Preserving the Dignity of the Badge in 21st Century Policing
Emotional Fortitude, Humane Leadership, Remembrance & the Responsibility to Protect the Protector
Statement
of Record
On May 20, 2026, members of the NYPD Turkic American Law Enforcement Society (TALES), in partnership with the NYPD Health and Wellness Section, the Consulate General of Türkiye, and Northwell Direct, hosted Beyond the Uniform at the Turkish House and Permanent Mission of Türkiye to the United Nations in New York City. The seminar explored ethical leadership, emotional fortitude, suicide prevention, wellness culture, and the broader human dimension of 21st Century policing.
The Turkish American
Law Enforcement Society (TALES), one of more than forty fraternal and cultural
organizations within the NYPD, is the first organization representing uniformed
and civilian members of law enforcement of Turkic descent. TALES continues
fostering mentorship, wellness, unity, cultural understanding, and meaningful
engagement throughout the department and broader community while strengthening
bonds of professional fellowship, support, and human connection within one of
society’s most demanding professions.
Walking past the
diplomatic missions and consulates surrounding the United Nations before the
seminar, I was reminded how closely connected humanity truly is. Despite
different nations, cultures, and languages, the burdens carried by those
entrusted to protect others remain woven together within a profound human
tapestry of sacrifice, dignity, honorable service, and shared responsibility.
With Memorial Day
approaching days later, portions of the presentation reflected upon visits by
my wife and me to American military cemeteries throughout Europe during a 2023
journey tracing sacrifice, liberation, remembrance, and the enduring human cost
of freedom across the Second World War.
Throughout the
seminar, I intentionally moved among attendees rather than remaining behind a
podium, reinforcing the importance of humane encounter, presence, and
relational leadership within policing culture.
Emotional Fortitude Must Become Culture
The seminar also
emphasized that emotional fortitude and resiliency cannot remain occasional
initiatives or isolated wellness programs discussed only during moments of
crisis.
Emotional fortitude and resiliency are not programs — they must become culture department-wide.
That culture must be reflected daily through leadership, mentorship, humane encounter, peer support, affirmation, training, organizational identity, and the manner in which protectors encounter one another during moments of strength and moments of struggle.
Policing in the 21st Century continues demanding extraordinary emotional steadiness from those entrusted with protecting others. Officers routinely absorb trauma, violence, tragedy, suffering, and emotional exhaustion while still being expected to respond with professionalism, restraint, courage, and humanity.
Yet many continue carrying those burdens quietly and often alone.
Preserving the dignity of the badge requires protecting the emotional dignity and humanity of the protector behind it.
The Human Dimension of Service
The seminar intentionally focused not only on operational realities, but on the human realities existing beneath the uniform.
Attendees viewed photographs documenting years of my field engagement throughout the NYPD, wellness initiatives, presentations across commands and specialized units, collaborative work conducted with agencies throughout California following international travel in China, and reflections connected to sacrifice, remembrance, and the preservation of freedom.
The presentation emphasized that all who serve and protect remain connected through a shared tradition of vigilance, sacrifice, courage, and service:
• law enforcement
• first responders
• military personnel
• peer support professionals
• and the families who quietly sustain those burdens behind the scenes.
As the nation approaches both the 25th anniversary of September 11, 2001, and the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States, reflections upon sacrifice, resilience, moral courage, and freedom carry profound meaning throughout law enforcement and the nation itself.
I reminded those gathered that their work remains honorable, and that they should stand tall in the dignity of service, because cities and communities survive chaos and disorder through honorable men and women willing to protect others.
Liberation,
Remembrance & Human Dignity
One of the most powerful images presented during the seminar depicted the Liberation Monument within Liberty State Park in Jersey City, New Jersey — portraying an American soldier carrying a survivor liberated from a Nazi concentration camp while overlooking the Statue of Liberty.
The monument stands as a reminder not only of military victory, but of humanity’s enduring responsibility to preserve dignity, defend freedom, and protect vulnerable human life against cruelty, hatred, and despair.
That reflection connected deeply with the broader themes of the seminar.
Many protectors today continue carrying wounded people emotionally, spiritually, and psychologically — often while carrying wounds themselves.
Protecting human beings requires more than tactical skill alone.
It requires humanity.
Memorial Day ultimately reminds the nation not only to remember the fallen, but also to honor the living burdens still carried by many who continue serving others today.
The
Wounded Protector™
influenced in part by the work of Henri Nouwen and the enduring reality that many protectors quietly carry emotional wounds while continuing faithfully to serve others.
The presentation emphasized that woundedness itself should never become a source of shame. Rather, when approached through emotional fortitude, affirmation, peer support, humility, and humane leadership, wounds may deepen compassion, strengthen listening, and allow protectors to accompany others through suffering with greater humanity and understanding.
Peer support was discussed not simply as intervention during moments of crisis, but as active human presence before crisis emerges. Sometimes a kind word, encouragement, affirmation, thoughtfulness, or simple presence may help interrupt isolation before despair deepens.
