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This Didn't Make the
News (sent by a reader – not confirmed)
At
Walter
Reed Medical
Center in Washington, DC recently the Sergeant Major of the Army, Jack Tilley,
was with a group of people visiting the wounded soldiers.
He saw a Special Forces soldier who had lost his right hand and suffered
severe wounds of his face and side of his body. The SMA wanted to honor him and
show him respect without offending, but what can you say or do in such a
situation that will encourage and uplift?
How do you shake the right hand of a soldier who has none? He decided to act
as though the hand was not missing and gripped the soldier's wrist while
speaking words of comfort and encouragement to him.
But there was another man in that group of visitors who had even brought his
wife with him to visit the wounded who knew exactly what to do. This man
reverently took the soldiers stump of a hand in both of his hands, bowed at the
bedside and prayed for him.
When he finished the prayer he stood up, bent over the soldier and kissed him
on the forehead and told him that he loved him.
What a powerful expression of love for one of our wounded heroes! What kind
of a man would do such a thing?
It was the wounded man's Commander-in-Chief, George W. Bush; President of the
United States, with First Lady Laura Bush silently standing by his side.
This story was told by the SMA at a Soldiers Breakfast held at Red Stone
Arsenal, AL, and recorded by Chaplain James Henderson, stationed there.
Our news media didn't see this as newsworthy. Pass it on...the press
hasn't.
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