
Carly Taich’s
drawing celebrating diversity won first place out of
sixth, seventh and eighth-grade artists in the “Flags
for Freedom” 2006 Children’s Patriotic Art
Contest. Carly, 14, from Charlotte, N.C., is now a high
school freshman.
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WASHINGTON, Jan. 26, 2007 - With
the help of an America Supports You member organization, Charlotte,
N.C., will observe its second annual “I Love America Day” on
March 19.
"Flags Across the Nation,” which promotes patriotism through
the arts, is a member of America Supports You, a Defense Department
program highlighting the ways Americans are supporting the nation’s
servicemembers.
Eileen Schwartz, Flags Across the Nation’s founder, said she
started the “I Love America Day” movement because more
than two months pass before Memorial Day without a patriotic holiday
and to start a tradition of honoring America and its troops in that
period.
“Part of the reason for doing it was to see if there’s
a way we can build our own history, … which honors the troops
(and shows) appreciation for America,” Schwartz said. “Here’s
a holiday that gives people the opportunity to make a significant difference.”
This year Charlotte will know just how much Carly Taich loves America.
The 14-year-old Charlotte resident’s award-winning artwork will
be painted on the front of a dairy processing building belonging to
a local farm.
Taich won first place in the “Flags for Freedom” 2006 Children’s
Patriotic Art Contest in the division for sixth, seventh and eighth
graders.
Area students will be invited to visit the building featuring the paintings,
and there will be some interactive activities, Schwartz said.
In fact, Schwartz said, she is hoping area residents will come to the
farm the weekend before I Love America Day to help with the painting.
Volunteers also will paint a 10-foot by 15-foot American flag on the
side of the same building.
“We’re going to have (local media) tell people who they
can come on Saturday and Sunday to participate in creating and adding
on to the painting,” Schwartz said. “On Monday we will
invite people to come to see the completed painting.”
With the event still nearly two months away, Schwartz said she’s
still firming up all the details. She is, however, planning to record
I Love America Day activities and burn CDs to send to servicemembers.
The local Veterans of Foreign Wars chapter also has volunteered to
help and will provide a few hundred small American flags for distribution
to those who participate in the festivities. An area businessman has
offered to donate 500 patriotic posters to hand out, as well, some
of which will go to troops overseas, she said.
For those who won’t be able to participate in the events in Charlotte
but want to observe March 19 as I Love America Day, Schwartz suggested
writing letters to the troops or making blankets for wounded warriors
through her organization’s Blankets for Recovery program.
Children can paint individual squares of fabric with a patriotic image
and send them to Flags Across the Nation. They’ll be made into
quilts for troops, she said.
She also suggested volunteering at a veterans hospital, and proudly
displaying the American flag as ways to observe the day.
For those with a competitive streak, Flags Across the Nation is hosting
a patriotic photo essay contest. Leading up to I Love America Day,
entrants can upload their patriotic images to the group’s Web
site. Three prize winners will be selected from all of the entries.
Additionally, 13 images, representing the original 13 colonies, will
be selected and made into a photo quilt, Schwartz said.
“We think that’s going to be a real easy thing to get a
lot of people involved,” she said.
Related Sites:
Flags Across
the Nation
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