The seminar also emphasized the importance of destigmatizing mental health struggles and suicidal thoughts within policing culture. Language matters. Humane encounter matters. Seeking support reflects professionalism, courage, and strength — not weakness.
At times throughout the presentation, attendees photographed slides containing wellness resources, reflections, and contact information connected to NYPD and Northwell wellness initiatives for their personal records and follow-up, reflecting both the importance of accessible support and the growing recognition that wellness must become part of organizational culture itself.
The Power
of Affirmation
For more than forty years, I have remained deeply influenced by the work of Dr. Conrad Baars and the transformative power of affirmation.
Affirmation is not flattery, technique, or performance. It is the genuine recognition of human dignity and goodness within another person.
In policing, affirmation may emerge through leadership, mentorship, friendship, peer support, spouses, family, chaplains, clinicians, and everyday humane encounter.
During the presentation, I briefly shared that the seminar coincided with my wife’s and my tenth wedding anniversary. The audience responded warmly when I explained that my wife encouraged me to “take care of them first,” and that we would celebrate afterward together with our children and grandchildren.
Those in policing understand these sacrifices well.
Behind many protectors stand spouses, families, friends, and support systems whose affirmation, encouragement, loyalty, and steadfast presence help sustain the emotional demands carried within the profession.
Stories
That Inspire Compassion and Action
Some reflected quietly upon emotional burdens carried throughout their careers. Others discussed peer support, wellness, family, sacrifice, and the importance of reducing stigma surrounding mental health struggles within policing culture.
Several participants spoke emotionally about a story shared during the seminar involving Clare — a resident at a senior living community where my wife and I have conducted prayer services and pastoral engagement for several years.
Clare, now elderly, once shared with us a deeply personal memory connected to a 1938 New York Times article involving her father. As a ten-year-old child, she pleaded for his life during a moment of profound human suffering and despair.
The presentation included a photograph of Clare together with her late husband, a United States Air Force veteran of the Second World War.
That image quietly connected generations of sacrifice, suffering, endurance, love, memory, and service. It also reminded those gathered that emotional suffering, perseverance, love, sacrifice, and the need for human affirmation transcend generations.
Several participants later shared that portions of the presentation moved them to tears and encouraged continued sharing of the story in hopes of helping prevent future officer deaths by suicide.
Sometimes the stories that help preserve life are not found in policies, statistics, or formal training manuals.
Sometimes they emerge quietly through friendship, memory, suffering, accompaniment, and the enduring human need to be seen, heard, affirmed, and understood.
The Sentinel
In many ways, the seminar ultimately returned to a single enduring truth: beneath every uniform, assignment, title, or rank remains a human being entrusted with responsibilities that often extend far beyond what others see.
As my presentation concluded, the final slides reflected upon the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery, including a photograph I had taken during one of my visits witnessing the Changing of the Guard. I also reflected upon the opening words traditionally associated with the Sentinel’s Creed:
“My dedication to this sacred duty is total and wholehearted…”
Those words continue reminding the nation that honorable service demands vigilance, sacrifice, humility, and unwavering commitment beyond recognition or applause.
Since 2007, I have remained privileged to serve as an associate member of the Society of the Honor Guard, Tomb of the Unknown Soldier — a nearly twenty-year association with a nonprofit educational organization founded by former Tomb Guards and dedicated to preserving the history, dignity, and mission of the Tomb while honoring the sacrifice of the Unknown Soldiers and supporting the Sentinels entrusted with guarding one of the nation’s most sacred memorials.
At the conclusion of the seminar, attendees were provided liberation cards featuring the Liberation Monument located within Liberty State Park in Jersey City, New Jersey — a bronze memorial depicting an American soldier carrying a survivor liberated from a Nazi concentration camp while overlooking the Statue of Liberty. The cards contained reflections upon sacrifice, dignity, freedom, resilience, and the enduring responsibility to protect human life and human freedom.
Beyond every badge remains the human being entrusted to wear it.
And despite different nations, cultures, languages, or assignments, the universality of being human continues binding protectors together through shared burdens, shared sacrifice, shared dignity, and shared responsibility.
Preserving the dignity of the badge ultimately begins by preserving the dignity, humanity, and emotional well-being of the human being entrusted to wear it.
Acknowledgments
Additional appreciation is extended to Detective Egemen
Aydin, NYPD SRG1, and the Turkish American Law Enforcement Society (TALES) for
their professionalism, leadership, coordination, and continued commitment to
mentorship, wellness, unity, and meaningful engagement throughout the
department and broader community; to NYPD Detective Ugur Bek of TALES for his
hospitality and for promoting the presentation through his professional
illustration work; to Dr. Stephen Wakschal, PhD, NYPD Health & Wellness,
for longstanding collaboration supporting wellness, emotional fortitude,
ethical leadership, and suicide prevention initiatives within law enforcement;
and to Sgt. Joseph Angelone of the NYPD Health and Wellness Section for his
kind introduction.
