MOSUL, Iraq, Jan. 9, 2007 -- Eight years and many small miracles later, U.S. Army Spc. Jotyar Tile retuned to his native land and will be serving both his countries. Tile remembers the day his family fled northern Iraq after years of bombing and terror by Saddam Husseins government. If we had stayed one more day we would not have made it out alive; they were using chemicals against us and destroying our villages, Tile said. My father was a hard-headed and proud Kurd and did not want to leave our home. We were the last family to leave Qumri, he said. For years his family had endured the anti-Kurdish campaign led by the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein. I remember every Friday we had to dress up and wear army clothes to school and march around and raise the flag and act like soldiers, Tile said. Saddam demanded we do this from about age 5 and up. In August 1988, then-18-year-old Tile, his parents, five sisters and seven brothers fled his home in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq to a refugee camp in Turkey. Tile explained the conditions in the refugee camp were appalling with approximately 16,000 refugees in tents in four to five square miles. Refugees were not allowed to work and all had fled with no belongings; not even bringing pots to boil water in. Many became ill and died because of the poor health and hygiene conditions and simple preventive medical issues like frostbite were rampant, he said. Then, one day, the U.S. and U.N. visited us and asked if we wanted to go to the U.S. or Europe, Tile beamed. I said yes, I want to go to the U.S., he said, but his parents declined and they returned to their home in 1992 along with his siblings. On Sept. 29, 1992 Tile, arrived in New York City as a refugee and was given a green card. Within days he moved in with a sponsor in Fargo, N.D. I did not know anything about U.S. except California and New York, he said. And I didnt speak a word of English. Tile explained how a very nice and beautiful lady volunteer named Karen Harris changed his life. This lady, with whom he has not had contact with in years, taught him how to speak English, drive a car, and got him his first job for $4.25 an hour. I would love to contact her and thank her but dont know how, he regretted. When I received my first paycheck, I went back to the social service and thanked them and told them I didnt want anymore of their help, he said with a smile. He said they tried to tell him that he could continue to receive support for months, but he said he wanted it go to someone else who really needed it. I wanted to join the U.S. Army ever since I came to the U.S., he said, to show my appreciation for everything they did for my people. |