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Pvt. First Class Bernard Calvi's remains arrive at Southview Cemetery.
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Members of the Calvi family are presented flags at Tuesday's graveside service.
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Local veterans groups turn out at Southvew Cemetery to honor Bernard Calvi on Tuesday.
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Scores of students from Drury High School attended Tuesday's graveside service.
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A bugler blows taps at Southview Cemetery on Tuesday.
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B.J. Calvi talks about his granduncle during Tuesday's funeral mass.
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Members of the Calvi family depart St. Elizabeth of Hungary Church after the mass.
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A Drury High baseball photo shows both Bernard Calvi and William P. Gilman, who served with Calvi and also died as a prisoner of war in World War II.
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The Rev. Dariusz Wudarski performs the Rite of Christian Burial on Tuesday.

North Adams' Bernard Calvi Honored for Making the Ultimate Sacrifice

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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Bernard Calvi is seen as a baseball player for Drury High School in the 1930s in this photo provided by his family.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — When Pvt. First Class Bernard Calvi died in a prisoner of war camp in World War II, his cause of death was listed as "dysentery, malaria and loss of hope," mourners were told during Tuesday's funeral service at St. Elizabeth of Hungary Church.
 
Calvi's captors got it wrong.
 
The 23-year-old Calvi's story was one of hope.
 
"We find solace in knowing that he now rests in the arms of our savior, experiencing the life promised to all who believe," the Rev. Dariusz Wudarski told the mourners.
 
"Let us bow our heads in solemn remembrance of this hero who laid down his life for us and also for all heroes who have laid down their lives. Their sacrifice was the greatest act of hope, reminding us of the cost of freedom and the responsibility we share."
 
Wudarski celebrated the Rite of Christian Burial 82 years after Calvi was buried in a mass grave in the Philippines' Cabanatuan Prison Camp after the forces of Imperial Japan overran the island nation in 1942.
 
B.J. Calvi, the grandson of Bernard's brother Ray, delivered the eulogy at Tuesday's service, sharing the detail about his granduncle's cause of death but focusing more on the brief life he led and the lasting impact on the Calvi family.
 
"He graduated from Drury High School in 1936 and joined the military so he could go to college," B.J. Calvi said. "He had a disagreement with his mother, my great grandma, because only one of the sons could go to college. And he was the middle son.
 
"He wanted to go in the military and have them pay for school."
 
An aircraft mechanic in the U.S. Army, Bernard Calvi was stationed in the Philippines about a year before Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, precipitating America's entry into the war.
 
After his unit was captured,  Calvi endured the 65-mile Bataan Death March, which killed an estimated 10,000 men. He reached a POW camp on the island of Luzon only to die on July 16.
 
"My grandfather told me the story of, on July 12, 1942, he woke up out of a sound sleep and started screaming that his brother was dead," B.J. Calvi said. "And that haunted him until the day he died.
 
"The one regret that I think we all have is that my grandfather didn't live long enough to see his brother returned."
 
Although PFC Calvi's parents were notified of his death in 1945, it was decades before anyone started working to make that return happen.
 
B.J. Calvi said he picked up the cause about 10 years ago with a call to the Army's POW/MIA Accounting Agency.
 
"I was surprised no one had ever opened up a case before that point," he said. "So they sent the paperwork, and my dad signed it, and I signed it. And a couple of months later, we received a letter from them that they were going to open an official case and collect the DNA evidence."
 
Eventually, that investigation led to the identification of Bernard Calvi's remains on Sept. 19.
 
Less than three months later, PFC Calvi got the sendoff he deserved.
 
After the funeral mass, the North Adams Police Department escorted the funeral procession to Southview Cemetery, where hundreds more were waiting to honor Calvi. The assembly included representatives from local veterans groups and a large contingent from nearby Drury High School, Calvi's alma mater.
 
The graveside service included a rifle salute, the playing of taps and the presentation of American flags to members of the Calvi family.
 
Wudarski also offered final prayers before Bernard Calvi was laid to rest.
 
Earlier, the St. Elizabeth's pastor talked about the "profound impact" Calvi had on the nation.
 
"Jesus declared, 'Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends,' " Wudarski said. "These words capture the essence of the sacrifice made by Jesus but also by our beloved soldier.
 
"He selfishly gave his life to protect the freedoms we hold dear. Scripture encourages us to remember and honor him. Remember the courage, the love of our fallen hero. His story of sacrifice and unwavering commitment serves as a reminder of the price he paid for our freedom."
 
 
 


Tags: funeral,   military funeral,   POW/MIA,   

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Airport Commission Drama Surfaces at North Adams Council Meeting

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff

Ashley Shade takes the president's seat after being sworn in again as vice president. Bryan Sapienza, who was attending remotely, was re-elected president. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The controversies stewing at the Airport Commission bubbled over to City Council on Tuesday night with a councilor demanding an investigation and the subject of a failed lease agreement claiming conflicts of interest and mayoral tampering.
 
The spark was an agenda item appointing Doug Herrick of Williamstown to fill the term of one of two commissioners who resigned after a vote to enter into a lease agreement with airport user Michael Milazzo and Brian Doyle for the Northeast Hangar back in October. That vote was rescinded in December after a letter from Mayor Jennifer Macksey called the process into question, particularly noting the recommendation by a subcommittee to reject Milazzo's proposal and concerns from the inspector general's office.  
 
Milazzo and Doyle are involved in civil lawsuits around the hangar going back to 2019 as both a plaintiffs and defendents with former hangar owners and Milazzo is accused of damaging the structure, to the point it was taken over by the city and restored at a cost of more than $750,000. 
 
City Councilor Peter Breen repeatedly called for an investigation into the commissioners' resignations, pointing to the reasons given by Michael McCarron in his email in November. Herrick would fill his term. 
 
"It says that it is the unexpired term of Mike McCarron, my understanding, after reading his email, that he said that he's resigning because the city official is telling him how to vote," he said. "I think we should send this to committee to investigate why we would have a commissioner be forced to make a vote."
 
Breen, the council's liaison to the commission, also referred to an email by Airport Manager Bruce Goff describing the situation and raised concerns about federal and state laws being broken. 
 
"There are two investigations going on now. And then there is a third one, because it's $750,000 worth of grant money from the federal government," he said. 
 
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