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Friday, December 22, 2006
Kathleen Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
They call it 'Semper Fi'
by Kathleen Parker
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


WASHINGTON -- It all started with a Marine major general's widow, who wanted to donate her wheelchair to a Marine who needed it.

What would seem to have been a simple request became a daunting task. There were bureaucracies to navigate, regulations to untangle, privacy acts to plow through, and logistics to manage.

Leave it to the Marines to get the job done.

The wheelchair at the heart of this story came to my attention the day after Thanksgiving, when John Palermo, senior vice commandant of the Marine Corps League in Tamarac, Fla., e-mailed me for help finding a needy Marine. Palermo already had been storing the chair for three months and was bumping into military privacy restrictions that prevented his finding a recipient.

The chair had belonged to Jane Hanson, widow of Maj. Gen. Arthur Briggs Hanson. She wasn't using the chair and wanted to honor her husband by giving it to a fellow Marine. It wasn't any ordinary wheelchair, but a new Shoprider Medical Power electric model worth several thousand dollars.

Palermo's e-mail set in motion a search that has involved dozens of people, mostly Marines, and a series of frustrating fits and starts that would prompt most to surrender. There's no shortage of needy Marines returning from Iraq minus limbs, but military rules made it nearly impossible to get a name.

Moreover, the Veterans Administration, it turns out, does a pretty good job of taking care of the wounded. Most have wheelchairs and prosthetics made to order, though I've learned during ``Operation Wheelchair,'' as this effort came to be called, that the list of back-ordered prosthetics is long.

Cutting to the chase, I forwarded Palermo's e-mail to Russ Clark, about whom I've written before. Clark is a minister and former Marine who counsels veterans through Point Man International Ministries in Columbus, Ohio. He went to work.

For the next five weeks, Clark sent me periodic updates on what was beginning to seem like a futile search. Every day, he was getting closer, but then he'd hit a snag.

E-mails and phone calls crossed the country several times. I can't list the names of all who worked on this project, but the search eventually landed at Naval Medical Center San Diego (better known to veterans as Balboa Hospital), where a new amputee clinic recently opened.

The only one of its kind on the West Coast, the clinic is expected to serve about 50 amputees per year. The week before Christmas, recent arrivals included ``a new quad.''

That chilling phrase -- ``a new quad'' -- doesn't roll easily off the tongue, but Richard Williams has learned to say it without flinching. An attorney and former Marine, Williams coordinates the Marine Corps League-Injured Marine Fund in San Diego.

Amputees are part of his life.

They are also his vocation. When not practicing law, Williams raises money to help financially strapped families visit their wounded Marines at the amputee center.

Although the Marine Corps and other groups help families visit wounded veterans, most programs allow for only two family members for a limited time. Places such as Fisher House -- which provides temporary lodging for military families at major medical centers -- are almost always full and have long waiting lists.

Williams' group tries to fill the void. Significantly, they bring families out for second and third visits, not just when the wounded first arrive.

``That's when the Marine is getting depressed,'' says Williams. ``He left his unit in Iraq, his family is in Omaha or wherever. The poor Marine faces multiple surgeries and is left by himself again.''

Williams has been instrumental in getting Hanson's wheelchair from Florida to California -- no small feat. Because of FAA rules pertaining to things such as batteries, you can't just fly an electric wheelchair across country, he says.

After many calls and dead ends, a Marine recruiter was located in Delray Beach, Fla., who is picking up the chair and delivering it to FedEx in Fort Lauderdale for crating and ground delivery to San Diego.

Hanson's chair is expected to arrive at the medical center soon after Christmas -- a gift from one Marine home to another. It's not exactly a happy ending, given the circumstances, but ``Operation Wheelchair'' reveals yet again what semper fi means to the Corps.

It also puts holiday angst in perspective.

For more information or to make a contribution to the injured Marine program, go to www.leaguelineup.com/injuredmarinefund/ .

