Braille Flag
Jesus Sanchez Cabral flew his flag until he could no longer see it. A decorated veteran, he never liked to display his World War II medals. That was showing off. But the flag was another matter. He hung it on his Hutchinson, Kan., porch every Memorial Day, every Flag Day, every Fourth of July, every holiday. It was a tradition he kept up until glaucoma blinded him. After that, his flag flew no more. When he died 10 years ago at the age of 82, his wife said it was too bad that he couldn’t see the flag in his final years.
And his son did something about that, designing an American flag for the blind. It describes the colors, the thirteen stripes and fifty stars, and also contains The Pledge of Allegiance. Over 5,000 of these flags have been distributed to blind veterans, including many who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan. Next month, a bronze version will be delivered to Arlington National Cemetery for permanent display.
Posted by: Ted at 11:48 AM
Comments
1
That is awesome. What a great idea.
Posted by: Blogeline at February 26, 2008 02:07 PM (YMz4J)
2
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Posted by: Raleigh Wojciechowski at April 24, 2012 06:14 PM (3TEvw)
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