story in todays paper
Vietnam veteran Daniel Foley died by himself in a rundown hotel.
No relatives or friends claimed his body.
But when it came time to bury him Thursday at the South Florida National Cemetery west of Lake Worth, 18 people attended, including a four-man, white-gloved Army honor guard.
Foley had never known any of them, but they were there.
"Although, sadly, Daniel has no family here today, he has a greater family of veterans who will always be with him," said Veterans Hospital chaplain Joseph Grodsky, who officiated at the burial.
Sgt. Keston White-Marin, in full uniform and beret, played taps, the plaintive notes echoing amid the neat rows of small, identical tombstones.
Once the U.S. flag was removed from the metal casket and folded into the traditional triangle, Staff Sgt. Jose Amoa solemnly handed to it to the woman standing in for Foley's mother, wife or sister — Cheryl Godbout, general manager of the Aycock Funeral Home in Jupiter and committee chair for the Dignity Memorial Homeless Veterans Burial Program in Palm Beach County.
Dignity Memorial is a network of about 1,600 funeral homes around the country, including several in the county.
"The homeless veterans burial program has existed for about 10 years around the country, but it just began here in the county last year," said Godbout. "This is our fifth burial."
"The idea is to make sure that no veteran has to be buried in potter's field," she said, referring to anonymous public plots where the bodies of the indigent and unclaimed are laid to rest.
Godbout said the funeral home that is closest to where the veteran died and that belongs to the network pays for the preparation of the body, the casket and transportation in a hearse. Foley's burial was paid for Mizell Faville Zern Funeral Home of West Palm Beach.
Godbout says the committee she heads includes representatives of the cemetery, the county Health Department, Medical Examiner's Office, Veterans Hospital, the American Legion and Vitas, a private hospice chain that sponsors a veterans program.
Only veterans identified and approved by the committee qualify for the burial.
"You can't just call us," says Godbout. "It doesn't work that way."
Denise DiGiovanni, a registered nurse with Vitas and a member of the Dignity Memorial committee who attended the burial, said, "No veteran should be sent on his way alone. About 1,800 veterans per day die in the U.S. In Florida alone, about 60,000 will die between now and 2016."
Foley, 63, an Army equipment maintenance engineer, served in Vietnam from 1967 to 1969. He was originally from Detroit.
As Amoa handed Godbout the folded flag, he spoke the lines any mother or wife would have heard:
"Let this be a symbol of his faithful and loyal service to his country."
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