Chapter One
The Unavoidable
Question
An old man walks down a wide path through a colonnade of
evergreens. He has a full head of gray hair, combed from a wavy peak to
one side. His eyebrows spike with a grandfatherly flourish toward his
temples. He wears a light blue Windbreaker over a golf shirt with a horizontal
stripe, Sansabelt slacks, and the crepe-soled shoes his doctor recommended.
His gait is quick but stiff-stiff like someone who has just
gotten himself up. He marches forward with great intent and purpose,
as if he's hunting out something or someone.
Behind him trail his family. His wife is closest, his son and daughter-in-law
a step or two farther behind, bracketing their children.
The man's eyes show that for the moment he's not thinking of his
family, although he seems to be dragging them in his wake. His eyes are
at once wide-open yet fixed, poached by what can only be dread. His
mouth works in a way that shows his stomach is in his throat. Off to the
left his family can see the curve of a long shore, hear the soughing of the
waves, and nearly breathe in the scent of the brine. But the man looks
neither to his right nor to his left. He keeps stumbling forward, his body
tense yet determined.
When he finally turns to his right, he steps onto a vast lawn striped
with thousands of white crosses that extend toward the horizon. Here
and there a Jewish star adds to the procession of markers that contrast
starkly against the green sward. The old man's pace speeds as he makes
his way through this vast cemetery. His family struggles to keep up.
James Ryan's determined march finally halts in front of a particular
cross. The rims of his eyes show red. He wipes at them with a shaking
hand, sniffs hard, tries again to breathe. Here it is, his captain's cross,
the name, the date: Captain John W. Miller, June 13, 1944.
He takes another sniff against his watering eyes, bites his lip. He's
almost choking as he struggles to breathe in the heavy air. His knees
give way, and he kneels before the cross, his shoulders heaving. His wife
is suddenly at one shoulder, his son at the other. He's glad they are
there, but they cannot help with what needs to be done.
He mumbles that he's all right, and they retreat several steps, leaving
him to the thoughts that press so hard he can't bear the weight.
Not until this moment does he realize that what he has been looking
forward to yet dreading is a transaction. An exchange of some kind.
For him this visit to the Normandy American Cemetery is no sightseeing
tour. It's a profound action. Even now he cannot say why he believes
this to be the case. The emotion that's seized him declares it to be
so, however.
Whatever must happen involves the question that's dogged him
his whole life. The unspoken question that's brought him here. He feels
its presence in every memory, and not only the good ones.
Now that he's looking at his captain's grave, Ryan has to ask the
question.
Decades earlier, on June 6, 1944, Captain Miller and his men had
landed at Omaha Beach, a horror James Ryan had been spared as part of
the 101st Airborne. His unit had been dropped into Normandy the
night before the sea assault. He later learned from the tales of his buddies
and from seeing newsreel footage what D-day had been like. Although
Germany had not been expecting the assault at the place
Eisenhower chose, the air assault hadn't softened their positions one
whit, and when the armored front of the Higgins boats opened onto the
beach, the men were ducks on a pond to the enemy's machine guns.
Many of those sitting forward in the landing craft never had a chance to
move from their seats as the Germans opened fire. Those who jumped
over the craft's sides to swim and crawl ashore could only cling to the
Belgian gates and iron hedgehogs-the jack-shaped defensive works
strewn in rows all along the shingle that prevented tanks from making
the initial assault.
The army rangers humped forward in waves, men falling to the
right and left every few feet. They were getting hit not only by machine-gun
fire but by artillery as well. Bodies flew with the explosions. The
wounded picked up their severed arms and stumbled a few more feet to
their deaths. The waves washing onto the beaches ran red with blood,
lapping at the dead, who lay scattered and senseless.
Captain Miller and a few of his company made it to the seawall.
Although 50 percent of the men in the first waves to hit Omaha Beach
were killed in action, the others broke the first line of German defenses.
