MFSO Slideshow



MFSO-Chicago is the local chapter of Military Families Speak Out, an organization of over 3,600 family members who have loved ones serving in the Military and are opposed to the war and occupation of Iraq.

Our blog serves to keep our members and the public informed on actions and upcoming events in our efforts to bring about an end to the war in Iraq and ensure that our loved ones have the care they deserve when they return after serving their
country.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Eyes Wide Open


Many people toured the exhibit during the day. We met the VA Coordinator for the College along with several active duty Service members. Many walked slowly through the boots pausing to read personal momentos left by family with the boots. One student, recently discharged from the Army left personal momentos with two pair of boots representing buddies with whom he had served.


One young woman thought the exhibit was "disrespectful" but she did not explain what was disrespectful about it. A few art students stopped by to take pictures to use as research for paintings.


We screened "The Ground Truth" several times during the day. Several students stood and watched the film from start to finish.

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Eyes Wide Open - The Cost of War to Illinois



On Wednesday November 1, 2006 MFSO-Chicago and The Lake Area Peace Partners will host Eyes Wide Open - The Cost of War to Illinois at the College of Lake County. The exhibit will be open to the public from 1 pm to 8 pm. During the day, we will screen the acclaimed documentary The Ground Truth which tells the stories of Iraq Veterans - in their own words - about the difficulties they face when they return home to a country that lacks understanding and resources to address their needs.

Eyes Wide Open - The Cost of War to Illinois is a smaller version of the American Friends Service Committe's exhibit that has traveled across the United States since 2004. Originally, 504 pairs of boots placed in the Chicago Federal Plaza in January 2004, the exhibit has grown to nearly 2800 pairs of boots to represent the fallen Servicemembers from all states and hundreds of pairs of empty shoes to represent the loss of innocent civilian life in Iraq. The large exhibit has been displayed coast to coast including Chicago, New York, Boston, Washington DC, and Sacramento. The Illinois exhibit has been "on tour" for the last several weeks. Family members and friends of the fallen often stop by and leave momentos that become a part of the exhibit.

MFSO-Chicago and The Lake Area Peace Partners invite you to stop by and visit the exhibit that speaks directly to our hearts and reminds us of the human cost of war

Thursday, October 19, 2006

After Pat's Birthday

Kevin Tillman joined the Army with his brother Pat in 2002, and they served together in Iraq and Afghanistan. Pat was killed in Afghanistan on April 22, 2004. Kevin, who was discharged in 2005, has written a powerful, must-read letter

By Kevin Tillman

It is my brother Pat’s birthday on November 6, and elections are the day after.

It gets me thinking about a conversation I had with Pat before we joined the military.
He spoke about the risks with signing the papers.
How once we committed, we were at the mercy of the American leadership and the American people.
How we could be thrown in a direction not of our volition.
How fighting as a soldier would leave us without a voice… until we get out.

Much has happened since we handed over our voice:
Somehow we were sent to invade a nation because it was a direct threat to the American people,
or to the world,
or harbored terrorists,
or was involved in the September 11 attacks,
or received weapons-grade uranium from Niger,
or had mobile weapons labs,
or WMD, or had a need to be liberated,
or we needed to establish a democracy,
or stop an insurgency,
or stop a civil war we created that can’t be called a civil war even though it is.
Something like that.

To read more please link here

Friday, September 22, 2006

The Oak Park Peace Fair

MFSO-Chicago members Marge, Katy, Ginger and Gold Star Mom Rosemarie joined Georgia from MFSO Wisconsin at the Oak Park Peace Fair on September 10. The turnout was perhaps not as large as last year but perhaps it was due to the clouds and threat of rain that scared folks off.

There were several peace and political groups that had tables...and a few candidates and special political visitors stopped by. Code Pink, in lovely pink garb, offered to give Bush a "pink slip". We tabled right next to our favorite people Vets for Peace and Vietnam Vets Against the War. They had a tent (leave it to those military guys) in case of rain. Katie shared stories with people about her son Jason's long recovery. Marge took pictures (and more pictures - too many to post all but take a look at the slide show) and Ginger and Rosemarie greeted visitors to our table and talked with people - about the toll of war on family and service members. Rosemarie brought a picture of her son, Brian who died in Iraq after his helicopter was shot down by an RPG. The helicopter, used by the IL National Guard in civilian missions, was not armored for war and along with Brian, several others were killed as well.

Georgia was a featured speaker. And when she took the stage, the members of MFSO-Chicago stood with her - in solidarity. She spoke of her son, who suffers from PTSD and the lack of help he receives from the government who sent him to war. She also spoke of her friends...and ours who have lost family members in Iraq. We held pictures of a few of the many who have died or wounded in Iraq: Brian - Rosemarie's son, Stephen - Summer's son and Jason - Katy's son.

