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OPERATION: Take a Soldier to the Movies is a small but novel way of bringing Saturday night out in America to our soldiers on duty, providing them some home style entertainment experience.
             

From Richard CW3 APVG-VZD-A
Dear Bernie & Kathy
Thanks for the movie it was one of the most original and fun gifts I have ever received your time was well
spent. Words can not express the gratitude I have for the American people who have kept us in there
prayers. On the 25th of December one of the guys I attend church with had one of his men got out to a fire base to take care of some things for him. As he went up some cement stares into a building, ten feet behind him a mortar round hit the stairs but did not explode. The round hit with such force it destroyed the stairs and bounced over a wall and into a field. If the round had exploded he would have died Christmas day. On the 26th December one of our guys had just left the base and ran over an IED (improvised explosive device) it blew with perfect timing, right under the driver’s seat. The vehicle was bent at 45 degrees like a giant was tiring to break it in half. The driver had only a broken ear drum. One of my vehicles hit an IED six months ago. The vehicle was destroyed there was not enough left of it to drag it home to strip parts off of it. They burned it in place; the driver got a cut lip. It rained here for a week strait the first part of January when the waters finally subsided, the field I walked across at least twice a day
revealed mines. I have walked threw a mine field every day for the last four months. The area was secured with concertina wire, the engineers and EOD blew up a load of mines. It is a miracle no one found one of the mines with a vehicle or a foot.
We are blessed thanks to hundreds of people like you that remember us in your prayers.
I am a Chief Warrant Officer 3, the equivalent of a Major I run the maintenance program for my battalion.
As soon as I get home I will be the same rank as you, a civilian retiring with 21and a half years in
service. To my friends, and you are on that list I am Rick.
We are making a difference Taliban are surrendering and being picked up by the truck loads.
The pics (see) are a resent trip I took out to one of our fire bases.
Keep the Faith
Rick


 
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TWO THOUSAND ONE, NINE ELEVEN (2001-911) | Close

Two thousand one, nine eleven
     Three thousand plus arrive in heaven
     As they pass through the gate,
     Thousands more appear in wait

     A bearded man with stovepipe hat
     Steps forward saying, "Lets sit, lets chat"
     They settle down in seats of clouds
     A man named Martin shouts out proud
     "I have a dream!" and once he did
     The Newcomer said, "Your dream still lives."

     Groups of soldiers in blue and gray
     Others in khaki, and green then say
     "We're from Bull Run, Yorktown, the Maine"
     The Newcomer said, "You died not in vain."

     From a man on sticks one could hear
     "The only thing we have to fear.
     The Newcomer said, "We know the rest,
     Trust us sir, we've passed that test."

     "Courage doesn't hide in caves
     You can't bury freedom, in a grave,"
     The Newcomers had heard this voice before
     A distinct Yankees twang from Hyannisport shores

     A silence fell within the mist
     Somehow the Newcomer knew that this
     Meant time had come for her to say
     What was in the hearts of the five thousand
     plus that day

     "Back on Earth, we wrote reports,
     Watched our children play in sports
     Worked our gardens, sang our songs
     Went to church and clipped coupons

     We smiled, we laughed,
     ! we cried, we fought
     Unlike you, great we're not"

     The tall man in the stovepipe hat
     Stood and said, "Don't talk like that!
     Look at your country, look and see
     You died for freedom, just like me"

     Then, before them all appeared a scene
     Of rubbled streets and twisted beams
     Death, destruction, smoke and dust
     And people working just 'cause they must

     Hauling ash, lifting stones,
     Knee deep in hell, but not alone
     "Look! Blackman, Whiteman, Brownman, Yellowman
     Side by side helping their fellow man!"

     So said Martin, as he watched the scene
     "Even from nightmares, can be born a dream."
     Down below three firemen raised
     The colors high into ashen haze

     The soldiers above had seen it before
     On Iwo Jima back in '45
     The man on sticks studied everything closely
     Then shared his perceptions on what he saw mostly

     "I see pain, I see tears,
     I see sorrow -- but I don't see fear."
     "You left behind husbands and wives
     Daughters and sons and so many lives
     Are suffering now because of this wrong
     But look very closely. You're not really gone.

     All of those people, even those who've never met you
     All of their lives, they'll never forget you
     Don't you see what has happened?
     Don't you see what you've done?
     You've brought them together, together as one.

     With that the man in the stovepipe hat said
     "Take my hand," and from there he led
     Three thousand plus heroes, Newcomers to heaven
     On this day, two thousand one, nine eleven

     Author UNKNOWN

 
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