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About The Author
Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.
 
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We send them off
straight and tall and strong. Some of them -- a blessed few, relatively speaking -- come back crippled. Their heroism has broken them. We must be heroes of compassion, then, and do everything within our power to bring comfort to those who have suffered in purportion to their courage.

This is an evil world, and the only light it can hold is what we make in it. That's all I have to say.

J
http://forgottenprophets.blogspot.com/

Wow!
You know, that is the worst part...when some heroes come back and cannot re-assimilate. I would give anything to make it hurt less. I think the best thing for these guys is not to be booted out on medicals, rather, let them reclassify and stay if they choose...as long as they can perform. To me, it seems the best therapy. God Bless them all!

Giving ...
is what this time of year is all about. What have we done with the gift God gave to us through His son Jesus? The Biblical admonition to love sounds like such a simple command. But how do we demonstrate that love in meaningful ways? How can we, you and me, be Jesus with "skin-on" to those who need a touch?

Some of us don't have the financial resources to give to organizations that help. Some of us have more financial wealth then we'll ever conceivably need. The body of Christ, the body of this nation, is made up of many parts. Each person alone cannot be all the parts of that body. But if we fail to be the part of the body we are called to be, then the whole body suffers. What part are you called to be? When we sit on our duff and think it is the other guy who is supposed to do something, that's when you're riding in the wagon instead of helping push. Get out and get going. Serve those less fortunate then yourself. You'll be amazed at how much of a difference it makes in how you feel about yourself and the community that you're a part of.

Thank you Ms. Parker for shedding some light the true meaning of this CHRISTmas season. Blessings to all.

Difficult Charity
It is sometimes sad to see how difficult it can be to do something nice - when laws designed to protect privacy conflict with the help that could be given if only we could identify the needy.

That is why charitable works (i.e. works of love) must be done privately, for private works are not under such restraints.

If you would like to see how to "get it done," you need look no farther than the Dutch who dominate the population and culture where I live. I have never witnessed such a "can do" spirit as this people possesses. They look at daunting tasks and, rather than being overwhelmed by them, begin working on them, coming up with innovative ways to deal with them, and in time, there is a productive business or charity handling the problem. Maybe they gained this attitude as children, when, on their farms, they were confronted with a huge pile of manure and given a shovel. Having worked a little with charitable organizations trying to link with government bureaucracies, I can testify that shoveling manure is an apt metaphor.

In the 1960's their "can do" spirit coupled with the demands of their religion began an organization to help the disabled. (Hope Haven) It is now an international organization, part of which provides wheelchairs for folks in parts of the world where wheelchairs are in short supply or completely unavailable. They even enlisted the help of the engineering department of a local college to design a wheelchair that could be built without welding. Instead of massive amounts of money being thrown at a problem, they enlist the help of those who want to help. What clever idea!

There are other such organizations in the area. For instance, "Justice for All" gathers all manner of goods and distributes them to various needy places around the country. Both of these organizations were conceived, built and thrive, not in a large city, but in a small community of 2500-3000 people. Other similar cities nearby can boast similar achievements.

BTW, I am not Dutch nor a spokesman for any of these organizations: I am a displaced West Virginia hillbilly. It's just that 20 years among these people have impressed me with the power of committed, optimistic people. Without much fanfare, they "get it done."

So, kudos to those marines and others who determined to "get it done," and get that wheelchair where it could help. And kudos to the thousands of other committed folks across this country who work to help, who shovel a lot of government manure to make a way for acts of love...and are happy to do it.




Some give
virtually all.....others disabled. My heart goes out to all our wounded warriors. I am an Army retiree but I have enormous respect and admiration for my Marine comrades...God bless every one.

Now, If American leaders would use the power in our arsenal, stop threatening without action, put the full force of America behind our Marines and all military members, fewer Marines and others would suffer lost lives, lost limbs, and devastated families.

We are failing, even betraying our men and women when we send them to combat with one hand tied.

