Community Corner
Bows Honor Police In Bel Air And Harford County
A new campaign to spread positivity is taking the form of ribbons and bows at intersections and police stations in Harford County.
BEL AIR, MD — Bows have popped up around Harford County this week including Bel Air, as tiny shows of appreciation for law enforcement. The woman who came up with the idea said she was concerned about morale.
"Probably the toughest job in the world right now is being a police officer," MaryPat Flanagan Feiss said.
"We just want to let them know we’re there," said Feiss, who lives in Forest Hill.
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"They’re constantly being attacked, and you know, they’ve got family and their poor family has to worry about them," she said. "It was just like our soldiers. Years ago, they would tie yellow ribbons," Feiss said, referencing the movement that sprang up in the Iran hostage crisis.
The tradition of tying yellow ribbons on trees to support those in service has been traced to a Bethesda woman whose husband was among the hostages taken in 1979 at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. She hung a yellow ribbon in a tree outside her home in a show of solidarity and strength until her husband was released in 1981, according to archives from the Library of Congress. In the Persian Gulf War in the 1990s, people began displaying yellow ribbons nationally to recognize the troops.
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Feiss thought: "Let’s make some bows. And I don’t even know how to make bows," she said sheepishly. She has two friends who do, and she watched YouTube to learn.
She mentioned the idea to a few friends, they discussed it over lunch at Maryland Golf and Country Club, and a small group got together to make the bows on Sunday.
They put up a little more than 50 bows Monday in Bel Air and Jarrettsville and hit the rest of the police stations in Harford County Tuesday, Feiss said.
"I'm going to stick to Harford County," she told Patch. "That's it for right now."
While she said she would love "every lamppost in Bel Air to have a bow," Feiss said she was concerned about drawing too much attention lest police be targeted. "It's sad to say," she added, that she had to think about them being a source of contention.
"It was nothing big," she said of putting up ribbons in Bel Air, Jarrettsville, Havre de Grace, Aberdeen, Edgewood and intersections like US 1 at MD 152 and the Festival at Bel Air.
"We don't want anyone being targeted or singled out. It was more just like, let’s be positive," Feiss said. "We're just trying to spread some positivity."
She has relatives in the police department, mainly family in New York, but there are some local friends as well who are on the force.
"If you think about it, they’re our next door neighbors," Feiss said of police. "It just breaks my heart to see" what is going on, she said of negativity toward those in law enforcement. "I just want them recognized."
Since posting the bows around the county, Feiss said she's received multiple inquiries about how to get involved.
"Just thank a police officer," Feiss said. "Keep them in your prayers."
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