WWII airman gets Star of David on headstone 75 years after being shot down
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WWII airman gets Star of David on headstone 75 years after being shot down

The grave of Staff Sgt. Jack Weiner was wrongly marked with a cross, until it was recently replaced with a Jewish symbol

A prayer is read during a memorial service for Staff. Sgt. Jack Weiner, U.S. Army Air Forces, at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, Feb. 28, 2017. 

 (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Heather Redman)
A prayer is read during a memorial service for Staff. Sgt. Jack Weiner, U.S. Army Air Forces, at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, Feb. 28, 2017. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Heather Redman)

The headstone of an American soldier killed in World War II was replaced with one bearing a Star of David.

A headstone replacement ceremony was held on Feb. 28 at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaii, according to a report on Friday on the United States Air Force news website, 15th Wing.

Staff Sgt. Jack Weiner, a navigator for the 345th Bombardment Group, was killed during an air raid on Aug. 10, 1945, days before the surrender of Japan. He was the only son of a Jewish immigrant mother from Russia, who had enlisted in the military despite being excused from the draft.

Originally buried at Yokohama Cemetery in Japan, Weiner’s remains were moved to the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Mach 1949. During the transition, a mistake was made and Weiner ended up with a cross on his headstone, instead of the Star of David, according to 15th Wing.

First Lt. Rabbi Levy Pekar, who serves from Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada, told 15th Wing that he first heard about Weiner and the mix-up from one of the navigator’s cousins.  He said it took “some digging,” but he was able to find the quarter master general’s form that “confirmed Sgt. Weiner’s wishes to have the Star of David on his headstone.”

“Sgt. Weiner’s story resonated with me on so many different levels,” Pekar said. “With both of us being Jewish and airmen, I felt like his story could have easily been mine. His story affected me on a spiritual level and as my duty as chaplain I knew we had to correct this mistake.”

Over 30 members of the Honolulu Jewish community, both military and civilian, attended the headstone replacement ceremony and recited the Kaddish prayer for Weiner.

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