|
A Winning Hand
for Soldiers
By ELISA A. GLUSHEFSKI
eglushefski@manassasjm.com
Monday, June 19, 2006

On Feb. 3, somewhere in
Iraq, U.S. Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Justin
A. Reynolds drove a
Humvee over an improvised explosive device. Both of
Reynolds' feet were broken, along with a bone in his leg and
shrapnel tore through his knee.
A short time later, the
entire left side of his body was paralyzed and the
22-year-old lost vision as a result of a virus he contracted
after the explosion, said Reynolds' father, Bob Reynolds.
Had it not been for Karen Grimord and her charity
organization, the Landstuhl Hospital Care Project, Bob said
he and his wife wouldn't have known how to manage. "As
parents not in the service we didn't know who to call [for
help]," the Ohioan said. "[Grimord] was his mother over
there as far as we're concerned."
About 80 motorcyclists
signed up Sunday morning for the Manassas chapter
of Harley Owners Group's Poker Run - a charity ride to
benefit the project. The game was five-card stud poker. Each
motorcyclist paid $15 per hand, randomly picking their first
card at Whitt's Harley Davidson in Manassas - where the ride
started - then picking the next three cards at various stops
along the 120-mile pre-planned route and ending at American
Legion Post 364 in Woodbridge, said Mike Lee, coordinator of
the event.
Landstuhl Hospital Care
Project provides comfort and relief items to sick, injured
and wounded military members who served in Iraq, Kuwait or
Afghanistan. Before the rally, Reynolds - a soft-spoken,
stout young man - sat in his wheelchair and delivered a
brief and selfless speech, thanking Grimord and the
attendees for their support. "Your support is what makes us
men and women do our job," he said. "It gives us wounded
soldiers a piece of home, when our only possessions are
cutups and hospital scrubs." Tears spilled from Grimord's
eyes as Reynolds closed his speech. "Karen was my mother
away from home and she will always be in my heart."
Based out of Grimord's
Stafford home, the organization took form after she took a
trip to Germany in August 2004 to visit her daughter and
son-in-law who were stationed at Ramstein Air Force Base,
about 10 miles from Landstuhl Regional Medical Center. There
was no grand vision in Grimord's mind, though, when she
first began sending care packages from the states to the
Landstuhl. After sending her first package of about 500
DVDs, Grimord almost immediately called the hospital
chaplain to find out what else they needed.
Nearly two years later,
the program has expanded to a nationally sponsored
organization that makes monthly shipments tailored to the
needs of each hospital. "If the hospital needs Colgate
toothpaste, we send Colgate toothpaste," she said. "We don't
send them Crest." Each Operation Iraqi Freedom or Operation
Enduring Freedom patient receives a $250 voucher from the
Department of Defense, Grimord said, that can be used at the
Post Exchange. Most arrive with nothing more than the
clothes on their back, she said, and the needs of the men
and women sometimes exceed the allowance.
Kris Paquette, a
three-year motorcyclist, said she was shocked to learn the
military does not provide the sick, injured and wounded with
any personal care items beyond the $250 voucher. "It's a
crime that the military doesn't provide our troops, with
adequate clothing, toiletries and other comfort items," she
said. "This is just such a good cause."
Dan Sullivan, who
retired in September of last year as a lieutenant colonel in
the Army, found the cause to be particularly dear to him.
"It just makes it a little more comfortable for them over
there," he said. "Makes them feel less like a patient and
more like a human." Reynolds is currently stationed at
Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina and has a
year left of service. |