge Boys nearly hour-long
musical tribute.
America Supports You is a Defense Department program connecting
citizens and companies with servicemembers and their families
serving at home and abroad.
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