As originally published in Law Officer, May 26, 2026 as Top Featured Article.
About the Author
Vincent J. Bove is a nationally recognized authority on ethical leadership, violence prevention, and law enforcement resiliency.A sought-after speaker and prolific author, his work has influenced agencies and institutions across the United States for more than 25 years.
Bove has authored more than 350 published articles and four books addressing critical issues in public safety, leadership, and moral courage.
His book Reawakening America© was named a finalist for ASIS International’s Book of the Year. Listen to Their Cries© was selected and sponsored for distribution to all attendees—students representing institutions from across the United States—at the National Conference on Ethics in America by the Simon Center for the Professional Military Ethic at the United States Military Academy, at the request of a coalition of West Point graduates involved in the conference.
He was appointed the first-ever Honorary Law Enforcement Motivational Speaker by the New York City Police Department, conducting leadership and resiliency initiatives across all five boroughs of New York City.
Bove is also the author of more than fifty leadership articles published in Law Officer, a national publication serving law enforcement professionals across the United States. His work emphasizes ethical leadership, preventive strategies, officer resilience, and the preservation of public trust in modern policing—drawing on American history and enduring leadership traditions to reinforce the importance of character, accountability, and moral courage.
He is a trusted voice at Federal Bureau of Investigation venues, United States Military Academy, and numerous U.S. military facilities. A longtime author for the National Association of Chiefs of Police, he has written 18 cover stories and contributed to shaping national law enforcement dialogue through feature articles and reports.
“Vincent J. Bove is considered one of the foremost national experts on school and workplace violence prevention, specializing in facility protection, evacuations, terrorism prevention, and leadership training.” — U.S. Senate
PHOTO: Vincent J. Bove conducting an ethical leadership, morale, and resiliency initiative at the NYPD 46th Precinct, Bronx, March 15, 2026. (Photo by NYPD Officer Theodore Cecchini for RALLC)
Related
Law Officer Resources
The Quiet Police Crisis: Protecting the Protector Through Emotional Fortitude & Humane Leadership
Examines the growing emotional burdens carried throughout
modern policing while emphasizing humane leadership, affirmation, emotional
fortitude, suicide prevention, and the institutional responsibility to protect
those entrusted to protect others.
A Wounded Protector and Beacon: Humane Leadership, Survival & the Power of Presence
Reflective feature exploring wounded protectors, survival,
peer support, resilience, and the transformative power of compassionate human
presence within law enforcement culture and public service.
The Silent Wound: Emotional Fortitude, Hidden Struggles & the Human Dimension of Policing
Addresses invisible emotional wounds quietly carried by many
protectors while emphasizing dignity, wellness culture, emotional steadiness,
humane encounter, and destigmatizing mental health struggles within policing.
Vincent J. Bove — Law Officer Author Archive
National archive documenting ongoing field engagements,
ethical leadership initiatives, emotional fortitude, suicide prevention,
remembrance, humane leadership, peer support, and the evolving human dimension
of 21st Century policing.
Additional Resources
Liberation Monument — Liberty State Park, Jersey City, New Jersey
The Liberation Monument overlooking the Statue of Liberty at Liberty State Park in Jersey City, New Jersey, depicts an American soldier carrying a survivor liberated from a Nazi concentration camp during the Second World War. The memorial stands as a powerful reflection upon sacrifice, liberation, human dignity, and the enduring responsibility to defend freedom and protect vulnerable human life.
Society of the Honor Guard, Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
The Society of the Honor Guard, Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
is a nonprofit educational organization founded by former Tomb Guards dedicated
to preserving the history, dignity, and mission of the Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery while honoring the sacrifice of the
Unknown Soldiers and supporting the Sentinels entrusted with guarding one of
the nation’s most sacred memorials.
Photo 1
Vincent J. Bove addresses attendees during the “Beyond the Uniform” seminar hosted by the NYPD Turkic American Law Enforcement Society (TALES) at the Turkish House and Permanent Mission of Türkiye to the United Nations in New York City on May 20, 2026. The seminar focused on ethical leadership, emotional fortitude, suicide prevention, and the human dimension of 21st Century policing.
Photo 2
The United Nations headquarters and surrounding diplomatic missions in New York City provided the backdrop for reflections on the universality of human dignity, sacrifice, honorable service, and shared responsibility among those entrusted to protect others.
(Vincent J. Bove for Reawakening America LLC)
Photo 3
An NYPD Mobile Command Center positioned near the United Nations during the May 20, 2026 seminar reflected the continuing operational responsibilities, vigilance, and public safety mission carried by modern law enforcement.
(Vincent J. Bove for Reawakening America LLC)
Labels: Character, Collaborative Policing, Diversity, Events, Faith Based, Law Enforcement, Leadership, Mental Health, NYPD, Policing, Presentations




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