Posts Tagged ‘Pat Tillman’

Pat Tillman’s Truth

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Rory Fanning served in the Army Rangers in Afghanistan with Pat Tillman. Today, Rory is in Tennessee, on an east-to-west walk across the U.S., to raise money for the Pat Tillman Foundation, and to honor one of his heroes. You can follow Rory’s long walk at walkforpat.org.

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Here is an excerpt from a recent blog on Rory’s site, taken from a radio interview he’d done along his walk, in which he’d been asked by the interviewer to tell a Pat Tillman story: (more…)

Arzu’s Beautiful Game

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

My father, whose military medals and discharge papers were stashed in a wooden box buried in a closet, never spoke about World War II. The discharge papers said that he came out of the service as a corporal, a sharpshooter, and had served with distinction behind enemy lines. The medals suggested battles fought and valor under fire.

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We got an occasional hint that he’d experienced his share of awfulness. We did not own guns, and we did not allow hunting on our land, anomalies among the farm families from our neck of the woods. My uncle once told me my dad had been in an ambush where only he and another guy in his unit survived. When we balked at eating all the food on our plates, he would sometimes end the dispute by declaring flatly: “You’ve never seen people starving to death.” He was right. We had not. And so we’d soldier on, through the boiled beets or the cauliflower, wondering all the while who he’d seen starving to death, and why.

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