Soon after the hell of D-Day, Captain Miller and a squad of seven
men were assigned to find paratrooper James Ryan and bring him
home-alive. The army's chief of staff, General George C. Marshall,
had personally issued the order for Private James Ryan to be taken out
of the war. Ryan's two older brothers had died in the great assault, and a
third brother had been killed in action in New Guinea. Marshall
thought that three sons were enough for any mother to contribute to
the war.
Captain Miller and his squad found Ryan with remnants of the
506, Baker Company, which had orders to secure a bridge on the far
side of a river. The company had been ordered to hold the bridge at all
costs-or, as a final defense, to blow it up. When Captain Miller and
his squad arrived to take Ryan home, Ryan refused to leave. Miller
asked him what he was supposed to say to Ryan's mother when she got
another folded American flag. Ryan replied, "You can tell her that when
you found me, I was with the only brothers I had left. And that there
was no way I was deserting them. I think she'd understand that."
Captain Miller and his squad told Ryan angrily that they had already
lost two men in the search to find him. Miller finally decided that
they'd make Ryan's battle their own as well and save him in the process.
The Germans soon came at them-nearly a full company of men,
two Panzer tanks, two Tigers. The Americans lured the Panzers down
the village's main street, where they staged an effective ambush. The
only thing Ryan had been allowed to do was pitch mortar shells like
hand grenades. Captain Miller never let Ryan leave his side, protecting
the private every step of the way.
Still, one tank blew their sharpshooter to eternity. Another soldier
died in hand-to-hand combat with a knife to his heart. No matter their
ingenuity, the squad couldn't hold off such an overpowering force, and
the men made a strategic retreat to the other side of the bridge. In the
retreat one of the sergeants was hit and collapsed.
Captain Miller took a shot beneath his ribs as he struggled to fix
the wiring on a detonation device. Then an artillery blast knocked him
nearly unconscious. All hope lost, Captain Miller began shooting at a
tank coming straight at him.
Suddenly, Tankbuster aircraft shrieked down on them, blowing
the enemy's tanks to smithereens and routing their foot soldiers. The
Allies' own armored reinforcements rolled up minutes later.
Of the squad that had come to save Ryan, only two men escaped
relatively unscathed. The others were dead or dying.
Captain Miller lay close by where he had been hit, his back
slumped against the bridge's wall. Ryan, in anguish, was alone with his
rescuer in the final moments before Miller died. Ryan watched as the
captain struggled in his last moments, shot clean through one lung. The
captain wouldn't take another breath, except to grunt, "James. Earn
this ... earn it."
Were these dying words a final order or charge?
Private Ryan has always taken it that way.
These memories rivet the aged James Ryan, who now finds himself
staring at the grave marker and mumbling to his dead commander.
He tells Captain Miller that his family is with him. He confesses that he
wasn't sure how he would feel about coming to the cemetery today. He
wants Captain Miller to know that every day of his life he's thought of
their conversation at the bridge, of Miller's dying words. Ryan has tried
to live a good life, and he hopes he has. At least in the captain's eyes, he
hopes he's "earned it," that his life has been worthy of the sacrifice Captain
Miller and the other men made of giving their lives for his.
As Ryan mutters these thoughts, he cannot help wondering how
any life, however well lived, could be worthy of his friends' sacrifice.
The old man stands up, but he doesn't feel released. The question remains
unanswered.
His wife comes to his side again. He looks at her and pleads, "Tell
me I've led a good life."
Confused by his request, she responds with a question: "What?"
He has to know the answer. He tries to articulate it again: "Tell me
I'm a good man."
The request flusters her, but his earnestness makes her think better
of putting it off. With great dignity, she says, "You are."
His wife turns back to the other family members, whose stirring
says they are ready to leave.
Before James Ryan joins them, he comes to attention and salutes
his fallen comrade. What a gallant old soldier he is.
* * *
Who of us can see this scene from Steven Spielberg's magnificent film
Saving Private Ryan and not ask ourselves the same question: Have I
lived a good life?
Does there exist an exact way of calculating the answer to this question?
How do we define living a good life? What makes the good we do
good enough? Is our life worthy of the sacrifice of others? The unavoidable
question of whether we have lived a good life searches our hearts.
Not everyone experiences what Ryan did in such a dramatic way.