Along with the sadness we all feel when we gather, there was a tiny bit of joy since Georgia brought her grandbaby...a beautiful ray of sunshine in a cloudy day.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

MFSO-Chicago Visits CSNY


Laura and Marge from MFSO were honored to be invited to "table" at the Chicago presentation of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young's Freedom of Speech Tour. The concert featured several of Young's songs recently released on the album Living with War along with many really great "oldies." During the concert, our MFSO members were able to go in and watch the performance.

Many who were attending the concert stopped by our table and picked up literature about MFSO, Vets for Peace, Iraq Vets Against The War and Vietnam Vets Against the War. Most comments were very positive although one young man decided to engage in a debate regarding Iraq and the need to "stay the course." In the end, we agreed to disagree about our positions and honored the committment of young men like my son and Laura's brother in serving their country. Pictures were not allowed in the concert venue, however, we did get a few of folks visiting us on their way in.

Friday, September 08, 2006

MFSO-Chicago Operation House Call Action

I was wrong to place my trust in Congresswoman Bean’s judgment or in her commitment to supporting the troops. Following a number of votes that providing continuing funding for the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan without requiring appropriate oversight and accountability, on June 16, 2006 the Congresswoman voted to “stay the course” in Iraq. For the members of the US Military and their families her votes mean broken contracts, delayed homecomings, inadequate supplies including basic needs like food, water and body armor while in combat, inadequate training for the actual situations on the ground due to a lack of equipment for training purposes and inadequate care for physical and psychological injuries sustained in battle.

Read more here

Friday, September 01, 2006

We Don't Always Chase Politicians

Most of what is done in MFSO is pretty heavy stuff. On occassion, however, we get to lighten up a bit and talk with like minded individuals....you know the 60% of those American voters who actually believe that "Stay the Course" is bad for our country.

MFSO-Chicago members Laura and Marge will table at the Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young "Freedom of Speech Concert" on Sept 2. I have listened to the Young album "Living With War" often since its release. My personal favorite is the song "Flags of Freedom" which was written to honor Bob Dylan.

And on September 9, Katy, Rosemarie and Marge will participate in the second annual Peace Fair held in Oak Park. Georgia Stillwell, MFSO Wisconsin, another good friend who took House Call to Dennis Hastert, is scheduled to speak.

A smaller Eyes Wide Open exhibit will be at the Fair...a sobering reminder of why we work so hard to advocate for our loved ones both on the battlefield and here at home. Our small contingent includes the mom of an active duty Soldier now serving, a mom who just spent months supporting her son who was seriously injured in Iraq, a Gold Star Mom and a mom whose son returned from Iraq with PTSD.
Today, MFSO-Chicago went to an 8th District Debate taped for a Chicago radio station. It will be aired at 9:30 am and 9:30 pm on Sunday on AM 780 - WBBM. The debate was held at the Grayslake High School and the Government class from the school assisted in a variety of roles...including submitting questions for the candidates. It was very nice to see that that the schools in the district are teaching politics in action since we need a group of smart voters to help get us out of the mess that is Iraq.

The challengers arrived early and interacted with the students. As MFSO-Chicago understood someone to say, the Congresswoman remained cloistered in a "private" room with her campaign folks. Maybe she heard that we had more of those lethal flowers to deliver...this time peace roses in a pair of combat boots...and a quote on a card from a soldier currently serving. The quote said simply: "Time To Change the Course".

In any case, the Congresswoman hardly had time to exchange pleasant conversation following the debate before she left...likely to get on with her busy schedule...or was it to avoid, once again, facing a mom who has a kid living with her "stay the course" vote? Don't know. The school extended a very nice invitation for MFSO-Chicago to attend a reception held following the debate...but many of us in MFSO-Chicago have "other jobs" as well...so it was off to work.

Since the Congresswoman didn't want "peace" roses, MFSO-Chicago gave them to the wife of one of the challengers...and gave that card to the students. Perhaps they will check out why that Soldier was quoted as saying "Time to Change the Course". The kids won't have to look far as the following story published today citing a Pentagon report to the Congress reveals. "Stay the Course" as MFSO has warned, is only going to lead to more deaths of US Troops and Iraqi civilians.

The core conflict in Iraq has changed from a battle against insurgents to an increasingly bloody fight between Shi'ite and Sunni Muslims, creating conditions that could lead to civil war, the Pentagon said in a report on Friday.

The congressionally mandated report provided a sober assessment of Iraq over the past three months, saying overall attacks rose 24 percent to 792 per week -- highest of the war -- and daily Iraqi casualties soared 51 percent to nearly 120.


The rest of the story which has been picked up by multiple papers can be found here.

It is all about accountability, Congresswoman. "Stay the Course" is a slogan that makes for poor policy. Nice commercials with happy business owners talking about health care insurance bills that haven't even been discussed in the Senate don't address the needs of all of the voters in the district. Internet safety is important...but so are the lives of those soldiers you voted to keep in harms way. And working on getting the basic equipment needed in the field through emergency supplementals has been pretty inneffective...and very costly for the taxpayers in the district.

