Posted on 12/06/2005 6:05:57 PM PST by SandRat
CAMP FALLUJAH, Iraq (Dec. 6, 2005) -- While serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom here, one sailor temporarily put aside her duties as a religious program specialist to perform another job in Fallujah.
Petty Officer 2nd Class Sarah Radel, 25, was among many female service members assigned to search Iraqi women and children entering the city. However, Radel, who is operating with II Marine Expeditionary Force, Headquarters Group, II MEF (Forward), is the only RP to fulfill the duty for II MHG to date.
According to Radel, the month-long duty was frightening, but an experience shell never forget.
I was kind of apprehensive at first because I didnt know what to expect, she said. You never know what is going to happen out there. We were always ready, at the ready. I loved every minute of it; it was a new challenge. It was a good time, (and) I wish I could go back out there.
I think the best thing about working out there was seeing the [children]. Some of the women were just really gracious for [the Marines] being out there, she said.
The Patton, Pa., native, had a formula to keep herself and her fellow Marines and sailors on the alert at the checkpoints.
You never overcome the fear, she said. The day you overcome your fear is the day you dont go out there. You have to be ready!
Radel said she cherishes the time she spent with the Marines while working at the checkpoints.
The Marines are the best, she said, with a bright smile. Ive had opportunities that no one has had to experience. I had the opportunity to work with some really great Marines out there; grunts. They were really great guys. They were always making sure we were taken care of.
Before joining the military in 2001, Radel dedicated her life to helping others, something she carried over to her career in the Navy. This holiday season, Radel will be aiding in the chaplains office and taking part in several programs aimed to boost morale among the troops.
Radel is the United Through Reading program coordinator aboard Camp Fallujah.
According to Radel, the program gives service members the opportunity to tape themselves reading a book to their children or loved ones. She also helps plan video teleconferences at the camp chapel.
Radel said these programs help link service members deployed here to their families at home. Despite being thousands of miles apart, the video teleconferences allow service members and their families to see each other.
She puts in a great deal of time and energy into her work, which shows in many of the projects that she is involved in, said Petty Officer 2nd Class Gregory S. Knight, religious program specialist, chaplains office, II MHG, II MEF (FWD). She helps facilitate these programs between here in Camp Fallujah and the rear. These are very important morale boosters for all of our troops, and [the programs] help them connect with their loved ones back home.
Radel looks forward to sharing her experiences in Iraq with other sailors when she returns to Camp Lejeune, N.C.
She said when she returns to Camp Lejeune, shell be able to show shipmates how to properly search a female and how to speak Arabic.
Radel added her deployment to Iraq hasnt discouraged her but has pushed her to continue a career in the Navy.
This deployment hasnt deterred me from what I do, she said. This is just a little speck of time to me.
Petty Officer 2nd Class Sarah Radel, 25, was among many female service members assigned to search Iraqi women and children entering the city of Fallujah. According to Radel, the month-long duty was frightening, but an experience shell never forget. Photo by: Lance Cpl. Josh Cox
Marine Ping
Chaplains are underappreciated, IMHO.
Recommend a book: "A table in the Presence":
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0849918235/ref=cm_aya_asin.title/104-0029690-4645545?%5Fencoding=UTF8&v=glance&n=283155
Are these Women in Arms stories just another step in desensitizing us to the continuing eradication of gender roles, or am I just paranoid?
Hah! Love it.
Praise the Lord and pass the Ammunition.
Yes.
Petty Officer 2nd Class Sarah Radel, 25, was among many female service members assigned to search Iraqi women and children entering the city. However, Radel, who is operating with II Marine Expeditionary Force, Headquarters Group, II MEF (Forward), is the only RP to fulfill the duty for II MHG to date.
There are women in the military. Get over it.
No, I didn't think it was a good idea either, but the matter is settled now.
Seems that this one had an important role where her gender was a job qualification.
That reminds me of my favorite Carnac the Magnificent bit:
Carnac: "Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition."
Ed: "Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition."
Carnac: (rips envelope, opens paper)
"What did one soldier say to the other after swallowing a grenade?"
Ouch. :-)
Thanks for the ping!
BTTT
So any time there's a precedent, you surrender like the mythical Frenchman? What one president or general can do, another can undo.
Oh of course I'm a weirdo traditionalist. But I'm also annyoyed at the queering of the culture and I pity those who don't realize they've been queered.
So I, and my mother before me, were "queered" because we served our country in the USA DOD?
Is that your position?
I'm not blind to the fact that radicals have been trying to make the military yet another laboratory for its experiments, using the armed services' well-deserved honorable reputation as a cloak to shut down criticism as they merilly attempt to redesign society. The push for women in combat or gays in the ranks hasn't come out of nowhere.
No fooling. How would the Iraqi people respond if it were MALE Marines body-searching the adult females?
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