Yet this question of the good life-and others like it-haunts every human
being from the earliest years of our consciousness. Something stirs
us at the very core of our being, demanding answers to so many questions:
Is there some purpose in life? Are we alone in this universe, or
does some force-call it fate, destiny, or providence-guide our lives?
These questions don't often occur to us so neatly of course.
Usually the hardest questions hit us at the hardest times. In the midst of
tragedy or serious illness, when confronting violence and injustice, or
after seeing our personal hopes shattered, we cry out, "Why is the world
such a mess? Is there anything I can do about it?"
There's a mystery at work in these perennial questions of human
existence. I doubt anyone who has ever seen Saving Private Ryan or read
great works of literature like Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov or
Camus's The Plague has ever doubted the relevance of such questions.
Neither does anyone who has ever marveled at the beauty of the Milky
Way or sat weeping at the bedside of a dying loved one.
What distinguishes humans from all other creatures is our self-consciousness:
We know we are alive and that we will die, and we cannot
keep from asking ourselves questions about why life is the way it is
and what it all means.
And isn't it odd that we all understand immediately why Private
Ryan would feel compelled to live an honorable life? Does he believe
that in doing so he can make his comrades' sacrifice worthwhile? Evidently,
he does, and we sense the rightness of this. But why does he feel
in their debt? Why does he feel that their actions have to be recompensed
by his own, as if blind justice with a sword in one hand and balancing
scales in the other really existed? And why should goodness be
the means of repaying this debt? Why not revenge? Why should he not
set about killing as many former Nazis as possible? Somehow that does
not satisfy, though. If sacrifice can be repaid at all, it can be done only
by sacrifice, not by slaughter. We know this. But why do we know this?
A broad answer lies in our humanity. Because we are human, we
ask questions about meaning and purpose. We have an innate sense of
justice and our own need to meet the demands of justice. Moral attitudes
differ from culture to culture, but take people from a Stone Age
culture in a remote village in Papua New Guinea, sit them down in
front of Saving Private Ryan, and they will immediately understand the
issues involved. They will understand Ryan's questions and his sense of
gratitude.
The word should in the questions that arise from Private Ryan's
life immediately grounds us in ethical considerations. It implies there
must be a variety of answers to these questions. It suggests that some
answers are better than others-some are right while others are wrong.
So, where does this should come from? What does it mean that we possess
an innate sense of these things?
At the very least it points to the notion that we all live in a moral
universe, which is one of the reasons human beings, regardless of background
or economics or place of birth, are irresistibly religious. If nothing
else, we know there is someone or something to which we owe a
debt for our existence.
Our questions also presume that we can choose our answers to
these questions and act on these choices. The freedom of the human
will, even if circumscribed, is built into the way the human mind works.
Commenting on life's questions, U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Anthony M. Kennedy, in the case Planned Parenthood v. Casey, said,
"At the heart of liberty is the right to define one's own concept of existence,
of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life."
Kennedy asserted that beliefs about these matters define the attributes
of personhood. We are who we are, we are the type of creatures we are,
because we are obliged to come to our own conclusions about the great
questions. Although I disagree profoundly with the legal conclusion
Justice Kennedy drew from this observation, I must admit his summary
captures what makes us human.
I can remember when I first began asking questions early in life. I
have particularly vivid memories of the Sunday morning in December
1941 when our family was riveted to the radio, listening with growing
anxiety to the reports of the Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbor. I was certain
we'd be fighting Japanese soldiers or German SS officers in the
streets of our sleepy Boston suburb. I remember asking my father,
"Why does there have to be war and bloodshed and death?" He replied-mistakenly,
as I now think-that it was all part of the natural
process, like famines and plagues that prevented overpopulation.
During the war, I organized fund-raising campaigns in my school,
even auctioned off my treasured model airplane collection to raise funds
for the war effort. Instinctively I knew I was meant to do my part to protect
our freedoms. I wanted my life-even at age twelve-to matter.
I also remember standing in our yard many nights, the world
around me in darkness, blackout shades covering every window in the
neighborhood, protecting us against the expected air raids.
Continues...