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Soldiers from S.C., Maryland killed in
Iraq by enemy fire
The
Associated Press
GREENVILLE, S.C. — A South Carolina woman was
one of two Fort Hood, Texas-based soldiers that were killed by enemy
fire in Iraq last week, the Defense Department said.
Zandra T. Walker, 28, of Greenville was killed
along with Sgt. Princess C. Samuels, 22, of Mitchellville, Md., on Aug.
15 in Taji, Iraq, according to a news release from the Defense
Department.
Walker was assigned to the 4th Battalion, 227th
Aviation Regiment, 1st Aviation Cavalry Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division.
Walker fueled helicopters and was serving her
second tour with the Army, one of her sisters said Monday.
“She’d be the one clapping her hands and
cheering them on when they came in,” Walker’s oldest sister, Charlita
Worthy, said by telephone Aug. 20 from their mother’s Greenville home.
Walker and her twin sister, Yolanda Worthy,
graduated from Woodmont High School in 1997 and joined the Army during
their second year at South Carolina State University, Charlita Worthy
said.
Yolanda Worthy was serving in Kuwait when she
learned of her sister’s death and has returned home, Charlita Worthy
said.
“We were upset they decided to leave college,
but it’s something that they wanted to do,” said Charlita Worthy, 31.
Walker met her husband while they were both in
the military, and he has been serving as a civilian in Kuwait, Charlita
Worthy said.
The last time the women were together was for
the funeral of their youngest sister, who died earlier this summer from
brain cancer, Worthy said.
“Out of sadness, came joy,” she said. “If we
hadn’t been together then, it would have been more than a year since we
saw each other.”
Tentative funeral arrangements were scheduled
for Friday at Mount Hopewell Baptist Church.
“She knew what she was going into, and she went
into proudly, bravely,” Worthy said. “I’m the big sister, and they’re
supposed to look up to me. But at this point, I’m looking up to her.”
Walker is the fourth South Carolina woman to
die in the war in Iraq, according to an Associated Press database of
casualty records released by the U.S. military.
Samuels was the fourth woman from Maryland to
die in the war. She was assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Troop,
1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division.
Zandra T. Walker dies 'when the enemy attacked using indirect fire'
Connie Worthy had heard that two men in military uniforms were looking
for her, and she knew it was only a matter of time before they came
knocking at the right door.
When the doorbell rang, only the sparest of words were needed: "I just
said, 'Kuwait or Iraq'"
The answer was "Iraq," and with that the Greenville mother knew that one
of her 28-year-old twin daughters, Zandra Terneice Walker, had perished
while serving her country.
Today, family and friends -- including Zandra's twin sister, Yolanda
Worthy-Weathersby -- gathered at the family's home in the Belle Meade
community to mourn the loss of a daughter, sister, wife and soldier.
Zandra, an Army specialist who refueled aircraft, was killed Aug. 15 in
Taji, Iraq, along with another soldier as a result of "indirect enemy
fire," according to the U.S. Department of Defense.
The incident is under military investigation, a defense department
spokeswoman said. The family said they were told she died in a random
mortar strike while she was off-duty.
Yolanda arrived from her station in Kuwait a couple of days ago.
Zandra's husband, Kenneth Walker, flew into Greenville from Kuwait,
where he's been working as a civilian air-traffic controller.
This is the second tragic reunion this summer for the family. In June,
the twins' baby sister, 22-year-old Katrina, died of cancer. Zandra had
returned home from Iraq for her funeral.
Yolanda flashed a muted smile as she looked over the pictures of her
twin sister's life sprawled across her mother's dining room table
Monday, as well-wishers came and went.
There was always a way to tell a difference between the two in
photographs, Yolanda said.
Somehow -- from childhood Christmas pictures to Woodmont High graduation
to a photo of the two dressed in their camoflauge Army uniforms --
Zandra always seemed to end up on the right side of the picture.
The twins were inseparable growing up, Yolanda said, split apart only
during their deployments.
Zandra (nicknamed "Neicy," derived from her middle name) was the
outspoken one, Yolanda ("Tricey") more reserved.
The two were competitive. Both ran track for Woodmont High. Yolanda said
that Zandra was always first -- save only for when Yolanda was born two
minutes before her sister.
"She was always two steps ahead, but never two minutes," Yolanda said.
"She didn't like that two minutes. As long as we finished first and
second, though, it was OK."
The two entered the Army together, in January 2000, just to see if it
was something they might like, Yolanda said. They found that they liked
it. In April 2005, Zandra's tour of duty was finished, but she re-signed
in April 2006.
It was difficult, Yolanda said, being split from a twin in a war zone.
"It was hard, but you get used to it," she said. "We always found a way
to communicate with each other."
The pair stayed connected through email and instant messaging. Yolanda
called back home to Greenville at least every other day. It was during
one of those calls home that she got word of her twin sister's death.
Still, there's hope, Yolanda said. While she's split from a bond that
only a few in this world know, she says she's certain that Zandra is
there to comfort another sister.
"I know she's in a better place now," Yolanda said, "and at least our
baby sister has one of her older sisters with her now."
http://iraqnam.blogspot.com/2007/08/zandra-t-walker-dies-when-enemy.html |