The call to “Remember Pearl Harbor” echoes across the decades, here in Hawaii and throughout the U.S. It honors the military who served and sacrificed on Dec. 7, 1941, when the Imperial Japanese Navy made its surprise attack on Hawaii — and calls on Americans to remember what followed that pivotal “date which will live in infamy,” which jolted the United States into World War II.

Americans are called on to make a solemn and enduring commitment to the fallen at Pearl Harbor and throughout the arenas of World War II. We mourn, but also honor the bravery and sacrifice of those who lost their lives during the attack and throughout the war, a devastating count: 2,403 American military and civilians on Oahu killed by the Dec. 7 attack; 291,557 American lives lost in wartime conflict; 113,842 de

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