UAW
REGION 8
VETERANS COMMITTEE
Hollowed ground was made
of the Saint Pete, Florida’s Sirata Beach Resort as the Region
8 Veterans Council stood down for their annual Regional Veterans
Conference.
Although the conference did offer time for rest
and recovery from the delegates’ hectic schedules, the conference
was not without a clear and decisive mission - a more comprehensive
understanding of today’s war injuries and the Wounded Warrior
Project.
As the war on terrorism, Operation Iraqi and Enduring
Freedom continues so does the severity of the injuries including
Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI), the signature injury of today wars.
Improvised Explosive Devices (IED’s), account
for 25 percent of today’s combat casualties. Milliseconds
after the explosion, an over pressurization wave engulfs the human
body, and just as quickly, an under pressure wave follows. Ear drums
burst, bubbles appear in the blood stream and the heart slows. The
brain violently slams inside the skull, back and forth. A soldier
can survive the blast without a single penetrating wound, but still
receive the worst diagnosis … TBI.
TBI specialist, Dr. Joel Scholten from Tampa’s
James A. Haley Veterans Administration (VA) Hospital, gave an excellent
and informative presentation, noting that with today’s advances
in body armor, transportation techniques and state of the art field
hospitals both on the ground and in the air, more and more soldiers
are surviving these severe injuries. The VA is taking great strides
and working with many other medical and service organizations on
health issues and research related to TBI’s. While these heroic
measures are yielding unprecedented survival rates they also carry
the grim reality that no other war has created so many seriously
disabled veterans. This is something the public needs to understand
and be ready to assist veterans.
The James Haley VA Hospital is one of the busiest
VA facilities in the U.S. With over 500 beds in constant use, the
Haley VA Center is a tertiary care teaching hospital accredited
with the prestigious designation as a Magnet Hospital, the national
benchmark for excellence in nursing care.
The James Haley VA Hospital is one of four VA hospitals across the
U.S. with a Polytrauma Rehabilitation Center and one of seven VA
hospitals with a TBI treatment, evaluation and research center.
Dr. Scholten supported everything the Wounded Warrior
Project (WWP) is about. WWP is the not for profit organization and
adopted project of the Region 8 Veterans Council.
Jeremy Feldbusch, the first national spokesperson
for the WWP, was severely wounded in Iraq during a mortar attack
on the Haditha Dam on the Euphrates River in 2003. Totally blinded
and suffering with a small amount of TBI, Jeremy went through many
months of rehabilitation and surgeries.
Jeremy was a key player, who spoke in Washington
D.C. regarding creating the new Traumatic Injury Insurance for our
soldiers, which went into effect by law in 2005. Jeremy from Blairsville,
PA, also lobbied the Pennsylvania Game and Wildlife Commission to
enact a law that created hunting possibilities for the blind using
a licensed sighted partner and laser grip. Since then, Jeremy has
bagged many big game trophies and continues his family’s tradition
of being an avid outdoorsman and sportsman.
Jeremy gave an inspiring testimony of himself -
his injuries and with his supporting family, he stated that anything
is possible with determination, goals and family support. Jeremy
is a great role model for everyone he comes in contact with and
Jeremy’s mom, Charlene, and dad, Brace, are very active in
Jeremy’s rehab and often speak in important summit meetings
and conferences on TBI and Polytrauma care for our soldiers.
Jeremy wants nothing for his work and freely speaks
about the WWP’s free services and programs for the severely
wounded and the important role WWP plays during rehab and the transition
back to productive civilian life.
During the conference, a donation for WWP of $11,404.00
was presented by Region 8 Veterans Council President, Mark Peterson
from Local 2069, located in Dublin, VA. Peterson explained how the
funds were raised including a group of veterans, Run for the Wall
(RFTW), who ride across America every year in route to the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial, “The Wall”, during the Memorial Day
weekend. Last year, during a “Welcome Home Ceremony”
in the neighboring county of Wytheville, VA, Mark explained Region
8’s adoption of WWP and spoke of the services and programs
offered.
Inspiring as the WWP is, the RFTW eagerly adopted
the WWP as their charitable organization. RFTW rode across America
speaking of the WWP and received many donations from community citizens
along the route as well as many donations from participants in the
ride. Many of the donations came in memory or in honor of loved
ones. Peterson added, “This is another way we can help the
WWP, educating others and bringing others on board with WWP.”
RFTW raised $6,700.00 of the $11,404.00.
The WWP is dedicated to assisting the new generation of severely
wounded servicemen and women. Most of these injuries include traumatic
amputations, gunshot wounds, burns and blast injuries that will
retire these brave men and women from their military service.
Highlighting the conference, as dramatic and informative
as all the other guests were, had to be the reunion of three Vietnam
Veterans and former Prisoners of War.
In the opening statements of the book “Why
Didn’t You Get Me Out?” guest speaker and author Frank
Anton stated “Nothing fully prepares a young man to go to
war, but every soldier carries with him some expectations, or at
least preconceptions, about what is expected of him and what he
expects from the government that has sent him into battle”
Having survived being shot down twice without injury
and facing the stark reality of many times being the target of enemy
fire, Frank Anton had prepared himself for the possibility of being
wounded and or killed. What Frank had not been prepared for was
being captured as a Prisoner of War.
During the Vietnam War, Frank flew hair-raising
missions as an aircraft commander of a UH-1 Huey gunship in January
of 1968; he was shot down and captured flying a nighttime helicopter
mission. He then spent the next five years as a POW of the Vietnam
War. Three of these years he spent in the jungle death camps through
South Vietnam and the final two years in Hanoi.
Frank described in detail in his book, the horrific
conditions within these camps and the long 500 mile forced march
along the Ho Chi Minh Trail to the north while weakened by disease
and starvation. Half of Frank’s comrades did not survive the
barbaric conditions.
First David Harker and then Junior Long, both from
Virginia, joined Frank in jungle camps and shared the same conditions.
Each man shared his own dramatic story of their battle and then
capture. After being released in 1973, the three men had not collectively
been together since the days in Hanoi some 35 years ago.
Frank brought and sold copies of his book, “Why
Didn’t You Get Me Out?”, and also found the WWP an outstanding
organization and donated to the cause.
All three men gave moving testimony of how dreadful
those days were and what it took to pull themselves and the others
through their ordeal where each day meant another day in hell and
death could be moments away. Half of the men who passed through
the jungle camps did not make it home. Many of the captives were
buried by the prisoners just outside their camps. All three Frank
Anton, David Harker and Junior Long, served our country honorably
and courageously and are examples of what is meant by God, Duty
and Country. “Freedom is not Free.”