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    Tuskegee airman buried at Arlington

    Jacqueline Weathers, widow of former Tuskegee airman retired Lt. Col. Luke Weathers, and others, watches her husband's casket arrive during burial services at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., Friday, Jan. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

    ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) — On the same day that retired Air Force Lt. Col. Luke Weathers Jr. took his resting place among other war and military heroes, his real-life story as a World War II aviator played out on movie screens across the country.

    Weathers was buried Friday at Arlington National Cemetery in a service that began with a flyover of four F-16 jets in the Missing Man formation, a special honor reserved for pilots, by the 113th Wing of the D.C. Capital Guardians, the same unit that guards the airspace over the nation's capital.

    Weathers died Oct. 15 in Tucson, Ariz., of pneumonia at age 90. His burial coincided with the official opening in theaters of "Red Tails," a George Lucas-produced movie retelling the story of the Tuskegee Airmen who debunked widely held beliefs that black pilots were incapable of fighting in combat.

    Shortly after the flyover, in which one of the three jets departed from formation, a caisson pulled by six horses carried Weathers' body to his burial spot amid hundreds of the stark marble tombstones that cover the grounds of the national cemetery. An Air Force band accompanied the wagon, its drummer thumping a solemn beat as family followed on the chilly, overcast Friday morning. Family members wore red ties and scarves, as they had at Weathers' Memphis funeral, as a nod to the aviators who painted their aircrafts' tails red to set themselves apart.

    Luke Weathers III, 61, said his father and other black Americans who fought in World War II did so to prove they were men, "and then they wanted their country to love them, but that didn't happen, either." Friday's ceremony, however, finally delivered recognition of his father as a national hero, Weathers said.

    This kind of attention to the Tuskegee Airmen is what the elder Weathers wanted throughout his life, said his daughter, Trina Weathers Boyce. Weathers was not vain, but he wanted to share the lessons of the airmen's courage in war, their struggles for equality and their victory over a wartime enemy and over racism, she said.

    "He would talk about his hard trials and tribulations to others, to children, because he never wanted us to feel like this (racism) is a reason we couldn't make it," Weathers Boyce said in a telephone interview Thursday. "He would tell us nothing good comes easy. He'd say there are going to be barriers ... and you can overcome them."

    Before the Tuskegee Airmen were formed in 1941, black men were forbidden to fly for the U.S. military, even though they could be drafted. After years of struggle, the Army Air Corps began to allow African Americans to train for flight, albeit in still-segregated units.

    Many of the tens of thousands of Tuskegee airmen, which included navigators, mechanics, medical personnel and others in support roles, trained from 1941 to 1949 at the Tuskegee Institute, which was founded by Booker T. Washington and was already home to an aeronautical engineering program. In the home state of the institute, Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley signed a proclamation honoring the airmen, saying they changed Americans attitudes about race relations.

    More than 900 Tuskegee Airmen were U.S. pilots, said Trent Dudley, an Air Force lieutenant colonel who is president of the East Coast Tuskegee Airmen Inc. chapter. An estimated 250 to 300 Tuskegee airmen are still alive. The exact number is not known because some have not registered with chapters.

    "As with all the airmen, when we lose one of them, there is a chunk of history that goes with them," Dudley said.

    Defying social norms was already a family trait when Weathers was born in Grenada, Miss.

    At the time, the town's railroad track served as the economic dividing line. Weather's mixed-race father and black mother defied that dividing line, which led them to move to Memphis, where they opened their own grocery store.

    Years later, Weathers was studying biology at Lane College in Jackson, Tenn., when he stumbled on an article in an international newspaper about the Tuskegee Experiment, the federal government's name for the Army Air Corps training of African Americans, Weathers Boyce said.

    His mother turned to the prominent Memphis family she worked for and, with the help of the family's connections, Weathers was considered and eventually accepted into their program.

    He always talked about the maneuver that save his life, Weathers Boyce said. A skillful pilot, he was a target of the Germans. In one combat flight, German aircraft were pursuing him and firing. He was forced to dip down and make a few turns in his plane to keep from getting shot, she said.

    Weathers flew P-51 and P-39 fighters during his service from 1942 to 1945 and earned a Distinguished Flying Cross, according to the National Guard Bureau. He and other Tuskegee Airmen were awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 2007.

