Thinking of Heroes
My little girl brings home reading practice sheets every week. Each day we’re to time her reading the fluency sheet for a minute, three times, the idea being that it will improve her reading. She does get better at reading each time through, naturally, but she also gets pretty bored – I suppose I would, too, if I had to read the same thing over and over three times a day. But she’s also bored because the stories as a whole haven’t been very interesting. Until last week.
She brought home the story of Butch O’Hare. I’d never given much thought to whom O’Hare airport was named after. I suppose I assumed it was named after a politician. None of these fluency stories can be read completely in a minute—she was only about a third of the way through when the minute timer dinged. My son, her older brother, was so interested that he looked up from his own homework and said “actually, that’s pretty interesting.” I agreed, and asked her to keep reading, and she was intrigued enough herself that she kept going without complaint.
Stories about heroes fascinate my family, at the least, and, I believe, humanity as a whole. I think that we’ve become so cynical that we sneer a little when we hear stories of heroics and imagine that it can’t really be true, or we wonder if the hero secretly beats his wife. We are programmed to think that we REALLY need to read stories of ordinary people or cowardly people or despicable people and that stories of heroes are for children. We’re savvy enough now not to believe everything we hear or read, because, God knows, we’ve been fooled plenty of times.
But we still need heroes. And Butch O’Hare was one. In WWII, O’Hare was a fighter pilot on the aircraft carrier
My knowledge of WWII is pretty scant, as it’s pre-industrial history that’s always fascinated me, so I had to look up entries on these fighter bombers. A few of them would have had enough bombs to sink an aircraft carrier, and here came nine, each manned by a tailgunner as well as boasting regular armaments. O’Hare had only a little over 140 seconds worth of ammunition in his machine guns. To make things worse, once he and his wingman were airborne and getting ready to engage, the wingman discovered that his guns were jammed. It was O’Hare alone against the bombers.
He flew up one side of the V formation and then dived under to swoop beneath the other. His shooting was so exact that he completely blew off the fuselage of one of the Betties. One of the Lexington’s other patrols came screaming back when the fight was almost over, and the officer reported seeing three bombers going down in flames at the same time, so rapid and efficient was O’Hare.
Only three of the bombers got past O’Hare, and amazingly none of them hit the
It brought to mind a preface I’ve always liked. Edison Marshall wrote one of my favorite historical novels, Earth Giant, the narrator of whom is none other than Heracles. He drafted these words at the end of a short introductory essay:
…I feel mystically about heroes, whether Heracles, Arthur, Roland, Ragnar Lothbrok the great Viking, Siegfried, Captain John Smith, John Paul Jones, and some living in the last century or even alive today. It seems to me that the Gods love them, that Olympian lightning plays about their heads, that Chance suspends her dull laws when one of the breed comes nigh, that Fate will meet them more than halfway, that event in ratio to their own greatness is their daily fare as long as their heroism lives.
Who are your heroes, and why?
Howard

(Anonymous)
You are totally right: although heroes are rare, they are also totally real.
A hero who dominates my imagination is Liviu Librescu. Do you know how many articles from the useful but unartful wikipedia can inspire me?
One.
This one: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liviu_Libre
When we write the heroic, we should always be mindful of the nature of those who have lived a real life of the Hero.
(Anonymous)
hero
They were attacked by a rogue elephant. The father was holding the baby. As the animal bore down on them, he tossed the baby into a bush and leapt in front of his family, yelling and waving his arms. He led the animal away from his family.
His wife grabbed the baby, who was unharmed, and fled with the daughter. They survived, the father was killed.
Before I had a kid this would have just been another depressing story in the news. Now it was different. It was heroic.
Good job, Dad.
John Hocking
Re: hero
Huzzah for the Heroes.
And Galileo, who, though he revoked his incredible observations before the fury of the Vatican, reputedly murmured, "Eppur si muove."
And still it moves.
Re: Huzzah for the Heroes.
Victor Kugler, Johannes Kleiman, Miep Gies, and Bep Voskuijl. They were the people who sheltered the Franks during WW2, though I'm sure there are many people whose names aren't as widely known who did the same thing. Though I'm Dutch and have lived her all my life, I've only heard bits and pieces of what happened to the Franks and now that I do, I regret not learning the whole story sooner.
I think it's kind of neat a major airport is named after a pilot.
Pro football players who who not only play well, but are good people. They get hit, over and over, and still get up and continue the battle. To see them move with such beauty and grace despite the pain, it's like watching a ballet. (I have a chronic pain condition; sometimes just getting out of bed and getting myself dressed feels like a major accomplishment.) To see how they master their bodies, to see them move with such grace despite the pain, is simply inspiring.
I'm sorry to learn of your own pain issues.
Howard