Home » Archives » "Thanking the veterans"

Thanking the veterans

Feb- 8-2008 » Filed Under: 3/2 SBCT , Michael Oreskovic

It's great to have an update on Michael Oreskovic. You can read much more about his story here. His father, Mike, was one of the founders of this site.

By Rebecca Taylor, The Register-Guard

Five young veterans injured in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq stood before a small gathering on Wednesday and heard two words they don’t hear often enough: Thank you.

“We’re here to say thank you to these young men today because they laid it on the line, as have veterans of other generations,” said Richard Casey, district commander for the American Legion and a veteran of the Korean War. “These young people are members of a very large organization — American veterans.”

Casey presented the men with American Legion membership cards and $500 checks, courtesy of the Coalition to Salute America’s Heroes, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping seriously injured veterans of the war on terror. The group awarded 1,000 grants to disabled veterans across the country on a first-come, first-served basis.

The checks were a “small token” of appreciation, Casey said, but the money and the recognition meant a lot to the men who were honored Wednesday at the Veteran’s Memorial Building in Eugene.

Michael Oreskovic was a corporal in the 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division of the U.S. Army from November 2003 to October 2004. He worked with a small patrol doing reconnaissance and surveillance, primarily patrolling the Syrian border for insurgents crossing into Iraq.

His tour ended abruptly after a pair of car bombs tore off his left arm and pierced his body with shrapnel.

“I was blown up twice in one week,” he said. The first bomb detonated Oct. 5, 2004, and left shrapnel in his left arm and right hip.

He was patched up, given a Purple Heart and returned to duty.

Six days later, on Oct. 11, his patrol was hit by another car bomb in Mosul. The blast partially blinded him but he returned fire before he realized his left arm was gone. “I thought it was just broken,” he said.

After a year of recovery at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington D.C. — where he met such luminaries as the president, vice president, joint chiefs of staff and comedians Adam Sandler and Rob Schneider — he returned to Eugene, grateful to be home. He has been taking classes at Lane Community College and hopes to become a history teacher.

[...]


Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by a site administrator before your comment will appear. We appreciate your patience.)

Advertisements