2010-03-18 / Community

Deceased homeless veterans get military burials

By Sophia Fischer sfischer@theacorn.com

IN MEMORIAM—Members of District 7 Veterans of Foreign Wars posts and their families commemorate five deceased homeless veterans during a memorial service March 16 at Pierce Brothers Valley Oaks-Griffin Memorial Park. IRIS SMOOT/Acorn Newspapers IN MEMORIAM—Members of District 7 Veterans of Foreign Wars posts and their families commemorate five deceased homeless veterans during a memorial service March 16 at Pierce Brothers Valley Oaks-Griffin Memorial Park. IRIS SMOOT/Acorn Newspapers They died homeless but not forgotten.

Five deceased United States veterans were honored on Tuesday with a full military funeral service at Pierce Brothers Valley Oaks Memorial Park in Westlake Village.

The service included a gun salute, the playing of taps and a reading of the poem “Just a Common Soldier (A Soldier Died Today)” by Canadian World War II veteran A. Lawrence Vaincourt.

“We are grateful for their service and their selfless acts for our country,” said the Rev. Bruce Kitabjian, pastor of Grace Bible Church in Newbury Park.

Family and friends of the Southern California men could not be located. The veterans’ service spanned World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War. Four served in the U.S. Army: Glenn Davis, age 63, from 196364; Jefferson Robinson, age 62, from 1964-74; Sanford L. Garland, age 78, from 1955-58; and Paul Deighton, age 86, from 1943-46. Valentine Plaska, age 92, served in the Merchant Marines from 1941-44.

The men are among an estimated 150,000 homeless veterans nationwide whose remains are unclaimed at the time of their deaths.

The homeless veterans burial program is a joint effort of the Dignity Memorial Network of funeral, cemetery and cremation providers, Riverside National Cemetery, Veterans Affairs, the Los Angeles County coroner’s office, the Veterans of Foreign Wars and local veterans’ organizations and advocates.

Available in 20 cities nationwide, burial services have been provided for more than 600 homeless

Available in 20 cities nationwide, burial services have been provided for more than 600 homeless veterans since the program’s inception in 2000.

The Dignity Memorial network provides preparation of the body, transportation, casket and coordination of the funeral service.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs provides burial in a national cemetery, including opening and closing of the grave site, a grave liner, a headstone or marker and the graveside ceremony.

The interment of the five men took place at Riverside National Cemetery the day after the memorial ceremony in Westlake.

On Pierce Brothers’ central lawn, the caskets, each on a stand, were draped with American flags.

About 20 men and women, many of them veterans, stood side by side in a line behind the small, seated audience. Known as the Patriot Guard Riders, many had traveled by motorcycle to Pierce Brothers to honor their fellow veterans. They came from Ventura, Camarillo and Fontana, among other communities.

Jerry Wendt rode in from Arcadia. The 70-year-old retired Army staff sergeant attends multiple veteran funerals weekly. Once a week he participates in a service for homeless veterans.

Wendt keeps a large ring containing hundreds of dog tags that represent each of the military funerals he has attended.

He added the latest tag, inscribed with the names of five homeless veterans and “We are their family” at the bottom.

“We do this because we have vowed to never forget,” said Wendt, who served from 1960-66.

Sometimes it takes months, even years, for a homeless veteran to be buried, Wendt said. The bodies are kept in cold storage while efforts are made to locate the veteran’s relatives.

During the memorial service in Westlake, Joe P. Sainz Jr., a retired U.S. Army veteran, recognized those like Wendt in attendance.

“As we honor these veterans we also want to honor those here today,” Sainz said. “Job well done. Carry on.”

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