[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 146 (2000), Part 8] [Extensions of Remarks] [Pages 10899-10900] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]FLAG DAY ______ HON. GERALD D. KLECZKA of wisconsin in the house of representatives Wednesday, June 14, 2000 Mr. KLECZKA. Mr. Speaker, I rise today, on Flag Day, to remind all Americans to pause and pay their respects to the banner that has come to symbolize the freedom and liberty that we hold so dear. June 14, 2000, marks the 223rd birthday of the U.S. Flag. In 1777, less than a year after the signing of the Declaration of Independence, and more than a decade before the Constitution was finalized, the Continental Congress adopted the Stars and Stripes pattern for the national flag. Flag Day was first celebrated in the year of the flag's centennial, 1877. After that, many citizens and organizations advocated the adoption of a national day of commemoration for the U.S. Flag. However, it was not until 1949 that President Harry Truman signed legislation officially making Flag Day a day for us to remember what the Stars and Stripes stand for, and honor those who gave their lives for them. The brother of one such brave soldier from my district contacted me recently to relate to me the great patriotism and love for his country of his fallen family member, Joseph G. Serketich, who was killed in a World War II battle in Metz, France, on November 17, 1944. During his basic training at Camp Swift, TX, he sent a letter to the Father of his church back home in Wisconsin that exemplifies how those soldiers felt about their flag, and reminds all of us of its true meaning. On July 31, 1942, Pvt. Serketich wrote of what he felt was the army's most moving ceremony, the end of the day retreat. His words ring as true today as they did when they were written: There the men all stand in formation, facing the flag of our country. While the colors are being lowered the men stand at attention and present arms. . . The thrill comes when one stares at the flag there high in the sky, he wonders what is it there for. What does it mean? Liberty, freedom, happiness and freedom of religion. . . I will fight to defend it whenever an enemy tries to take it from us. I will die for it as Christ died for me. . . . All America should be proud of its flag, not of its material beauty, but for what it stands--life, liberty and happiness--to be also proud of its soldiers who fought to make it, and who fight to preserve it. The Serketich family also sent me a poem entitled ``I Am Your Flag''. These excerpts eloquently remind us all of what this hallowed national symbol really stands for: I was born on June 14, 1777. I am more than just a cloth shaped into a design. I have led your sons into battle from Valley Forge to the bloody jungles in Vietnam. I walk in silence with each of your honored dead to their resting place My red stripes symbolize the blood spilled in defense of this glorious nation. My White [[Page 10900]] stripes signify the burning tears shed by Americans who lost their sons. My blue field is indicative of God's heaven under which I fly. My stars are clustered together, unifying 50 states as one, for God and country. Keep alight the fires of patriotism, strive earnestly for the spirit of democracy. Worship eternal God and keep His commandments, And I shall remain the bulwark of peace and freedom for all mankind. --Author Unknown. I would like to thank Paul Serketich for bringing these tributes to my attention. Each day as the flag is raised in front of our government buildings, schools, and businesses, and as we put our right hands over our hearts and pledge our allegiance, we will be reminded not only of those who fought and died for all that our flag represents, but of the freedom that they bought with their lives. ____________________