Maria_ortiz   She wasn’t a soldier firing a weapon. She was a caregiver who dedicated her life to saving the lives of others. Inside the casket these soldiers are bearing (left) is the body of Captain Maria Ortiz. Captain Ortiz was the first nurse killed as the result of hostile fire in the Iraq War when, in 2007, a mortar round fell into the Baghdad hospital where she was caring for wounded Iraqis.
   Her friend, Wanda Shuler said about Maria, "She was really proud of the fact she was over there taking care of our
soldiers, trying to make the situation they were going through a little
easier."
   Maria is the kind of caregiver we all want to remember on this Memorial Day. Her life can serve to represent, for all of us, the lives of every caregiver ever killed seeking to heal others in the midst of war…

Maria_smiling
  Maria was described as the kind of caregiver whose smile lit up a room. We may reflect on the power of that smile as we glance at the image of her, left, at a happy moment in her life.
   Clara Barton, the caregiver known as the"Angel of the Battlefield" and the founder of The Red Cross, understood the need for caregivers to take risks in the context of the Civil War. Memorial Day was initiated in 1868 to recognize those who had fallen in that war. All these wars later, we pause again, on this day, to reflect on the sacrifice so many have made for us.
   Today,for example, I think of my great grandfather, Harlan Chapman, wounded by a Confederate bullet in 1864; and of his brother, Degrasse (my middle name) who died on the bloody fields of Antietam after lying wounded for three days. If only a caregiver could have been present for him. And I think of my cousin, Harlan, who was a prisoner-of-war in Vietnam for seven years.
   Each Memorial Day, some of us ask anew, have we learned anything yet? Do we appreciate the freedom won for us by those who have given their lives on our behalf? And have our leaders yCartoon_memorial_day_2et come to recognize what they do when they commit soldiers to battle? A cartoon in today’s paper challenges us to reflect on the real meaning of this day.
   Maria was the kind of caregiver anyone would want at their bedside. Today, some of us join with Maria’s mother and husband in mourning Maria’s death. We honor the gift of service she gave to strangers, foreigners to her in a land where she was a foreigner. A place where she gave them the gift of Love before her own life was taken by those committed to violence.

-Erie Chapman

2 responses to “Day 147 – Remembering Maria”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    Maria Ortiz’s beautiful smile is one filled with light and Love. I am sad to know that she was taken so violently from our world. I appreciate learning about her Loving service through your tribute. This meditation causes me to pause…to remember Maria and her grieving family, my father and brother, friends and family, and countless others who have served and sacrificed for our benefit. I feel deep gratitude to the men and women in our armed services. I am going to send a letter to a wounded soldier today and say thank you. I am including information in hopes that all readers will want to reach out to a service member and send a message of Love and gratitude.
    Send a Letter or Card to a Wounded Soldier
    Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, located in Germany, is usually the first actual military hospital wounded soldiers are taken to after they’ve been evacuated from the Middle East. Sometimes, they are further evacuated stateside after a few weeks, and sometimes they return to duty.
    To any injured service member
    Care of: Landstuhl Red Cross
    CMR 402 Box 2234
    APO AE 09180
    Brooke Army Medical Center, at Fort Sam Houston, TX, also allows people to send cards, letters, and donations to injured service members that are treated there.
    Any injured service member
    Care of: American Red Cross Office
    3851 Roger Brooke Dr.
    Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234
    The National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, MD allows people to send cards or letters to wounded Marines at the following address.
    Any injured service member
    Care of: RADM Jeffries, Commander
    National Naval Medical Center
    8901 Wisconsin Ave
    Bethesda, MD 20889
    You can also send cards and letters to injured service members at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, DC. If you send anything, it must be addressed to the American Red Cross offices or it will be returned and/or destroyed!
    Any injured service member
    Care of: American Red Cross Office
    Walter Reed Army Medical Center
    6900 Georgia Av. NW
    Washington, D.C. 20307

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  2. Yvonne Ginez-Gonzales Avatar
    Yvonne Ginez-Gonzales

    Thank you Liz, for sharing the information about where you can send letters to service men and women. I will pass on the information to friends, co-workers, and family. After 13 years of having served in the Army Reserves as a nurse, I have had the opportunity to meet all kinds of people who have come in and out of my life. My fondest memory was joining up with a medical unit to fly down to Guatemala in 1998 for a humanitarian mission. I met a number of physicians, nurses, pharmacist, dentist, etc. who volunteered their time to deliver their services to a hurricane ravaged area. We were located in Puerto Barrios. This was an area where the local people had been without running water, adequate resources for food, clothing and healthcare. As a medical unit we went out daily for two weeks to set up clinics in various villages to bring healthcare to them. Like Maria, our intentions as a caregiver was to bring support to everyone we encountered during those two weeks. While it was not a war situation it was a humbling time for me that I will never forget. I will never forget all that I have here in the states and freedoms that are afford me as a citizen. Today is a day of remembrance to all those that have fallen and those that continue to fight for us. You are in my prayers.

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