A peaceful and still early morning at the Pearl Harbor National Memorial yesterday. We had time to visit the museums and watch the excellent documentary film before our 9 am boat tickets to the Arizona Memorial.
The famous white structure was built over the sunken battleship Arizona, straddling the hull, parts of which are still visible.
Of the 1,102 Arizona crew members, more than 900 sailors and marines are still entombed in the wreck below, making this site a most solemn National Memorial Cemetery.
The shrine room with a list of the names, and a place to reflect on the devastating 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor that killed 2,403 Americans.
We grew up with parents who experienced World War II, and are the last generation to hear those stories directly. John's dad was a Marine in the South Pacific and our dad served in Panama. We both wished they could have visited here.
And a most poignant sight. Over a half million gallons of heavy bunker fuel is still trapped in the ship's hull, leaking 2-9 quarts a day. At the current rate of seepage, the ship could continue to leak oil for another 500,000 years.
This phenomenon is widely known as "The Black Tears of the Arizona."
We all know the history, but visiting the actual site is a profound and memorable experience.

