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Wounded Hawaii Marines Return Home (1/3 Was One of My Old Battalions :-)
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Great bunch of kids. Doing a difficult job under trying circumstances. If you read the article, you see what most of us military types have always known: that you really are out there in combat for your fellow soldier or Marine or sailor or airman first.



Posted on: Wednesday, November 24, 2004

Marines come home to Purple Hearts

By Vicki Viotti, Honolulu Advertiser Staff Writer



Lance Cpl. Joaquin McCurty had grown up with a grandfather who earned a Purple Heart as a Navy pilot in Vietnam, someone he knows as tough and inclined to keep his emotions to himself.

Brig. Gen. George Trautman, commander of Marine Corps Base Hawai'i, thanks Lance Cpl. Jose Moracruz for his service. Moracruz and four other Kane'ohe Marines received the Purple Heart yesterday.

Lucy Pemoni • Associated PressThat image was shaken when, after earning his own Purple Heart on the Fallujah battlefield, McCurty phoned home.


"He's real stoic," the Kane'ohe Marine said of his grandfather. "I was surprised when he broke out in tears after I talked to him. And that made me cry, too. I'd never seen that side of him."

McCurty was one of five Marines injured in Fallujah to receive the honor in a ceremony yesterday at Tripler Army Medical Center. They are the first Hawai'i-based Marines wounded in Iraq to return home.

All belong to the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, from Marine Corps Base Hawai'i, and all received their Purple Heart from the base commander, Brig. Gen. George J. Trautman.

Trautman moved down the line, pinning to the Marines' fatigues the purple ribbons with pendant hearts, commenting to McCurty that he had been injured on the Marine Corps' 229th birthday.

The awardees:

• Lance Cpl. Jeffrey B. Owens, 21, of Harlan, Ky., injured Oct. 17.

• Lance Cpl. Lance Pettis, 29, of Bremerton, Wash., injured Oct. 30.

• Lance Cpl. Bryan C. Bodrog, 20, of San Jose, Calif., injured Nov. 9.

• McCurty, 23, of the Mescalero Apache Reservation, N.M., injured Nov. 10.

• Lance Cpl. Jose A. Moracruz, 20, of Collin, Texas, injured Nov. 13.

All but McCurty and Bodrog, who used crutches to walk, declined to be interviewed. Moracruz, who was in a wheelchair during the ceremony, is the only one still hospitalized at Tripler, officials said; the others are outpatients who have plans to return home for the holidays after their orders for extended convalescent leave come through.

Lance Cpl. Bryan Bodrog holds back tears when speaking about his "brothers" still fighting in Iraq.

Lucy Pemoni • Associated PressTrautman recounted the historic origin of the decoration, which was first presented in 1782 by George Washington to recognize soldiers' outstanding valor and merit. "The road to glory in a patriot army and a free country is thus open to all," Washington wrote in creating the Purple Heart, which the military revived in 1932 as an honor for those wounded in combat.


Trautman said: "They have all walked the road to glory ... they all understand the end of that road is freedom — in their case it was freedom for Fallujah, freedom for Iraq. It's the glory that comes from forever being recognized as a recipient of one of our nation's most cherished honors."

McCurty glanced down at his decoration when asked how it felt to receive one.

"I'm really proud to get it," he said, then added with a smile: "To tell you the truth, I was kind of avoiding this one. ... It came up and bit me."

McCurty said he had been on patrol overnight and was taking sniper fire from atop a two-story dwelling as daylight broke. His unit was trying to take out the snipers and was deciding who should enter the building when a mortar round exploded nearby.

He said he suffered a groin injury that will leave him unable to father more children; he and his fiancee are expecting a daughter in January.

It also left him with emotional scars he wants to address before going home, he said.

"I want to try to deal with some of the things that I have on my mind," McCurty said.

Bodrog said that on the previous day, his unit was crossing a zone of heavy combat. He was firing his machine gun when a rocket-propelled grenade winged him on the left.

"It all happened so fast," Bodrog recalled. "It hit off my collarbone and landed two or three meters to the left."

When it exploded, Bodrog took shrapnel to the left thigh.

"The blast did a number on my spine," he said. "My left leg is paralyzed. ... The doctor says I should recover."

Bodrog attributed his endurance of the ordeal to his Christian faith. He acknowledged feeling "a little nervous" shortly before the assault began Nov. 8 but talked to a comrade who shares his faith and felt much stronger.

"I always carry a Bible in my right pocket," he said.

Bodrog said that while he's heartened by the prospects for a rare Christmas with his family, he wished he could be with his "brothers" in Iraq. When asked what he'd like to say to those brothers, the Marine fell silent a moment.

"I say that ... I love them ... excuse me," he said, faltering, his eyes filling with tears. A Marine officer offered to end the interview, but Bodrog pressed on.

"No, I really want to say this," he said, and then finished: "They are the greatest brothers anyone could ever have."
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Re: Wounded Hawaii Marines Return Home (1/3 Was One of My Old Battalions :-) [big kahuna] [ In reply to ]
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They really are just kids. At that age they are easily influenced and believe they are invincible. At least they are coming home to people who appreciate them, unlike the Viet Nam era when I was that age. Not that I ever agreed with Viet Nam, still don't, protested it, but with growing up in a military family I sympathasized with the returning soldiers much more than many others did.

I had a good friend in high school (a Canuk) who actually joined the US Army to go to Viet Nam. We were both living on a NATO base in Germany in the late 60's and knew a lot of American military teenagers who were dealing with the conflict that they were soon becoming draft age. When we heard that my friend actually wanted to go there we all called him "one dumfuk", including the US kids.

I saw him off at the airport just after high school as he was returning to Canada. I shook his hand and gave him a big hug. He went south and joined the US Army soon after.

Never saw him again but a few years later I heard that he was shot in Nam and earned the Purple Heart. I was very happy to hear that he survived because two US friends from high school days died there. Still think he was "one dumfuk" for going, but he obviously had a different view of that war than I did.

Made this post just for you BK, since as a former military grunt you might appreciate it.
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Re: Wounded Hawaii Marines Return Home (1/3 Was One of My Old Battalions :-) [big kahuna] [ In reply to ]
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Really glad to see this one. Thanks for posting. Too many thing I could write on this one but I'll spare everyone the agony.



Happy Turkey Day.
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Re: Wounded Hawaii Marines Return Home (1/3 Was One of My Old Battalions :-) [big kahuna] [ In reply to ]
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What is the Marine equivalent of woundedwarrior.com?
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