A Fishers Daughter Remembers Her Father On Memorial Day

Keynote Speaker Taylor Downing talks about her father

Keynote Speaker Taylor Downing talks about her father

 

The weather was gorgeous for the May 30th, 2016 Memorial Day ceremony, with the largest crowd yet for such an event in the  City of Fishers.  But what those in attendance for this commemoration will remember most will not be the weather.  The keynote speech by Taylor Downing is one no one will soon forget.

She talked about her father and how much she treasured the time she did have with him. He died while on duty in Iraq.  Taylor talked in detail about the last time she was with her Dad.  Then she described the day she was told her father had died while serving his country.

I do not know how Taylor Downing was able to complete that speech.  The tears came often and there were a few times emotions overwhelmed her and she paused.  At one point, during one of those pauses. the crowd began to applaud, in recognition of her courage to speak about such a painful experience.

One passage from the speech struck me.  Her father died from a sniper’s bullet.  She is often asked if she wants that sniper to die.  No, she replied, Taylor knows what her father’s death has done to her family.  She knows the sniper that fired the fatal shot has  family too. Taylor wouldn’t wish that pain on any family.

Taylor is a student at Indiana State University working on her degree.

Memorial Day is an important annual holiday in America.  In our part of Indiana, the Indianapolis 500 sometimes overshadows the holiday it is built around.  This year, Fishers experienced a very special Memorial Day ceremony.  It is one I will not soon forget.

Fishers residents place carnations at Liberty Plaza in honor of Americas war dead
Fishers residents place carnations at Liberty Plaza in honor of Americas war dead

 

Liberty Plaza in downtown Fishers, site of the 2016 Memorial Day Observance
Liberty Plaza in downtown Fishers, site of the 2016 Memorial Day Observance

Here is a video of the ceremony’s first 20 minutes

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