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“THANK YOU” TO READERS FROM GEORGIA GENERAL RODEHEAVER
Here is a message
especially for you from Brig. Gen. Stewart Rodeheaver, commanding
general of Georgia’s 48th Brigade Combat Team in Iraq:
“Hello from
Baghdad, Iraq. Dick Yarbrough was kind enough to ask you to write the
soldiers of the 48th Brigade. You responded with true Southern style and
caring. We received hundreds of cards, letters, signs, banners,
hand-painted pictures and many other items. We distributed these to
soldiers all across the 48th Brigade, and we tried to answer as many as
possible, just to let you know how much your letters meant to us. When
you are away from your families, and especially when you are in a war
zone, holidays are very tough, but you and your cards helped make this
holiday season a lot easier for my soldiers. Thanks to each of you, for
your great support.
“The letters could
not have arrived at a better time. We hear that some people think we
shouldn’t be here. You could not tell that by the letters we received
from students, Sunday school classes, assisted-living centers, police
departments and groups and individuals all across the state. You told us
to maintain the fight, to come home safe, and thanks for protecting
America. What a wonderful gift you sent to us, and what a powerful
message you projected to our soldiers.
“I handed many of
the letters out to soldiers and gave others to my staff to hand out. I
have seen soldiers laugh out loud at some of the comments, and I have
seen them swallow hard to stop the tears that welled up inside of them.
I have heard them express amazement at the boxes upon boxes of cards we
received from people whom we had never met, but who cared enough about
us to take the time to write to us. I have seen them write letters and
cards in answer to the ones they received, and put cards from their new
friends up on their doors, or carry them in their pockets because it
gave them a link to ‘home’ that they needed.
“Your cards and
letters helped add a little extra ‘hope’ to our Christmas packages. We
hope that we are helping the people of Iraq, we hope that we are
protecting the citizens of the U.S. and of Georgia, and we hope that
because of the sacrifices my soldiers have made, the world is a little
better off.
“A soldier’s life is
pretty simple. You have a mission to conduct, an objective to reach, the
necessities of life to get you by, and every now and then you have
something ‘extra’ that adds to your comfort or that just adds joy to
your day. As I walked though the company areas a couple of nights before
Christmas, I saw one office door that had cards from you taped over the
entire door. I saw two soldiers decorating one of the small trees that
had been sent to us. They had put several lights and a few ornaments on
the tree, and were finishing it off by making hooks out of paper clips
and taping them to cards sent to us by children from a second-grade
class and hanging the cards on the tree. I asked the sergeant why he was
putting cards on the tree when he had so many already on the door. He
said, ‘These are from children, who are probably not old enough to
really know what is going on with the war. Each of the messages is
different, but in each one, somewhere in the message, the child says to
our soldiers, ‘I love you.’ He added, “They may look like pieces of
construction paper to everyone else, but to me they are as shining as
any tinsel I have ever seen.”
“Thank you for
providing the tinsel and shining moments for our Christmas season this
year.
“Regards to you all,
BG Stewart Rodeheaver”
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