Freedom Walk Helps Groups Spread Word
By Samantha L.
Quigley / American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9, 2007 - As
thousands of people filled the Pentagon parking lot at the
end of the third America Supports You Freedom Walk today,
they were greeted by groups individually working toward
the collective goal of supporting troops and their
families.
Representatives of more than 20 groups that support
America Supports You were on hand to let people know what
they do for the troops. America Supports You is a Defense
Department program connecting citizens and corporations
with military personnel and their families serving at home
and abroad.
The groups, which send care packages and letters, offer
support to wounded servicemembers, and assist military
families agreed the walk gave them the opportunity to tell
the participants how they could support the troops.
“There’s a lot of people out there that don’t realize that
you can write to a servicemember,” said Kristen Petrella,
president of the New Jersey-based Hugs from Home, a
letter-writing group. “We’re going to … let them know
that, ‘Yes, you can do that.’”
Landstuhl Hospital Care Project, treasurer Sharon Buck,
said her group participated for the same reason. “Our
purpose today is to hand out pamphlets if people are
interested in learning what our mission is,” she said.
The project supports the chaplains’ center at the
Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, Buck said.
Its support arrives at the chaplains’ center in the form
of a black backpack containing basic necessities that
wounded servicemembers may need but not have when they
arrive in Germany, such as underwear, T-shirts, toiletries
and other needed items.
Another group participating in the post-Freedom Walk
activities, Soldiers’ Angels, successfully spread the word
about its efforts by attracting walkers like Karina
Rollins with the opportunity to write a message to the
troops. The Washington resident, who plans to “adopt” a
servicemember through the group, said supporting the
troops is a must for her despite not having any ties to
the military.
“I do not have a family member or a friend who is in Iraq,
so it’s not a personal thing in that sense,” Rollins said.
“We need to show them that we care about more than getting
soy lattes and watching ‘American Idol.’ We need to show
that we understand that there is something very big and
important going on.”
The support groups and walkers said the Freedom Walk did
just that, and has done so since the inaugural event on
the fourth anniversary of the attacks.
“We need to keep the memory alive,” Carol Watanabe, lead
volunteer with Little Patriots Embraced, a Missouri group,
said. “It’s important to rally the American people and
make them understand that we support … our troops.
“There’s nothing more important than our troops knowing
that we are standing behind them,” she said.
Little Patriots Embraced works to relieve stress on the
families of deployed servicemembers through care packages
that include teddy bears, writing journals and blankets
for newborns, Watanabe said.
Cindi Bookout, president of Operation Homefront’s D.C.
Metro chapter, agreed that letting troops and their
families know they have support is paramount. Her group
accomplishes this through chapters in 31 states that
provide support to the families of deployed servicemembers.
“The Freedom Walk is important because it lets (servicemembers)
know that there are thousands of people all over the
United States – not just here in Washington, D.C., but all
over the (country) – that support our servicemembers,” she
said.
With more than 230 walks scheduled to take place between
yesterday and Sept. 11, in all 50 states and 10 countries,
Americans are doing just that -- thanking those who serve,
remembering those who have made the ultimate sacrifice,
and commemorating the tragic events of six years ago.
This year’s America Supports You Freedom Walk began at the
Lincoln Memorial and ended with a musical tribute by the
Harlem Gospel Choir in the Pentagon’s parking lot.
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