>From a speech made by Capt. John S. McCain, USN, (Ret) who represents Arizona in the U.S. Senate:

      As you may know, I spent five and one  half years as a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War. In the early years  of our imprisonment, the NVA kept us in solitary confinement or two or three  to a cell.
      In 1971 the NVA moved us from these conditions of isolation  into large rooms with as many as 30 to 40 men to a room.
      This was, as  you can imagine, a wonderful change and was a direct result of the  efforts of millions of Americans on behalf of a few hundred POWs 10,000  miles from home.
      One of the men who moved into my room was a young man  named Mike   Christian. Mike came from a small town near Selma, Alabama. He  didn't wear a pair of shoes until he was 13 years old. At 17, he enlisted in the US Navy. He later earned a commission by going to Officer Training School. Then he became a Naval Flight Officer and was shot down and captured in 1967.
      Mike had a keen and deep appreciation of the  opportunities this country-and our military-provide for people who want to  work and want to succeed. As part of the change in treatment, the Vietnamese  allowed some prisoners to receive packages from home. In some of these  packages were handkerchiefs, scarves and other items of clothing. Mike  got himself a bamboo needle. Over a period of a couple of months, he created  an American flag and sewed on the inside of his shirt.
      Every  afternoon, before we had a bowl of soup, we would hang Mike's shirt on the  wall of the cell and say the Pledge of Allegiance. I know the Pledge of  Allegiance may not seem the most important part of our day now,but I can  assure you that in that stark cell it was indeed the most important and  meaningful event.
      One day the Vietnamese searched our cell, as they did  periodically, and discovered Mike's shirt with the flag sewn inside, and  removed it. That evening they returned, opened the door of the cell, and for  the benefit of all us, beat Mike Christian severely for the next couple of  hours.  Then, they opened the door of the cell and threw him in. We cleaned  him up as well as we could.
      The cell in which we lived had a  concrete slab in the middle on which we slept. Four naked light bulbs hung  in each corner of the room. As said, we tried to clean up Mike as well as we  could. After the excitement died down, I looked in the corner of the room,  and sitting there beneath that dim light bulb with a piece of red cloth,  another shirt and his bamboo needle, was my friend, Mike Christian. He was  sitting there with his eyes almost shut from the beating he had received,  making another American flag.
      He was not making the flag because it  made Mike Christian feel better.  He was making that flag because he knew how  important it was to us to be able to pledge allegiance to our flag and our  country.
       So the next time you say the Pledge of Allegiance, you must  never forget the sacrifice and courage that thousands of Americans have made  to build our nation and promote freedom around the world. You must remember  our duty,our honor, and our country.

"I pledge allegiance to  the flag of the United States of America and to the republic for which it  stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for  all."
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