A special note of thanks to all who participate in "operation wheelchair"

Semper Fi

Semper Fi
I am a little choked up right now. This is a truly touching story about what this season is all about. All I can say to Mrs. Hanson and the others mentioned in this story is "OOH RAH!"

Great Item... Just a little...
clarification.

Jack H mentioned "Their heroism has broken them."

Certainly not in spirit. I spent some time in military hospitals after my short stint in Viet Nam. I saw patients in pain and patients missing limbs. I did NOT see any self-pity.

More than 20 years ago, I went to my first unit reunion, travelling about 700 miles with Matt, a para. There were only about 12 of us at that reunion, but more than a few amps.

No whining. No self-pity. The amps felt blessed they were better-off than Matt.

I also felt blessed - just to be in the company of "the real deal."

S/F,
Chris

Thank You
Where is CNN and CBS at times like these? Oh yes, of course.

There's several hundred million people owe men like these more than a token gesture. Every day of our lives, we should thank God for such men, and thank these men for such sacrifice and service.

Ironic
More come home maimed because the medical care is so improved. In any previous war many would not have made it home, except under a flag.

I am a retired Navy Vietnam veteran and have nothing but the greatest respect for the new American military. These kids are amazing.

As do so many others, I do what I can but it is never enough. A special appreciation goes out to all in "Operation Wheelchair".

And yes, where was CNN and MSM when all this was going on. Probably out looking for some Marine to accuse of killing civilians.

Thank God
Thank God that these young men (and women) are among us today to give us protection from those who would do us harm. There's nothing that we don't owe them, as individuals and as a nation. I wish that I had Bill Gates' resources to give them the best possible rest of their lives. God bless them all. I can barely type through my tears.

this moment
We train hard for this moment
Endure our hellish weeks
Repetition becomes our friend
Strangers now our…lifeline
They are our family now
Brother from another mother
Together we continue to train for…
This moment
Pack our bags with essentials
Before we depart...
We reassure our loving families
Don our helmet, armor, holster and sling
We travel, we wait, and we endure
Endure our hellish months
Hustle, move, quick turn
Backs ache…legs and arms burn
Suck it up and control the pain
Gone is the smell of cologne
The only scent in the air is…
Sweat
And
Gun Oil…
It's damn hot…so f’ing hot
You think you know hot…
Opening the oven door doesn't compare
Seared lungs…tearing eyes
Stinging sand…raging wind
And we continue to train for…
This moment
Hellish months turn to year
Canteen water tastes old…
But at least it's wet
Hope the chow is good…
Thank you GOD for the MRE
Dig a hole to sleep
Just not too deep
Gone is music…faded long ago
The only sound in the air is
Gunfire
And
Screams…
Gone is dance…can't remember steps
Writhing bodies in pain dance with death
Lost are…
Innocence
Minds
Limbs
Wrap
And
Press
Blood
Sweat
And
Tears
Mingle
Curse and Yell
F’ing gun
Yell and Curse
Them
And
No one
Reload
Take aim
Pink mist
And later clean
Clean, Clean
Clutching tight to
Faith
Hope
We continue to endure
Bonds are formed
New family throws a lifeline
Try to find laughter
But smiles can't reach soulful eyes
Harsh memories are held there
Return home…
What was once funny…
Isn't really…not anymore
Like an inside joke
Guess you had to be there…
Debrief and brief
Fill out tons of forms
Lack of
Sleep
And
Frustration
Pushed to the limits
Suck it up and carry on...
Tests and observation
Reconstitute and recover
Maybe take some leave
Returned empty…
Back to loved ones
Who thought they understood…
Including those who had already served
Can only offer hugs and cheers
Much later…kisses and tears
No guarantees that this will work
Pain and more still lingers there…
Only one thing is for sure
There is a do over…
In the not so distant future
We train hard for that moment…
And endure…
Brothers In Arms

Semper Fi
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