 By Rudi Williams / American
Forces Press Service
WOODBRIDGE, Va., April 10, 2006 - The
Landstuhl Hospital Care Project added $4,400 to its
coffers April 7 to buy items needed by wounded,
injured and sick servicemembers at Landstuhl Regional
Medical Center, Germany, and hospitals in Iraq and
Afghanistan, according to Karen Grimord, the project's
coordinator.
The money was raised during the "Hook & C's Karaoke"
2nd annual benefit, held here this year at American
Legion Post 364. American Legion Auxiliary Unit 176
and American Legion Post 176, both in nearby
Springfield, Va., donated $2,000 and $1,000,
respectively. The Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 7916
of Occoquan, Va., also presented a $300 check to the
project.
"Last year, I was asked by Karen Grimord and Karen
Monk (former president of American Legion Auxiliary
Unit 364) to do a karaoke to help raise money for the
Landstuhl Hospital Care Project," said Ed "Hook"
Hudgins, an electric tower crane operator and member
of the Sons of the American Legion. "I suggested
having a cookout and karaoke and we had a good turnout
at American Legion Post 162 in Lorton (Va.). We raised
more than $1,000."
In keeping with Hook's cookout idea, this year's
benefit featured t-bone steaks grilled outdoors and
assorted seafood dinners. There were also raffles and
drawings for door prizes to raise money. The rest of
the money came from personal checks from benefit
attendees.
The "C" in Hook & C's Karaoke is Claude Burns, a
retiree from the Washington Post security division.
This marked the fourth benefit held by the Landstuhl
Hospital Care Project since Grimord and her husband
Brian founded it in November 2004. "We try to provide
mostly clothing items, but we've also extended to
hospitals in Iraq and Afghanistan that need supplies,
including bed sheets," Grimord said. "The project
started supporting three hospitals In Iraq in 2005 and
one in Afghanistan this year."
Pointing out that the project is an item-specific
organization, Grimord said, "We don't just send
whatever we can get our hands on. We send the items
that they specifically want."
For example, the hospital in Afghanistan asked for bed
sheets and pillows to use on litters. When patients
arrive at hospitals, their clothes are ruined, stained
or cut off in the treatment process. The project helps
out by taking monthly orders from Landstuhl's Pastoral
Services Department.
The April order includes sweatpants and -shirts,
long-sleeve t-shirts, men's pajamas, ankle socks and
slippers, pillows, quilts, blankets and travel-size
mouthwash and toothpaste, among other items.
In addition to holding fund-raising benefits, the
project pays for items with donations from American
Legions, Veterans of Foreign Wars, churches and other
organizations.
Grimord began seeking donations for hospitals in Iraq
and Afghanistan after learning of the need from people
who escort seriously wounded servicemembers from
theater to Landstuhl.
She said she's always amazed when seriously wounded
patients arrive at Landstuhl don't want to take any of
the donated items. "Those whom we almost have to force
to take something feel that their biggest
responsibility is to get back to the field," she said.
"They want to get back to their guys. They have a
responsibility, a job that needs to be done, so they
want to get back to the field. So they don't want to
take any items.
"Then you have patients who know they're going to come
back to the states because they injury are so badly,"
Grimord said." They don't want to take anything
because they want to leave it for the next patient
coming in behind them. They don't feel that they
deserve to take the sweat pants, underwear, and
t-shirt or winter jacket."
Grimord said she was puzzled when a wounded helicopter
pilot asked her if all the items were donated, and
when told, yes, he said, "These guys deserve it."
"I told him he didn't include himself, and he said,
'No,'" Grimord noted. "He said he was a 'fly boy' and
that the guys and gals on the ground deserve it all. I
told him that we'd lost 14 'fly boys' in two weeks and
that he had the back of the ground pounders and asked
him who has his back. I asked him, 'So what makes you
less deserving?'
"They always think someone else is more deserving,"
she noted.
Grimord returned to Landstuhl Jan. 17 to spend another
45 days volunteering. While there, she passed out 235
pink, red and white Valentine apes with little Xs, Os
and messages of "I Love You," or, "I'm Ape for You,"
on them.
She also mailed 20 pillows to a hospital in Iraq en
route to the airport. To her surprise, as she was
waiting to pay the postage, the postmaster took out a
debit card out of his wallet and paid the $21 shipping
cost himself. "He thanked us for everything we do,"
Grimord said.
One day, while waiting for a busload of patients that
were flown from Iraq to Ramstein Air Base, Germany,
the doctors, nurses, chaplains and technicians saw the
bags full of little apes. When they started commenting
about the apes, Grimord started passing them out.
"They stuck them in their breast pockets so the little
arms were hanging out," Grimord chuckled. "When the
patients got off the buses, they were greeted by all
these doctors, nurses, chaplains and technicians with
little apes hanging out of their pockets.....Of
course, we gave apes to the patients, too."
Grimord said that during her fall visit to Landstuhl,
a wounded Marine told her about his battalion needing
sweats because of the cold. She got information about
their sizes and arranged to send sweats for all 300
Marines, by size.
When she returned to Landstuhl in January, the Marine
sent her an e-mail message asking for her mailing
address because he had something to send her.
"When I opened the box, there was an American flag
with a note saying that it they had flown it over
their camp headquarters in Iraq in my honor on Jan. 5
for the support I'd given them," Grimord said. "You
don't expect that kind of thing. You don't expect
anything because they're the ones doing all the work.
"Every time I look at that flag," Grimord said, with
tears welling up in her eyes, "it brings tears to your
eyes. That's for all the guys we've lost, all the guys
that have sacrificed themselves and their families.
That just tells you how much this support means to
them."
Among donors for the Landstuhl Hospital Care
Project were Loretta Smith, left, who
presented a check for $2,000 from American
Legion Auxiliary Unit 176 in Springfield, Va.;
her husband, Leon Smith, who presented a
$1,000 check from American Legion Post 176;
Karen Grimord, the care project's coordinator;
and B. J. Richardson, commander of Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post 7916 of Occoquan, Va., who
presented a $300 check to the project. Photo
by Rudi Williams

