Here's Why, In the End, We're Still the Good Guys: The Mike Stokeley Foundation in Iraq

Hat tip to Greyhawk: http://www.mikestokely.com/

http://www.blackfive.net/main/images/2008/04/03/82756.jpg Hughes, Ark., native, Staff Sgt. James Robinson, Company C, 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, hands out school materials donated by the Mike Stokely Foundation at a school in Mullah Fayad, March 27. (U.S. Army photo/Staff Sgt. Tony M. Lindback)


Mike Stokely Foundation Makes Changes in Yusifiyah
By Staff Sgt. Tony M. Lindback
erd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division
PATROL BASE YUSIFIYAH, Iraq - Students and teachers had looks of joy - and bewilderment - as Soldiers handed out school supplies and toys at the Mullah Fayad school in Yusifiyah, Iraq, March 27.

Children grinned ear-to-ear as they looked over the treasure. When teachers asked who had sent the truckload of goods, they were surprised by the answer. Everything had been donated in the name of Sgt. Michael Stokely, who was killed Aug. 16, 2005, in Mullah Fayad.

Stokely, from Sharpsburg, Ga., served with the 48th Georgia National Guard. After his death, his father began the Mike Stokely Foundation.

The organization put together a shipment of school supplies for citizens of the communities where Stokely lived and died. It took an Army five-ton truck to deliver the supplies to the school.

Pittsburgh native Capt. Michael Starz, commander of Company C, 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, coordinated with Stokely’s father to ensure the donations reached the most destitute people in Mullah Fayad.

The unit distributed the school supplies along with a sizable donation from Sgt. Nathan Barnes’ family and community. Barnes, who also died while serving in the area, served with 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division.

“(Stokely’s) dad is just a tremendous individual. He knew how much his son loved the children in the area that he worked with because his son always sent home pictures of him with kids,” Starz said. “He thought a lasting tribute to his son would be to do something for the children of the area. That’s just remarkable.”

“They donated a lot of stuff,” said Hughes, Ark., native Staff Sgt.

James Robinson, platoon sergeant for 3rd Platoon, Co. C, 3-187th Inf.

Regt. “It’s like the packages just wouldn’t stop … I know a lot of kids in the neighborhood appreciated that.”

Teachers received materials as well. Unlike the children, who were happy to get the gifts without asking who they come from, the teachers wanted to know who to thank. They could barely believe their ears when Starz told them.

http://www.blackfive.net/main/images/2008/04/03/82755.jpg
Soldiers of Company C, 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, distribute school materials donated by the Mike Stokely Foundation at a school in Mullah Fayad, March 27. (U.S. Army photo/Staff Sgt. Tony M. Lindback)

“They said it’s almost too much to imagine,” Starz said. “All the teachers wanted a copy of Sgt. Stokely’s picture and the foundation’s name so they could frame it and put it up in their school. They say it’s something the Quran teaches - the forgiveness of your enemies. But it’s so hard to do … that it’s never actually seen.”

Changing Iraqis’ opinion about Americans is important to winning in insurgent warfare, said Starz. When people in the States, like the Stokely family, donate materials it positively impact the abilities of ground forces, he said.

“People send us care packages and things like that - and that’s fantastic - but this is directly relating to our ability.” Starz said.

“It’s almost the modern Rosie the Riveter. You’re not going to the factories and working, but you’re doing something to enable and provide another tool for the combat Soldier on the ground.”

These “feel good” type stories from the front remind me so much of the pro war propaganda that was constantly being printed in the Stars and Stripes during the Viet Nam era. Being a teenager living on a military base at the time we used to read it all the time. Gestures like this are really nice, but they sure don’t tell the whole story of what is really happening over there.

The gesture is really nice and that counts in something to itself. War is not a one or two thing activity, it is made of millions of things good or bad. Having served in the US military I can say 100% that most of our service members care about doing the right thing for the locals. Helping a region you are in is useful and helpful. While me and you probably agree on a lot things about this war what we think the US is trying to achieve right now is different. Small things count.

no disrespect to the parents, the memory of their son, or the people over there fighting. hats off on a very generous and classy move. but this story isn’t about what the military or the government are doing in iraq. these were private citizens who managed to dig up all these donations from other private citizens.

-mike

yeah, it’s a good thing…but there’s a lot more bad stuff! Sheesh, can’t you guys just say “it’s a drop in the bucket, but a good drop!”, and leave it at that. Are you just bent because of other images just out:

http://youtube.com/watch?v=9aghWnnThZQ&feature=related

What a great way to remember their son. Thanks for posting this, BK.

Nice story, thanks for sharing
.

Great story! What a wonderful thing to honor their son. I think these efforts help everyone, the parents, the soldiers benefit tremendously as who would not get a high from doing this for children, and the local people. For those that take this and give it a negative meaning, you guys must have pathetic daily lives.

**Nice story, thanks for sharing **



No problem. There’s a plangency to this young troop’s story that resonates with me. I refuse to give in to the idea, closely held in some circles here in the United States, that we’re some sort of monsters over there. We’re plainly not, though there is always a possibility for monstrous acts to be committed in this war and in *any *war, for that matter.

Yet that hasn’t happened with anywhere near the frequency as some here would like, or desire (to be honest), to believe. Instead, we see numerous examples of this sort of charitable act in Iraq going on all the time. There are countless examples of selfless bravery on the part of our troops, to the point of a unit or a squad or a platoon or some other maneuver element taking casualties in an attempt to avoid hitting unarmed civilians in the population as a whole.

Would that our craven enemy fight in the same manner. Instead, they cowardly and sneakily hide among civilians (especially women and children), or wire up bomb belts or suicide vests to mentally-disabled women, whom they then send into a crowded marketplace, all with the aim of killing people who just want the same things in their own country that we take for granted here. But I hear that Ted Turner believes them to be patriots, so I guess that’ll give some comfort to Stokeley’s family, huh?

A soldier like Mike Stokeley, and others exactly like him, deserves our thanks and our gratitude. His family, choosing to honor his memory as they did, did not give in to the temptation to lash out angrily at those who brought about his death. For this alone, they deserve our admiration.

History will judge whether what we did in Iraq was right, or ultimately wrong. But surely history will look upon Mike Stokeley and his family and have nothing but the highest praise for them.

God bless the United States and its fighting men and women.

http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/

T.