Across the nation, Americans are commemorating Veterans Day with parades, wreath-laying ceremonies, monument dedications and other events.
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NEW HAMPSHIRE: GREEN PASTURES
Richard Velez is a veteran who makes it clear: He didn't serve in a war, but he welcomed home family and friends — brothers all — who had seen "the beast" that is combat.
At the New Hampshire State Veterans Cemetery in Boscawen, Velez joined hundreds of others on Veterans Day. Velez, a 51-year-old from Dover who served with the Army from 1980-86, rode to the peaceful patch of land along the Merrimack River with a Vietnam vets motorcycle club.
"This is a place of brokenness," he said. "Just being here, you find that peace that you're looking for, that you need. And you feel less broken."
Veterans — those who have seen combat and those who haven't — take special solace in the cemetery's green expanses, he said. They find their connection in the orderly rows of headstones that remember comrades from the Civil War to the present.
"It's the brotherhood," he said. "We never rest because of the beast we've seen. And once you've seen the beast, you can't unsee it."