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A wall of names can change how you see yourself—and your country. Walking the National Mall with our guide Jeremy Goldstein, we explore how the World War I, World War II, Korean War, and Vietnam Veterans memorials turn stone, water, and bronze into living memory. Each site carries its own voice: Korea’s haunted patrol, WWI’s powerful relief, WWII’s stars and fountains, and the Vietnam Wall’s reflective ledger of loss. Together, they invite pride in service and a sober accounting of cost, holding space for grief, gratitude, and collective healing. We share stories that ground the monuments in human experience: veterans who return to volunteer, guides who greet friends on the wall each morning, and families searching for names to etch and carry home. Jeremy unpacks why Maya Lin’s design remains so resonant—your reflection interlaced with names, the depth of the wall rising with the toll of weeks, and the nearby statues that personify service. We trace the civic values embedded in these places—service, engagement, and a shared commitment to ideals rooted in the Constitution—and consider how local memorials connect hometowns to the nation’s front yard. Looking ahead, we highlight new memorials on the horizon, including Desert Storm/Desert Shield and efforts around the Global War on Terror, and we point to accessible digital tools for classrooms and families through the National Mall Gateway. Whether you’ve walked these paths or only seen photos, this conversation offers a clear way to experience the Mall as a civic classroom: honor the fallen, support the living, and turn remembrance into action. If this resonated with you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review telling us which memorial moved you most. Your stories keep the memory alive. Take the virtual tour! (https://gateway.nationalmall.org/en/t...) Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum (https://civics.asu.edu/civic-literacy...) ! School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership (https://scetl.asu.edu/) Center for American Civics (https://civics.asu.edu/)