![]() |
|
|||||||
|
Greetings, and welcome to the World Affairs Board! The World Affairs Board is one of the premier forums for the discussion of the pressing geopolitical issues of our time. Topics include foreign & defense policy, international security, military developments, weapons proliferation, terrorism, international strategic affairs, and politics. Our membership includes many from military, defense industry, and government backgrounds with expert knowledge on a wide range of topics. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so why not register a World Affairs Board account and join our community today? |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|
#1 (permalink) |
|
Military Professional
Moderator |
A Life Reclaimed By Serving
Long Island Newsday
August 3, 2005 Pg. 15 A Life Reclaimed By Serving By Dennis Duggan There are plenty of stories about war veterans who become homeless after marching home. But the experience of Orlando Rosa, 40, is a switch on that story. The city's mean streets were where he slept, made love and took drugs for years, starting in 1993. Then, early last year, he was called up by the National Guard to go to Iraq. For many in the Guard who never expected to have to go to war, that was the worst kind of news, but not for Rosa. He was ready for a change, even if it meant getting killed. The one smart thing Rosa had done was enlist at 18 in the National Guard, where he trained in the armory on Lexington Avenue, home to the famed Fighting 69th Division celebrated in the 1940 film starring Jimmy Cagney. Rosa admits his erratic personal life caused him to miss many of its training sessions. But when the Guard activated him last year and sent him to Fort Drum in upstate New York for three months, he took to soldiering with relish. "I was sick of being in the streets, of sleeping in the subways, of taking drugs. I was depressed and my life seemed like it was going nowhere," says Rosa. "Now I had another chance to change all that." And the horror of the Twin Towers attack on Sept. 11, 2001 - and volunteering at Ground Zero - set him on a life-transforming path that sent him off to war, and to his new life back at home. When I interviewed him Monday, Rosa looked tan and fit, anything but down and out. He was mustered out of service after almost a year in Iraq and returned to New York this January. In April, he was hired as a site supervisor by the Doe Fund, a nonprofit group that rehabilitates men and women coming out of jail. He's the boss of a crew charged with keeping many Upper West Side streets free of litter. "If it weren't for the Doe Fund, I'd be back on the streets or in jail or even dead," he says. "When I saw how the people working there had turned their lives around, it gave me the strength to do the same for myself." On Monday, Rosa enrolled in Monroe College in the Bronx, where he plans to study accounting at night starting in the fall. He was also making plans to celebrate his 40th birthday with his wife, Myra, whom he married two years ago. The couple live in the Kingsbridge section of the Bronx. When Rosa looks back at his misspent youth - he has fathered three daughters with three different women - he shakes his head. "I was so depressed," he says. "But I knew there had to be something better for me. And my parents, especially my mother, kept telling me I could do better with my life." He says that his wartime experience in Iraq, with all its dangers, gave him a sense of responsibility that has carried over into his life now. "I knew I was headed for danger in Iraq," he says. "One of my best friends was shot and killed while riding in his Humvee just ahead of me. But I learned plenty by being in combat, and with the GI Bill, I can afford to go to school." He says, too, that despite polls showing that a majority of Americans are discontented with the way the war in Iraq is going, he supports President George W. Bush. "I know we will have to be there for years - maybe as many as 20 - but the Iraqi people need our help." Rosa says that he hopes one day to get a job in law enforcement, possibly as a parole officer or a correction guard. "A lot of soldiers I met in Iraq griped about being called up, but not me. I wanted to fight for my country because of what happened on 9/11." It was the attack of the Twin Towers that forced Rosa to think about his life of self-indulgence and his own loss of self-respect. But the work he did with the Guard after 9/11, where he helped provide security around the perimeter of Ground Zero to prevent looting, and assisting the firefighters in putting out fires, helped give him that sense of responsibility. His anger at the enormous damage grew each day he worked there. And he decided that if he got the chance, he would be happy to fight for his country. Now he's home, and ready to continue his journey of self-transformation. "My past is behind me," he says. "Now it's about my future." |
|
|
|
|
|
#2 (permalink) |
|
Senior Contributor
Join Date: 06-23-05
Location: 35 minutes outside Chicago (please don't refer to it as "Chi-Town"...that's annoying)
Posts: 5,711
Country:
|
It's amazing how two people, put in almost identical situations, can see them so completely different:
One has his cousin shoot him to avoid his obligations and the other, who could probably have more easily ran from his, actually embraced it.
__________________
"To dream of the person you would like to be is to waste the person you are."-Sholem Asch "I always turn to the sports page first, which records people's accomplishments. The front page has nothing but man's failures."-Earl Warren "I didn't intend for this to take on a political tone. I'm just here for the drugs."-Nancy Reagan, when asked a political question at a "Just Say No" rally "He no play-a da game, he no make-a da rules."-Earl Butz, on the Pope's attitude toward birth control |
|
|
|
|
|
#6 (permalink) | |
|
Military Professional
Moderator |
Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#8 (permalink) |
|
Title Classified
Senior Contributor
|
Hope he has good luck with Accounting, speaking as a former Accounting major I'm firmly convinced that it's a dark art and those who practice it must have dealings with the Devil.
![]()
__________________
"We always have been, we are, and I hope that we always shall be, detested in France." -Sir Arthur Wellesley |
|
|
|
|
|
#10 (permalink) |
|
401 Ikvot Habarzel
Military Professional
|
I hate people who walk around as civilians with military artifacts, but I have no problem with soldiers who were released giving teir stuff to soldiers still in service, cause it stays in the army. If it makes life easier for a soldier, why not? I'm completely against stuff like snow boots to Saudi Arabia tho...
__________________
You're a naughty girl, go to my room! |
|
|
|
|
|
#13 (permalink) | |
|
Resident Curmudgeon
Military Professional
|
Quote:
Sorry, The one Shek posted. Although a great feel good story, my BS meter is pegging on it. Anyone that has been in for a few years could spot the holes. Last edited by Gun Grape : 08-06-2005 at 17:05 PM. Reason: spelling |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#14 (permalink) | |
|
Resident Curmudgeon
Military Professional
|
Quote:
You did send them, right sir? A good scrounger is priceless in a unit. And to break up a deal ![]() |
|
|
|
|
![]() |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| ISLAM and the AIM of LIFE | goodman | Political Discussions | 3 | 10-17-2006 05:59 AM |
| Evolution Opponents Lose Kansas Board Majority | troung | Political Discussions | 275 | 08-23-2006 14:10 PM |
| Is religion the wource of all evil? | platinum786 | Political Discussions | 54 | 04-27-2006 13:07 PM |
| The Cosmic Landscape | Bulgaroctonus | Science & Tech | 12 | 01-16-2006 21:19 PM |
| Sermon #2 -From the speeches of Federico Garcia | Jonathan Locke | World Affairs Board Pub | 8 | 06-17-2005 15:31 PM |