Karen Grimord, founder and coordinator of the
Landstuhl Hospital Care Project, poses with Ed
"Hook" Hidgins - the "Hook" in Hook & C's Karaoke,
during a benefit at American Legion Post 364 to
raise money to purchase items for wounded
servicemembers at Landstuhl and hospitals in Iraq
and Afghanistan. Photo by Rudi Williams
Download high res image
Ed "Hook" Hudgins, right, an electric crane
operator, and Claude "C" Burns, a retired
Washington Post employee, volunteered their "Hook
& C's Karaoke" to raise money to help wounded
servicemembers from Iraq and Afghanistan. Photo by
Rudi Williams
Download high res image

Claire Veneziano performs a karaoke song during
the Hook & C's Karaoke 2nd annual benefit for
wounded, injured and ill servicemembers at the
Army's Landstuhl Regional Medical Center. The
event was sponsored by American Legion Post 365
and the Landstuhl Hospital Care Project. Photo by
Rudi Williams
Download high res image

Karen A. Monk, former president of American Legion
Auxiliary Unit 364 in Woodbridge, Va., reads a
copy of the Landstuhl Hospital Care Project
pamphlet during a fund-raising benefit at Legion
Post 364. The pamphlet was part of the display at
the benefit. Photo by Rudi Williams
Download high res image

Among donors for the Landstuhl Hospital Care
Project were Loretta Smith, left, who presented a
check for $2,000 from American Legion Auxiliary
Unit 176 in Springfield, Va.; her husband, Leon
Smith, who presented a $1,000 check from American
Legion Post 176; Karen Grimord, the care project's
coordinator; and B. J. Richardson, commander of
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 7916 of Occoquan,
Va., who presented a $300 check to the project.
Photo by Rudi Williams
Download high res image
|