It is Time to Change the Course. It is time to Support Our Troops, Bring Them Home Now and Take Care of Them When They Get Here. Responsible slogan...make it responsible policy....soon. Every day you fail to act to end the occupation of Iraq, an average of two more US Troops and hundreds of innocent Iraqi civilians die. Whose name are YOU willing to add to the growing list of casualties?

MFSO-Chicago will be back to ask that question again...and again until you answer. See you soon.

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Win At All Cost Dems

Following is the press report of our demonstration at BlueFest. It would seem that MFSO-Chicago and the Peace Partners friends aquired a mole!

Must mean we are important or something.
________________________________________
Group protests 'stay-the-course'

By
Frank Abderholden fabderholden@scn1.com

MUNDELEIN — "I'm an equal opportunity protester," said Marge Haracz, a member of Military Families Speak Out.

The Mundelein resident was at a Democratic Party event Sunday called Blue Fest Rally For Democracy and she was targeting U.S. Rep. Melissa Bean, D-Barrington.

"I'm amazed with the stay-the-course mentality," said Haracz, whose son Ray, 21, is serving in Afghanistan. Her husband, Jay, handed Bean 48 carnations before the congresswoman left for another engagement.

Each carnation, half yellow and half white, represented a soldier from Illinois who has died in Iraq or Afghanistan.

"She was going to place them in some memorial park," said Jay.

Brian Herman, Bean's communications director, said the congresswoman dropped the flowers off at the Mundelein veteran's memorial at Route 176 and Hawley Street. The flowers were still there later Sunday.

Herman said Haracz, who has protested the war in front of the White House, also has criticized Bean over a procedural vote on how long a debate can last in the House of Representatives. On that issue, Bean voted with a majority of both Democrats and Republicans, he said.

"She doesn't support a timetable or the immediate withdrawal (of troops)," Herman said of Bean. She supports holding the administration accountable for training and the deployment of Iraqi security forces that will be needed "before we withdraw our troops," he said.

Haracz was not the only member of Military Families Speak Out at Sunday's rally.

Carolyn Quinn has a son, Collin, 24, in the Navy working inside a nuclear submarine somewhere in Middle East waters.

"That's all I get to know," said the Crystal Lake woman. But she says she supports Bean's re-election. Quinn said the MFSO has a motto: Bring them home now and take care of them when they get here.

"I want my son to be home now and I want Melissa Bean back in Washington come November," she said. "And I want Melissa Bean bolstered by a Democratic majority when she returns to Capitol Hill."

A number of Democratic candidates and officials spoke at Blue Fest, including U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Evanston, who voiced her support for Bean's re-election.

"I'm proud to be here and support Melissa Bean. We need 15 seats," she said, referring to the number of congressional seats Democrats need to have a majority. In her remarks she also blasted the Bush administration and Republicans saying that 67 percent of the country thinks there needs to be a new direction in Washington.

"The world is on fire and people are suffering," she said. "Democrats are on the rise. People regardless of party are fed up and you activists are going to be leading the way," she said to an ovation from the nearly 100 people gathered at the Diamond Lake Slough Park off Route 60/83.

08/28/06

______________________________________

We realized that the "Party People" were upset about the demonstration...but we think their problem should be with Congresswoman Bean and her failure to act to stop the dying in Iraq.

And can we all choke on that bit about "holding the administration accountable?" Thousands of lives lost and billions of dollars missing: Mr. Herman - get real!

When it counts, Bean fails to show up and be counted just like she has for her entire term on the subject of Iraq and real support for our troops. The peace people show up...shoot we visited the "Party People" all afternoon kind of like a nagging conscience.

And a mole...geez aren't we special?

Did you guess who the mole is? If not, stay tuned (we already know but we aren't telling). I believe that critter will likely show up again. Maybe next time our little mole will bring the Congresswoman with her.

Oh yes...to the Bean campaign folks who have been busy reading our blog instead of working - email us when the Congresswoman wants to talk. We gave you cards with the contact info. Have your people call our people as it were.

In the mean time, we will be seeing you around. We will be the ones holding the signs and maybe a pair of empty boots. The Congresswoman seems to think she is able to carry sll 2,631 pairs. We find that burden too great.

Sunday, August 27, 2006

A House Call on Rep Bean, (D) IL 8th

On Sunday August 27, MFSO-Chicago paid a House Call on Congresswoman Melissa Bean at a local political event called BlueFest, Rally for Democracy.

Operation House Call began on June 22nd in Washington, DC in response to the “limited debate” allowed by the Republican Majority on the merits of the ongoing occupation of Iraq and the House Resolution that was passed following that “debate.” Bean failed to support a Democratic sponsored resolution calling for an open debate on the issue of Iraq – something that has not occurred since 2003. Bean also voted in favor of House Resolution 861 which among other things identified Iraq as a “central front on the war on terror”, called it a “noble cause”, and supported the Bush Administration’s “stay the course” pseudo-policy. Bean’s record on Iraq made a House Call necessary.

