Maria Made Me Cry
by Joel S. Hirschhorn
I unexpectedly found myself crying over the Iraq war as I read the obituary of Capt. Maria Ines Ortiz, a highly praised Army nurse. What I read broke my heart. The story of this remarkable woman and her tragic, pointless killing in Iraq had so much more power than the endless statistics that have numbed our emotions and fed our anger about Bush’s Iraq War.
Maria was just 40 years old. She volunteered for duty in Iraq, eager to do her part. She wanted to take care of soldiers. She was the first Army nurse killed in combat since the Vietnam War.
Everyone who ever worked with Maria adored and respected her.
She was one of those truly exceptional people who transcended her
professional status with loving care for those she nursed and worked
with.
Maria was killed on July 10 in the Green Zone in Baghdad.
She was caught outside by a barrage of mortar shells and killed by
shrapnel.
Before going to Iraq last fall she was the chief nurse
at the Kirk U.S. Army Health Clinic in Aberdeen, Maryland. Many people
there broke down in tears when the clinic commander called everyone
together to tell them Maria was another casualty of the Iraq War.
Renee Smith who had worked with Maria described her as the “jewel of
the clinic.†“Her work wasn’t finished until everybody was cared for,â€
said Smith.
Maria had also served at Walter Reed Army Medical
Center. Medical Command officials are considering naming a building or
clinic in her name to honor her memory.
Wendy Schuler, another
co-worker at Aberdeen, had sent Maria an email, asking if she needed
anything. All Maria wanted was Christmas decorations so she could
brighten up the halls at the hospital where she worked. Her colleagues
there held a memorial service for her. They talked about how Maria had
touched their lives.
Maria started her Army career as an
enlisted solder with the Reserve in Puerto Rico in 1991. She became
active duty in 1993 and was commissioned an officer in 1999, the year
she received her nursing masters degree from the University of Puerto
Rico. Dead in 2007.
Upon returning from Iraq, Maria was to
marry Juan Casiano, an Army veteran who had guided her career. He said
“She touched everyone's lives and everything about her was positive.
She always carried a smile. I saw in her what everyone else sees, a
beautiful person who brings joy to everyone she touches. There wasn’t
anything negative about that woman.â€
Maria is also survived by
her parents and four sisters. Her father had also served in the Army
and said, “She always said to me ‘daddy, I am going to serve 30 years
in the army.’†Maria only made it halfway.
Maria will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
Maria
was just 40 years old with so much more living, loving and service
ahead of her. Bush is guilty of her criminally negligent homicide.
I
don’t know what Maria thought of the Iraq War. But her death has done
more than anything else to make me despise what our disgraceful,
delusional and dumb President George W. Bush has done. It will take a
long, long time for our nation to heal from the wounds that Bush has
viciously and arrogantly inflicted on us.
Maria should not have
died from shrapnel in Iraq. And neither should have thousands and
thousands of other Americans died and become terribly wounded in Iraq.
For what? To keep all the lies of Bush alive until, eventually and
inevitably, we leave Iraq, defeated and with even more dead and wounded
soldiers?
By then Bush will be back in Texas, disgraced,
delusional and dumb as ever. And many, many people will still shed
tears when they remember Maria and ask themselves: Why?
And why, I ask, is there any hesitation by any sane member of Congress about impeaching Bush?
[Joel
S. Hirschhorn is a founder of Friends of the Article V Convention at
www.foavc.org and author of Delusional Democracy,
www.delusionaldemocracy.com.]
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