    After the war, Weathers went on to become the first African American air controller, run a coin-operated laundry, raise five children, open a flight school, provide vocational rehabilitation for veterans and write a book about his life story that has not yet been published, Weathers Boyce said.

    "We are still educating people on the Tuskegee history," Weathers said, "because it's a big part of American history, not African American or black history, but American history."

    ___

    Online:

    Arlington National Cemetery: http://www.arlingtoncemetery.mil/

    ___

    Suzanne Gamboa can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/APsgamboa

    Friends and family of former Tuskegee airman, retired Lt. Col. Luke Weathers arrive for burial services at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., Friday, Jan. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
     

    53 comments

    • jeannie0198  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  4 months ago
      My son and I went to an early screening of Red Tails on Monday. It was a holiday in honor of Dr Martin Luther King and my husband serves in the Air Force so we were offered the opportunity. We are Caucasian, I am 48 and spent 16 years in the Air Force and my son is 15. I was shocked at the segregation and treatment of these men. It was embarrassing. I would recommend this movie to everyone. I cried and laughed and I was in awwe of how much those Airmen just wanted to fight for their own country and prove themselves. I will pay to see Red Tails in theaters and also buy it when it is released. We were honored to also have in attendance a wife and brother of 2 of the original Tuskegee Airmen. We have been invited to attend their annual conference, it will be held in Saint Louis this year and we will attend. God chose the color of my skin but I choose how I treat others and I have taught my children the same. God Bless Col Weathers and his family.
      • Obobo 4 months ago
        Umm, lady? It was a f'n movie sensationalized by Hollywood. Maybe do some real research about the Tuskenee airmen and how little they accomplished compared to the rest of our men in that war instead of getting your history from a movie.
      • ray 4 months ago
        Why does everything have to be either/or? I am sure honoring one does not take away from the other.
      • Mark 4 months ago
        Well stated Jeannie0198. Thank you.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  4 months ago
      A great resting place for a great man. May he rest in peace.
    • C H  •  4 months ago
      Proud..............may you rest in peace and know that what you did WILL be part of our history!
    • MNBruce  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  4 months ago
      My uncle was a 17 year old gunner on a B-17. He looked at these men as heroes to the entire bomber force. He said that like many men from the south, one of his crew members was from Alabama and was at least mildly racist. After one mission, their plane had fallen out of formation due to a shot up engine, was saved by two fighters from the 332nd. Like in the movie, his crew tracked them down and they drank beer with them for several hours and the Alabama guy paid the tab!
      • Obobo 4 months ago
        Really? Because the Tuskenee airmen were escorts for the B 25's, not B-17's. Nice try at lying though.
      • A Yahoo! User 4 months ago
        He must be a Hollywood screen writer.
      • Carl S 4 months ago
        Hummmm think he is dreaming
    • Nigel  •  4 months ago
      There was never a greater example of American air superiority than what these brave men accomplished in that not ONE bomber they escorted was EVER lost over enemy territory. Its amazing how racism is STILL so prevelent in American society after what these American heroes proved.
      • Obobo 4 months ago
        It's amazing out easily idiots like you are brainwashed to make stupid statments like the one you just did. Maybe try to learn some real history intead of getting it from movies.
      • Jayne Cobb 4 months ago
        No dis-respect intended but it has been proven by the Air Force and Tuskegee pilots themselves that some bombers were lost to enemy fire in combat.This had taken on a urban legend myth like status but they were still some great pilots with nerves of steel who overcame a lot to prove that they had what it took and I hand salute all of them.I look forward to seeing the movie but as Obobo pointed out in a not so polite way movies are very rarely historically accurate even if George Lucas makes them.:~D
      • Nigel 4 months ago
        Obobo: OK, so the "zero losses" may be a myth but the 25 that were confirmed as being lost STILL reflect a ratio of scuccess FAR AND ABOVE than ANY white escort group. Maybe you should let go of that hate you have for peolpe who can't choose their parentage or skin color? Pathetic.
    • Eagle  •  4 months ago
      Japanese-Americans on the mainland experienced even more horrible racism than African-Americans during WWII. They were herded into concentration camps across the country. While their families were in "concentration camps", many young Japanese-Americans volunteered into the 442nd Regiment, which fought and suffered heavy casualties from the landing in Italy through bloody combat in France.

      Last month, a US Army soldier of Chinese-American ethnicity committed suicide after enduring months of continuous racially induced verbal and physical abuses by his entire squad.