According to the Waukegan News Sun, Bean along with Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky was scheduled to “headline” the event. Congresswoman Schakowsky intended to introduce Bean and both intended to address the crowd. The same article published the fact that MFSO-Chicago planned to attend the event in protest of Congresswoman Bean’s record on Iraq.

Supported by peace activists from the Lake County community, three 8th District MFSO members decided to attend BlueFest and deliver flowers to Congresswoman Bean – one for every Illinois Service Member who has died in Iraq since she took office in 2005. In response to inquiries from peace people all over the district, Bean carefully points out that she was not in Congress when the decision to invade Iraq was made. I believe we already knew that.

We set up in a community park with signs, a pair of boots, several dozen flowers and our best smiles early Sunday morning. Good thing we got there early. Alerted by a reporter, the Bean campaign knew we would be there. The reporter from the paper expressed doubt that she would come. He told me that her campaign “freaked out” when they were called for comment on the MFSO press release. She did come, 15 minutes ahead of the start of Bluefest and 45 minutes ahead of Operation House Call to “make an appearance.” Since I am my own “staff”…and had forgotten something, I briefly left and came back to find her…arms full of flowers preparing to leave the event at about 11:45 just minutes into her scheduled event. Her aide kept tapping his watch telling us she “had somewhere else to be” and we assumed that she would return to speak. She did not. Congresswoman Schakowsky spoke. Several local Democratic candidates spoke. Bean was a no-show on the speaking engagement. We can only surmise that the 8 of us with our signs, boots, and smiles were too scary for her.

This response is typical of Congresswoman Bean. When she is asked to be accountable for her voting record by the people who it most profoundly impacts - she is all about “cut and run.” That point was very evident to her supporters, her constituents and the military families in attendance.

Throughout our time there, various people stopped by from Bluefest, including Congresswoman Schakowsky. Most were quite nice although they were pretty adamant about the need to “vote Democratic” in the upcoming election. A few were a bit upset because we were “showing the split” among the Democrats and even if Bean was a “weak” Democrat we needed to “hold our nose” and cast a vote to get the Democrats in the majority. That was funny since I am not a Democrat…or Republican for that matter. I am an Independent who takes a look at issues when casting a vote or supporting a candidate. But in a spirit of peace and harmony, we were able to co-exist with the “Party” people while making our point: Supporting the Troops is much more than a yellow bumper sticker: True support for the troops is to Bring Them Home Now and Take Care of Them When They Get Here. And that is a scary message, indeed.

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Illinois 8th District House Call

Military Families to Deliver Flowers to Representative Melissa Bean to Highlight the Loss of Illinois Soldiers Killed in Iraq

Chicago Chapter of Military Families Speak Out kicks off "Operation House Call" in Mundelein, IL, Sunday, August 27 from 12 p.m. - 2 p.m.

MUNDELEIN, IL - As Congress prepares to end their summer recess in their home districts, Chicago area Military Families will make a “house call” to Congresswoman Melissa Bean. In June of 2006 Melissa Bean failed to support a resolution for an open debate on the floor of the House regarding Iraq. Following the “debate” and contrary to the will of the majority of voters across the United States, Congresswoman Bean voted with the Republican Majority to “stay the course”. That course has lead to the deaths of over 2,600 US Servicemen and women and countless Iraqi civilians.

WHAT: Military Families will gather during the appearance of Congresswoman Melissa Bean at the BlueFest event. (www.bluefest.org). Military Families Speak Out - Chicago will deliver flowers to Congresswoman Melissa Bean, to highlight the human cost of the Iraq war – she will be presented with one flower for each service person from IL who has died since she took office in January 2005. The name of each of those soldiers will also be read.

WHEN: Sunday August 27 from 12 p.m. - 2 p.m.

WHERE: Mundelein’ Diamond Lake Slough Park (on Route 60/83) approximately ½ mile west of the intersection of Diamond Lake Road and Route 60/83, Mundelein. The entrance to the park is just east of the Irish Mill Tavern on the south side of 60/83.

WHO: Members of Military Families Speak Out (MFSO)-Chicago, along with Veterans and other local Peace Activists.

Congresswoman Bean has consistently refused to meet with members of MFSO stating that in her district, people are not opposed to the ongoing occupation of Iraq. A small group of constituents delivered a petition with some 500 signatures in December calling for an end to the occupation in Iraq. In June and July, voters in the 8th District assisted MFSO in Operation House Call by mailing post cards asking her to take action to Bring Our Troops Home, Now and Take Care of Them When They Get Here.

