| Veterans
News Flash 
Combat Veterans Connect With America Through 'Why We Serve' Program
By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Dec. 21,
2007 – Wrapping up three
months of speaking engagements around the country,
recently returned combat veterans said Americans
long to hear firsthand accounts about duty on the
front lines without media filters.
“They were so hungry to hear our personal
stories,” said Marine 1st Lt. Tabitha White,
after sharing experiences about her eight-month
deployment to Al Asad Air Base, Iraq, with schoolchildren,
employers and civic groups through the “Why
We Serve” program.
“The only information they had about what’s
going on came from the news,” White said. “They
said they never get a chance to hear personal stories.”
The Defense Department established the Why We
Serve program in July 2006 to give returning veterans
the opportunity to fill that void.
The brainchild of retired Marine Gen. Peter Pace,
former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the
program sends servicemembers just back from Iraq,
Afghanistan and the Horn of Africa into the community.
They crisscross the country sharing their firsthand
experiences with community organizations, business
associations, academic institutions, veterans groups
and other non-profit or non-partisan organizations.
Today, the latest group,
made up of three Marines, two soldiers, two sailors
and two airmen, wrapped up the fifth three-month
iteration since the program’s
start.
Air Force Maj. Marcia Potter, who visited 12 states
describing her work as a nurse practitioner at
Balad Air Base, Iraq, said the program helps balance
information the public receives about the combat
theater from other sources.
Program participants share straightforward details
about what they did, what was happening around
them, and how it felt to be part of it.
“The Pentagon doesn’t tell me what
to say,” Potter said. “I simply talk
about my own experience.”
Wherever the participants
took their stories, audiences responded. “I heard over and over
again how people now have a better idea about the
military and what it’s doing,” Potter
said.
Army Maj. Cedric Burden,
who spoke at 30 events through the program, said
the groups he talked with couldn’t get
enough. Many people came to the speaking events
with written questions, some with three parts.
At one event, the emcee had to cut off the questioning
when it stretched well beyond the allotted two-hour
time block.
Potter said the program
gave people with little or no previous exposure
to the military a chance to see that it’s made up of people not all
that different from themselves. “It helped
show people that in the military, we have relatable
people -- people like them, but who have dedicated
themselves to serving their country,” Potter
said.
For Navy Petty Officer
1st Class Sivenson Guerrier, a highlight of the
program was speaking at Navy veterans’ functions to explain the broad
missions today’s sailors are conducting in
the war on terror.
“There’s a new generation of sailors
on the ground, not on ships,” said Guerrier,
who returned from Afghanistan, where he served
as a maintenance officer for the provincial reconstruction
team in Asadabad. “When they heard about
that, they were really surprised and so proud of
the tradition that they had carried.”
Schoolchildren, many
who thought only soldiers were fighting the war,
were equally surprised, Guerrier said. “It felt really good to tell
them that, no, the Navy is there, too,” he
said.
Guerrier said he got
a kick out of some of the “crazy
questions” children would ask him. “They’re
honest and don’t sugarcoat any questions,” he
said. “They were just eager to learn.”
White said she was amazed
at the level of support she felt everywhere she
traveled. “Most of
the public are so supportive of us as military
members,” she said. “They may not agree
with some of the policies and politics, but they
are so supportive of us.”
Participating in the program, particularly fresh
off a deployment, proved to be a benefit to the
speakers, too. Burden said it helped give him closure
after his yearlong deployment as an infantry company
commander with 1st Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment,
in Hawijah and Rashad, Iraq.
It also helped him deal
with the 10 soldiers he lost. By meeting their
families, visiting some of their graves and officiating
at the dedication of a post office in one’s
honor during his Why We Serve assignment, Burden
said, he was able to pay tribute to his troops.
“It was therapy for me,” agreed White,
who entered the program just a month after returning
in August from her deployment to Iraq with Marine
Tactical Air Command Squadron 2. “Before
that, I had had no time to fully process everything
I’d gone through. This helped me come to
terms with my experience and what I personally
got out of it.”
White said she takes
pride in her service and the contribution she
made as an airspace cell coordinator. “I
was doing my job, protecting my country, protecting
my family and protecting the community,” she
said.
SOURCE:
U.S.
Department of Defense
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