      It is a shame that people of color were/are being used for combat and abused by their own country and fellow Americans of Euro ethnicity especially where those Americans also wear same uniform.
      • steve 4 months ago
        And still won more Medals of Honor than any other unit in WW2.
      • thetnrebel 4 months ago
        what happens when democrats run the government
      • soldier boy 4 months ago
        Even more than black people, you say. How many of those Japanese Americans were hung from a Poplar tree or a railroad trestle? How many Chinese were enslaved for 350 years while building this country but in the process they were prevented by law from learning to read and write, and how many could not legally own property, not even a dime? How many Japanese women were raped on a daily basis and how many bore the children of their owners? How many were dragged from their homelands and died by the millions in slave ships amongst their own #$%$ and gore and urine ? How many worked the cane fields of Louisiana where the sharpness of a sugar cane blade cut your body as clean as a knife? How many marched on those hot Alabama highways while facing the blast of a shotgun shell, or the dogs of a grining sheriff? How many have ever walked up to a restaurant and have been told " We only serve #$%$ from our window in the back and if you want to eat you better get your chink #$%$ back there, chink." ? How many Asians were counted by the founding authorities in this country as 3/5th of a white person? How many Asians are told " Well now, chink, you've got to pull yourself up by your own bootstraps because you are a whole lot better here than you would be in chinkland."I am waiting for your answer and I want to know. How many?
    • jim  •  Tampa, Florida  •  4 months ago
      From one servicemen to another I salute you Col Weathers. Thank You for your service my brother in arms. Blessings to your family.
    • pat  •  Irving, Texas  •  4 months ago
      Rest in Peace....Air Force Lt. Col. Luke Weathers Jr.
      American History
    • SB  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  4 months ago
      we all lost a great member of the human race today, a person who puts his or her life on the line for all people no matter who you are deserves the honor he received May God meet you at the gates of heaven , I salute you,
    • Duncan Idaho  •  4 months ago
      Rest in Peace sir.
      • Joseph 4 months ago
        I can't beleive somebody gave thumbs down to the comment of " Rest in Peace sir " How small some of you are. He risked his life for our country, if you can't respect that simple fact then I don't know what to say...
    • Jim  •  Cumby, Texas  •  4 months ago
      God Bless this American Hero and his family.
    • Ray  •  Richardson, Texas  •  4 months ago
      It not black history.. It's american history !! Just like the buffalo soldiers of the frontier !! They fought to protect the towns they couldn't even go in... How sad !!! God bless all who fought for our freedom.. No matter what color you are!!!!!!!!!!!! Thank you !!
    • steve  •  4 months ago
      I met and got to know Herman Johnson, a Tuskegee Airman; he owned an insurance agency, bought a cemetary so blacks would have a place to bury their dead, and Pres of the KC NAACP.

      I am also a history buff and teach history at the University. I saw this movie today, and was VERY VERY disappointed

      They had the pilots all 21st Century black hood speech, jiving and jacking, and it made me SICK

      These were men under twice the strain of other pilots--its enough to be shot at, but to be under the microscope constantly--and yet they CONSTANTLY had decorum and military bearing. They were students and graduates of Universities

      They really have to relationship to the 85% out of wedlock, more likely to be a felon than go to college "African American" so called "men" of today. Today they are standing on the shoulders of giants and urinating on them
    • thetnrebel  •  Nashville, Tennessee  •  4 months ago
      they were a great unit, i remember right not a single bomber were lost wile this unit was flying escort for them
    • Retired Mercenary  •  4 months ago
      RIP Col. Weathers. You and the other airmen are all heros in my book. Thank you for your service to our country at a time of need. I salute you.
      A Nam vet said that.
    • Nichol  •  Minneapolis, Minnesota  •  4 months ago
      Good story,like storie's like this, something positive for a change..Thank's to all who have and are serving...AND I MEAN EVERYONE.... RIP GOOD MAN...
    • Gertie  •  4 months ago
      This film is absolutely breathtaking... I am so very proud of these men! I also salute you! gg
    • jeffery  •  Bremerton, Washington  •  4 months ago
      From your brothers and Sisters in Arms we will miss you RIP Lt. Col. Luke Weathers Jr
    • Robert  •  Lompoc, California  •  4 months ago
      I stand and salute you Colonel Weathers. Thank you for saving my Nation. I have had an easy life because of people such as you.
    • JamesM  •  4 months ago
      A true American Hero. R.I.P.