Marge Haracz, a long time member of MFSO, is the mother of a soldier currently serving in Afghanistan. In July of 2006, her son’s unit sustained approximately 10% casualties including two fatalities as the result of ambush. On July 31, her son’s unit was notified that they would be extended for an undefined period of time despite the fact that NATO took over operations in much of the south of Afghanistan. His unit is scheduled to deploy to Iraq in the summer of 2007. Several other units in Iraq and Afghanistan including the 172nd Stryker Division were extended beyond their duty periods due to increasing violence in both countries.

Operation House Call opened on June 22nd in Washington, D.C., with a daily vigil that included a growing number of combat boots representing U.S. troop deaths, and shoes representing the deaths of Iraqi children, women and men - all who have died since June 15th when Congress voted to "stay the course" in Iraq, and the 2,500th U.S. troop death occurred. On June 22, the display reflected 11 pairs of combat boots and shoes representing the deaths of 141 Iraqis. As of August 1st, the display has grown to include 78 pairs of combat boots and shoes representing the deaths of 1,594 Iraqi children, women and men.

The second phase of Operation House Call follows members of Congress and Senators to their home states, as MFSO's 26 local chapters and over 3,000 military families prepare to meet their Senators and Members of Congress and demand an answer to the question: "Whose names are you willing to add to the growing list of casualties?"

For further information, go to: www.operationhousecall.org and www.mfso.org

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Operation House Call Featured in the "Army Times"

Families bristle at word of tour extension

By Karen Jowers Times staff writer

For some families of soldiers in the 172nd Stryker Brigade, the July 27 announcement of the extension of their tour in Iraq was just too much.

Some of them are joining the ranks of the anti-war group Military Families Speak Out. “We’ve had a whole group of people who have joined since the announcement,” said Nancy Lessin, co-founder of the group. She was working to get an exact count at press time, and said e-mails are still coming in to the organization. “They are having meetings at families’ homes,” she said. “Many family members hold their breath until their loved one gets home,” and then speak out, she said. “But something like this puts them over the edge.

“There has never before been a group of military families breaking the code of silence like this,” she said. “It speaks to the horrific nature of the invasion and now occupation of Iraq.”

Lessin and her husband, Charley Richardson of Boston, founded the organization with another military family in November, 2002, to speak out against military action in Iraq. Their Marine son served in Iraq in 2003.

The organization now has grown to more than 3,000 military family members. Most are parents or spouses or fiancées of troops, she said, but there are also siblings, grandparents, aunts and uncles, and children. “I got one e-mail from a young man whose 59-year-old mother was being deployed,” she said.

Since June 22, some members of the group have staged “Operation House Call” near the U.S. Capitol, making statements to congressmen, staff members, and others as they pass by. The number varies daily, but more than 50 family members have participated at some point, coming from the Washington, D.C., area as well as other locations around the country. By the time they finish Aug. 3 when Congress is expected to go into summer recess, the number may reach 100.

A number of service members, including some Marines and a West Point graduate, have thanked them for their efforts, Lessin said.

Group members have also visited a number of congressmen and senators. “As we go in to offices, we often take two pairs of boots and put them on the table to show an average of two troops are being killed for each day that Congress fails to act,” she said.

They will continue to speak out until their goals are met, Lessin said. Those goals “are to end the occupation and bring the troops home; to take care of them when they get here.

“And never again send our loved ones to a reckless misadventure putting them in harm’s way in a war based on lies,” she said.

Group members have been maintaining their vigil near the Cannon House office building when Congress is in session.

The group is worried about the care of troops who return, especially their mental health. “The biggest single issue among families lucky enough to welcome their troops home is PTSD [post-traumatic stress disorder],” she said.

But there’s a broader concern, too, Lessin added. “There’s a real sense among families this war is destroying the military,” she said, noting that “many service members who wanted to make the military a career” and were devoted to their service, have chosen to leave the military.

http://www.armytimes.com/story.php?f=1-292925-1985733.php

Sunday, July 16, 2006

Speaking Out and Supporting Operation House Call

On Saturday, MFSO members John and Marge were invited to speak at Congregation Beth Emet in Evanston. Following Sabbath services, Marge and John addressed the members of the Social Action Committee and did a pretty extensive Q and A session after. This talk was part of their educational series on the war in Iraq. We learned that some members of the Congregation had family and friends in Israel in these very troubling times...and it was very easy to identify with their concerns - when it comes down to it, in war and occupation Family Matters.

John's son retuned from Iraq earlier this year. He shared some stories regarding personnel and equipment shortages that are a constant source of concern in Iraq and have served to increase the casualty count on both sides. John's observation, as a former artillary officer, was that US policy was only half heartedly pursuing those responsible for terrorism.

Marge spoke of similar problems in Afghanistan - often touted as the "blueprint" for freedom in Iraq but in reality, just another quagmire that has resulted in unnecessary casualties both civilian and Military in an occupation that is nearly 5 years old. Her son is currently engaged in the large offensive in the southern and eastern parts of that country which as seen the worst violence since 2001 just ahead of the NATO take over of peace keeping responsibilities in that country.

