True story of a Soldier and the Intervention of St. Michael
What follows is a letter written by a young Marine to his mother while
he was hospitalized after being wounded on a Korean battlefield in 1950.
It came into the hands of a Navy Chaplain who read the letter before
5,000 Marines at a San Diego Naval Base in 1951.
The Navy Chaplain had talked to the young man, to his mother, and to the Sergeant in charge of the patrol. This Navy Chaplain, Father Walter Muldy, assured anyone who asked, that this was a true story.
Dear Mom,
I wouldn't dare write this letter to anyone but you because no one else
would believe it. Maybe even you will find it hard, but I have to tell
somebody.
First off, I am in a hospital. Now don't worry, you
hear me, don't worry. I was wounded but I'm okay. The doctor says that I
will be up and around in a month. But that is not what I want to tell
you.
Remember when I joined the Marines last year; remember
when I left, how you told me to say a prayer to St. Michael every day.
You really didn't have to tell me that. Ever since I can remember you
always told me to pray to St. Michael the Archangel. You even named me
after him. Well I have always prayed to St. Michael. When I got to
Korea, I prayed even harder. Remember the prayer that you taught me?
"Michael, Michael of the morning, fresh corps of Heaven adorning…" You
know the rest of it. Well, I said it every day, sometimes when I was
marching or sometimes resting, but always before I went to sleep. I even
got some of the other fellas to say it.
Well, one day I was
with an advance detail way up over the front lines. We were scouting for
the commies. I was plodding along in the bitter cold; my breath was
like cigar smoke. I thought I knew every guy in the patrol, when along
side of me comes another Marine I never met before. He was bigger than
any other Marine I'd ever seen. He must have been over 6 feet 4 inches
and built in proportion. It gave me a feeling of security to have such a
body near me.
Anyway, there we were trudging along. The rest
of the patrol spread out. Just to start a conversation I said, "Cold
ain't it." And then I laughed. Here I was with a good chance of getting
killed any minute and I am talking about the weather!
My companion seemed to understand. I heard him laugh softly.
I looked at him, "I've never seen you before. I thought I knew every man in the outfit."
"I just joined at the last minute," he replied, "the name is Michael."
"Is that so," I said surprised, "that's my name too."
"I know," he said, and then went on saying the prayer, "Michael, Michael of the morning..."
I was too amazed to say anything for a minute. How did he know my name,
and a prayer that you had taught me? Then I smiled to myself, every guy
in the outfit knew about me. Hadn't I taught the prayer to anybody who
would listen? Why now and then, they even referred to me as St. Michael.
Neither of us spoke for a time, and then he broke the silence.
"We're going to have some trouble up ahead." He must have been in fine
physical shape for he was breathing so lightly I couldn't see his
breath. Mine poured out in great clouds. There was no smile on his face
now. Trouble ahead, I thought to myself; well with the commies all
around us, that's no great revelation.
Snow began to fall in
thick great globs. In a brief moment the whole countryside was blotted
out, and I was marching in a white fog of wet sticky particles. My
companion disappeared.
"Michael!" I shouted in sudden alarm. I felt his hand on my arm, his voice was rich and strong, "This will stop shortly."
His prophecy proved to be correct. In a few minutes the snow stopped as
abruptly as it had begun. The sun was a hard shining disc. I looked
back for the rest of the patrol. There was no one in sight. We lost them
in the heavy fall of snow. I looked ahead as we came over a little
rise. Mom, my heart stopped. There were seven of them, seven commies in
their padded pants and jackets and their funny hats. Only there wasn’t
anything funny about them now. Seven rifles were aimed at us.
"Down Michael!" I screamed, and hit the frozen earth. I heard those
rifles fire almost as one. I heard the bullets. There was Michael still
standing.
Mom, those guys couldn't have missed, not at that
range. I expected to see him literally blown to bits, but there he
stood, making no effort to fire himself. He was paralyzed with fear. It
happens sometimes, Mom, even to the bravest. He was like a bird
fascinated by a snake. At least that's what I thought then. I jumped up
to pull him down and that was when I got mine. I felt a sudden flame in
my chest. I often wondered what it felt like to be hit. Now I know.
I remember feeling strong arms about me, arms that laid me ever so
gently on a pillow of snow. I opened my eyes, for one last look. I
thought I was dying. Maybe I was even dead. I remember thinking, “Well,
this is not so bad.”
Maybe I was looking into the sun. Maybe I
was in shock, but it seemed I saw Michael standing erect again, only
this time his face was shining with a terrible splendor.
As I
say, maybe it was the sun in my eyes, but he seemed to change as I
watched him. He grew bigger, his arms stretched out wide, maybe it was
the snow falling again but there was a brightness around him like the
wings of an angel. In his hand was a sword. A sword that flashed with a
million lights.
Well, that's the last thing I remember until
the rest of the fellas came up and found me; I don't know how much time
had passed. Now and then I had but a moment's rest from the pain and
fever. I remember telling them of the enemy just ahead.
"Where's Michael?" I asked. I saw them look at one another. "Where's who?" asked one.
"Michael, that big Marine I was walking with just before the snow squall hit us."
"Kid," said the sergeant, "you weren't walking with anyone. I had my
eyes on you the whole time. You were getting too far out. I was just
going to call you in, when you disappeared in the snow."
He looked at me, curiously. "How did you do it, kid?"
"How did I do what?" I asked half angry, despite my wound. "This Marine
named Michael and I were just..." "Son," said the sergeant kindly, "I
picked this outfit myself and there just ain't another Michael in it.
You are the only Mike in it."
He paused for a minute. "Just how
did you do it, kid? We heard shots, yet there hasn't been a shot fired
from your rifle, and there isn't a bit of lead in them seven bodies over
the hill there."
I didn't say anything; what could I say? I could only look open-mouthed with amazement.
It was then, the sergeant spoke again. "Kid," he said gently, "every one of those seven commies was killed by a sword stroke."
That is all I can tell you, Mom. As I say, it may have been the sun in
my eyes, it may have been the cold or the pain, but that is what
happened.
Love, Michael
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