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								| Homecoming Festival |  |  |  
					| I have witnessed festivals all over the world From 
					the Bulls of Pamplona to the glittering swirl
 Of the 
					crowds in New Orleans on Mardi Gras Day.
 And they all 
					were impressive, each in its way.
 
 But, by far the 
					most impressive of all
 Wasn't on a foreign plaza or the 
					DC Mall.
 It was the heartfelt joy of a dear old friend
 Saying, "I'm glad you're safely home again."
 
 But what 
					of the men who will never see
 Glad faces like the ones 
					that welcomed me;
 Men who for thirty long years and more
 Have been locked behind their captors' doors?
 
 There 
					are some who'd rather turn away
 And forget those men who 
					were willing to pay
 With their lives and their youth for 
					democracy.
 Weren't those men also fighting to stay free?
 
 Observe the politicians who were never there
 To fight 
					for their country and really don't care
 That some who did 
					have never come home �
 That they've been abandoned to 
					suffer alone;
 
 They speak of patriotism with puffed up 
					chests
 While surreptitiously feathering their nests.
 Our forsaken men surely wonder why
 Their country has 
					callously left them to die.
 
 Bleak yesterdays become 
					hopeless tomorrows,
 With nothing ahead but more days of 
					sorrow,
 What do they care about pageantry
 And 
					homecoming festivals across the sea?
 
 So, shall we 
					just sigh and let them be
 A shameful footnote in our 
					history?
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					| By Thurman P. Woodfork Copyright 2002 - Revised 2006
 Listed 
					February 1, 2011
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