Members of the Congregation thanked us for our very personal stories telling us that they helped paint a picture of the lives of our Soldiers and the stress it places on families at home.

When they have finished their educational series, the Social Action Committee plans to propose a resolution for the full Congregation to call for a speedy end to the Occupation in Iraq. We hope that our stories help them in their cause.

Most members took Operation House Call post cards to sign and forward to Barak Obama calling on him to Act NOW to bring about an end to our occupation of Iraq.

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Operation House Call - Week Three in DC


This week, Georgia, MFSO Wisconsin paid a house call on some Illinois lawmakers. She was interested in visiting them because her Soldier son who suffers from PTSD resides in the Chicagoland area. Dennis Hastert was among those she wished to visit. Initially, he refused - but then various groups, MFSO-Chicago among them began calling to ask his scheduler WHY a Member of Congress who "supports the troops" would refuse to address the concerns of a Soldier's Mom? He relented and a meeting took place. MFSO member Stacy accompanied her. You can link to the story of the meeting here.

Saturday, July 08, 2006

New Website

Operation House Call has a brand spanking new website. It is www.operationhousecall.org. Please visit often to check how our members in DC are doing...and for ways you can support them in your own district.

Sunday, July 02, 2006

North Suburbs House Calls

150 House Call Post cards have been distributed to mail to Senator Obama and the 8th District incumbent, Melissa Bean. Thanks to Code Pink - Chicago and concerned Lake County Residents for your help. MFSO-Chicago has also sent several news stories highlighting the human cost of war to these lawmakers.

Since it seems that Representative Hastert's staff does not read the paper, I sent him a House Card letter and press clipping to identify one of Illinois latest casualties. Stacy had paid his DC office a House Call...and left a young staffer flustered when he was unable to give the names of the Soldiers who had died in Iraq the previous day. Sadly, the DOD has reported other Illinois casualties this week.

MFSO-Chicago participated in the North Suburban National Organization for Women's Meet the Candidates event to bring our message to incumbents and hopefuls alike. We will also have a representative at a gathering of peace groups meeting with Democratic candidate, Dan Seals later this week.

Friday, June 30, 2006

Operation House Call News from DC

This picture first appeared in Roll Call. The caption reads:

Cope, S.C., resident Elaine Johnson (back), whose son, Spc. Darius Jennings, was killed in Iraq, consoles Mona Parsons of Mount Vernon, Ohio. Parsons’ son is currently on his first deployment in Iraq. They took part in a press conference last week organized by Military Families Speak Out, which launched Operation House Call, a summer-long campaign urging Members of Congress to help bring American soldiers home


To read more on Operation House Call in DC, please click here.

Sunday, June 25, 2006

Operation House Call



Operation House Call is underway in Washington DC...and in Chicagoland! Operation House Call is a summer-long awareness-raising campaign to assist our lawmakers to make the right decision: Support Our Troops - Bring Them Home Now and Take Care of Them When They Get Here.

MFSO members from all over the country will maintain a vigil at the Congressional Office Building from now until Congress recesses on August 7. MFSO will do citizen lobbying of various members of Congress and selected Senators.

For those who can go to DC, please contact the National Office for further information. For those who can't - we need your involvement as well. So our various Reps and Senators don't get lonely, missing that great MFSO logo while they are in the district and traveling around Illinois, please write them...send post cards (MFSO has a supply of them! - or design your own) and give them a call. Often!

If you have a local peace group you work with, have a post card signing party....but keep those cards and letters flowing with our message. Now is also the time to consider scheduling a personal visit when our leaders are "home for the summer." They love to meet with constituents during an election season after all.

Keep our message going strong. For our reps, this is the start of the election season. Let them know that enough is enough...Not one more life ought to be lost in Iraq due to this ongoing occupation.

Show REAL Support for the Troops! Bring em Home!

For questions or if you need cards, support, etc, please email the Chicago Chapter at mfso-chicago@mfso-chicago.info.

Now get writing!

Saturday, June 17, 2006

Welcome Back!

I am pleased to report that Gold Star Dad, Juan has returned from a three week fact finding tour in Afghanistan safely. His tour, which took him to the place where his son John was killed in 2004, will be the subject of a documentary which is planned for release in August.

Welcome back, Juan! I was really worried about you!

Monday, June 12, 2006

Into The Lions Den

Several citizens in the 8th District will be meeting with a representative from Congresswoman Melissa Bean's office to discuss her position on the issues.

MFSO-Chicago will be there to challenge her stance on the war, her reasons for continuing to issue a virtual "blank check" in the twice yearly "emergency" funding bills that she has signed and give her an election year message: Support our Troops: Bring Them Home Now and Take Care of Them When They Get Here. Ms. Bean has relied upon the fact that since she is a Freshman rep in the district that she was not in Congress when the war began. However, a review of her record shows that she favors a "stay the course" platform - that nearly 60% of the voters have rejected. We hope to change some minds here or perhaps find a candidate who votes for what the voters support.

