Tag Archive


Recognition for WWII Women Pilots

A WASPAmerican Forces Press Service reports that President Obama signed a bill last week to award the Congressional Gold Medal to the Women Air Force Service Pilots of World War II, the first women in American history to fly military aircraft.

From 1942 to 1943, more than 1,000 women flew in the unit, and 38 of them made the ultimate sacrifice in performing its mission. The Women Air Force Service Pilots, known collectively as WASPs, participated in instructor piloting, towing targets for air-to-air gunnery practice, ground-to-air anti-aircraft practice and transporting personnel and cargo, among other tasks. In total, the women flew more than 60 million miles on American missions. But until recently, the women had not been recognized for their contributions.

U.S. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida said the legislation recognizes the women’s sacrifice. “This Congress…considers them all heroes because these trailblazers and true patriots served our country without question and with no expectations of recognition or praise,” she said. “This bill honors mothers, grandmothers, teachers, office workers, nurses, business women, photographers, [and] dancers. One was even a nun,” she added. “But before that, they were pilots for the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II.”... Read more here

“Suffer the Little Children”

A Woman with Children in BaghdadLittle kids have a way of grabbing our attention!
Whether it’s the innocent calmness (briefly!) of a newborn, the first attempts at walking, learning to read and write, or entering those challenging years of adolescence, kids demand, and get, our attention. They have big needs and even bigger egos. It’s all about them!
Every new parent comes to this realization sooner or later: the needs of the child supersede the needs of the parent. Parents’ needs don’t go away, but they take second place to the tyrannical demands of children.
I even witnessed this at a clinic in Baghdad last summer. The women waiting to be treated, dressed head to toe in their burqas, made little eye contact and even less conversation, especially with a man.
But when they saw the camera, they instantly wanted their babies to be photographed. Children were a bridge. Like people everywhere, the parents wanted the best for their children. I had never seen one of the local women smile so broadly as when holding her baby for a simple photo!... Read more here