Friday, June 09, 2006

Haditha

President Bush has described the incident in Haditha as "troubling". I beg to differ. As the Commander-in-Chief, Mr. Bush ought to have portrayed a realistic view of what war is really about to the American public before he ordered young men and women into harms way. That was his job.

Haditha is now being described in the press the Mei Lai of Iraq. Once again, as was the case 30 years before, American citizens do not understand how valiant young Americans can act so brutally.

To read more click here

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

One Mother's Son - Memorial Day 2006

More than two years after the crash that killed John Sullivan, his mother still struggles to make sense of his death in Iraq

May 28, 2006

In the early evening of Nov. 15, 2003, Army Spec. John Robert Sullivan, 26, of Countryside, was killed along with 17 other members of the 101st Airborne Division when two Black Hawk helicopters went down over Mosul, Iraq. He died eight months after the invasion of Iraq had begun and six months after President Bush had declared "Mission Accomplished" on the deck of an aircraft carrier.

John was the third of my six sons.

That day should have been forgettable, a day spent doing what couples do when it's cold outside and the kids are grown or on their own. I had planned to spend a couple of hours at work, go to the market, putz around the house and then finish plans for Thanksgiving. At work, I heard a radio report that said two helicopters from the Army's 101st Airborne Division had crashed. John was a wheeled-vehicle mechanic in the 101st in Mosul, so I wasn't terribly worried about him being on a helicopter.

Still, the news flash sent a chill through me. I hurried home and began searching the Internet and flipping through news channels for updates on what every account said was the largest number of casualties in a single incident. I stayed up late that evening, a Saturday, and awoke early on Sunday, debating whether to call John's wife, Trina, who had moved to Seattle to be near her parents while he was in Iraq. I watched footage of the charred wreckage being towed away and listened to reports on the rising casualty counts. On the computer in my family room, I read online accounts from other families about what it's like to wait for the two men in uniform to knock on your door.

Then my cell phone rang. I remember leaning on the kitchen wall and sliding to my knees as Trina told me about the visit from the Army chaplain and another officer and how she thought that, maybe, if she didn't let in the two uniforms, it wouldn't be true. I saw my sons Andy, who was 22, and 24-year-old David, and my partner, Ivan, their bewildered eyes staring at me, first sleepy, then weepy. Did my son Joey wake them? Did I scream? I told Trina that I saw the wreckage being lifted and towed, and how it was so burned and broken up that you couldn't even tell it was a helicopter, and that John's death had to have been quick, almost instant. So I was sure--I hoped--that he didn't have time to be scared.

We were sobbing together, and she said that she hoped she had made John happy. I told her she did. I thought about their twin sons, Aiden and Gavin, who were born Sept. 10, 2003, two months after their father was deployed. He never got to hold them. I took a deep breath, then sobbed. Tried again. And again. There were so many things to do, and I thought about them from oldest to youngest: tell my sons' father in Romeoville, then their brother Jimmy, who was 32, in Woodridge, and finally call their brother Michael, 29, in Springfield.

First, though, I took a shower. I wanted to cry without anybody watching. I certainly didn't want them to see that I was crazy mad and numb. But there was something else: I also didn't want anyone to know I thought that, when I felt a chill after hearing about the helicopter crash, it was the moment his soul left his body. Then I went to my ex-husband's house. While I was there, the uniformed officer arrived. He seemed nervous. But we solemnly and proudly received the official notification, with condolences on behalf of a grateful nation. We thanked him.

Then I was on autopilot. I went to the Jewel and grabbed enough comfort food and snacks for our family and everyone else who would be stopping by. I woke up Jimmy, who wailed, swore in whispers and tears, and pounded his apartment wall until he made a hole in it. I hugged him for a long time and brought him home with us. And then I called Michael and had my heart ripped out again because I had to tell him over the phone and wasn't there to hug him when he sobbed and choked. God, it was an awful sound. More thoughts: I wondered whether I should throw a frozen lasagna in the oven. John loved lasagna, even Stouffer's, but he wasn't there. Michael loves it, too, but he wasn't there either. Jimmy eats it after he scrapes off the ricotta filling. Ivan will eat it if there's nothing else. So maybe I should make something else. They would need energy for grieving.

A fine mother I turned out to be. My family was hurt, and I could not do anything to make it better. I thought, damn Bush. The days passed. On Tuesday, Trina told me she had decided to bury John near Seattle so when the kids are older they can visit him any time they want. She explained it in a way that made me wonder if she thought I would get mad. Of course it's OK, I told her; if he wanted me to make a decision like that, he wouldn't have married you.

A day or two later, Trina called to tell me that the Army thought the helicopters hadn't crashed, as was initially reported, but that they had been shot down by hostile forces with rocket-propelled grenades. Hostile forces? At that point, I still thought that the Iraqi people liked us. For the first time in 30 years, I opened the Bible. I looked up John 2:17 (his birthday): "Zeal for your house shall consume me," and John 11:15 (the date of his death): "For your sake I am glad I was not there so that you may believe," to see if I could find any comfort in those verses.

Nothing. Exactly where is my son? I want my son here. Now. I asked myself, Am I nuts or something? Not yet.

Later still, I received a letter from John. There were photos of John's cot inside the airplane hangar that also served as their shop--they slept with the trucks they repaired--and a brief line: "Thought the guys would like these pictures. Love, John."

What would he have written if he had known that it would be his last letter home?

John's body did not arrive in Seattle until Nov. 24, more than one week after he was killed. We got there the next day. I met the twins for the first time. Seeing John's flag-draped casket, I realized I was not prepared. Everyone else was just as overwhelmed. My boys: God, I couldn't look at them, couldn't even bear to see them in this much pain, it hurt so much. Everyone alternated sitting and staring at the casket, and standing and staring at the casket. There were no funny stories about John that night, like there had been when we first arrived, just a dead quiet punctuated by deep sobs. This can't be, I thought.

That night, I didn't want John to be alone. I thought of asking whether I could stay with him, but I didn't. The funeral was on Nov. 26, 11 days after John died. I tried to utter the words "Thy will be done" during the Lord's Prayer. I couldn't. Whose will was this?

On the first anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, someone apparently thought it would be good public relations if the president visited the 101st Airborne Division at Ft. Campbell, Ky., then the home of the most casualties. Three days before the event, Trina called to tell me the families of the fallen soldiers of the 101st were invited and that Bush would meet privately with us afterward. I told her that we couldn't afford the trip or to take any more time off work.

"No," Trina told me. "The Army is paying. For everything." Flickers of anger turned into flames. They wouldn't pay for me to attend John's funeral--Trina had asked if they would--but they would pay for some pre-election photo op? No way.

Then I thought, maybe I should go. What if Bush were to give me an opening line like, "I share your pain," and I got to reply, "You want to share my pain? Send your daughters there. See how they like sleeping in sand and getting bitten by sand fleas and asking you to stand in line at the post office with boxes of itch cream and hand wipes and Gatorade for the 106-degree heat? And have them tell you they can't do their job properly because, besides itching all the time, they have to share socket wrenches, but that's OK because they'll order a Craftsman set online from Sears the next time they get to a computer? And then have them come back home draped in a flag."

But I can't sully John's name. I stayed home.

One of John's legs didn't arrive back in the States until a few months after the funeral. Trina had to have a separate burial for it.

No one told me until last year. They were afraid I would go off the deep end. Now, as far as I know, the leg is on top of the rest of John--though I'm not sure whether it's in its own little casket or they opened John's casket and put it in. I can't bring myself to ask.

Something else. As a Mother's Day gift, Trina is sending me this weekend to Good Grief Camp in Washington, D.C. It's sponsored by the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, or TAPS, a non-profit group for military survivors. Ostensibly, we're going to help Jade, Trina's 13-year-old daughter from an earlier marriage. But Trina thinks grief camp might also help me. Grief camp children visit war monuments and, according to the TAPS Web site, "learn how we, as a nation, honor those who have served and sacrificed, and they also learn coping skills for handling their own grief." Adults attend workshops and support groups. I'd rather hang out with the kids. I'd like to learn the same coping skills they're taught; the ones I've learned so far from adult support groups aren't working.

I've been encouraged by several mothers whose children have been killed in the war to get a prescription for Zoloft or Prozac or Paxil to help me cope, but I haven't, and I won't. I want people to see how hard it is to control my emotions when I talk about John. I want to wholeheartedly laugh at Bush's silly speeches and his plots to deflect attention from Iraq. I crave the insomnia that allows me to write the speeches I have given about John and to record our family's memories of him. I don't want to be numbed. I want to feel every minute of this.

But I have to do something with this grief and anger that will make John's death meaningful. Not to a grateful nation. To me. I have spoken about John, and now, with this piece, I have written about him.

Copyright © 2006, Chicago Tribune

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Silence of the Dead - Voices of the Living

On Mother's Day weekend, Gold Star Families, Vets from Iraq, Afghanistan, Vietnam and other conflicts, Military Families, Surviving Family Members from 9/11 and the American Friends Service Committee brought a human face of the current War in Iraq to the Mall in Washington DC.

As I got off of the Metro at the Smithsonian Station on Friday afternoon, I saw row upon row of empty combat boots. These boots, placed at precise intervals, represented the 2437 members of the Military that had given their lives in Iraq. In several winding paths, hundreds of empty shoes, many woman's and childen's shoes, represented the innocent Iraqi civilians who have died. In the center of the display, stood a large pictogram featuring portraits of Iraqi people, smiling and going about the business of life. The inside of the pictogram told the story of war and occupation.

To read more click here