Return
to the "POINTER VIEW"
March
5, 2004
Lieutenant shares war experiences with students
Photo
and story by Gerry J. Gilmore
American Forces Press
Service
|
|
| 1st Lt. Emily Woolsey, of the 101st Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Ky., describes captured Iraqi military equipment during a Feb. 26 visit with students at Franklin Middle School in Chantilly, Va. |
WASHINGTON
-- As her unit moved toward Baghdad, freed Iraqis “were tearing down things in
celebration of the fall of the regime,” 1st Lt. Emily Woolsey, a veteran of
Operation Iraqi Freedom, recalled during a Feb. 26 visit with seventh- and
eighth-graders.
The
24-year-old West Point Class of 2001 graduate had recently returned stateside
after a yearlong deployment in Iraq. Woolsey spoke about her experiences with
Franklin Middle School students in Chantilly, Va., a school she had attended in
1992 and 1993.
Woolsey
told students she performed military intelligence duties first with an aviation
battalion and later at an MI company while serving with the 101st Airborne
Division in Iraq. She recounted tales of sandstorms, convoying across miles of
dusty, open desert, 130-degree heat, Spartan living conditions, countless hours
of work, and Soldiers’ bravery and comradeship.
When her
aviation unit moved through liberated cities and villages on the way to Baghdad,
Woolsey recalled the local people had “torn down posters (of Saddam
Hussein)” and other symbols of his regime.
Saddam had
already fled when her unit reached the outskirts of Baghdad, Woolsey noted.
Woolsey’s
unit paused south of Baghdad at an airfield for a few weeks until being posted
further north, she said. Later, she said she took a new a job with a military
intelligence company.
The
lieutenant remembers mail call as one of the soldiers’ most-anticipated events
in Iraq. “That’s what got us through every day,” she remarked.
Woolsey
also recalled visiting local Iraqi cities and villages “to see how we could
help them rebuild their schools, fix their roads, get them water and
electricity.”
Although
she recalled going without a shower for two weeks, Woolsey said she wouldn’t
trade her Iraq experiences for anything in the world. “I’m really, really
proud of all the work I did,” she said.
Franklin’s
principal, Michelle Peyser, said the school had adopted Woolsey and her unit
during the Iraq deployment, noting that students had sent cards, letters and
gifts to the lieutenant and other 101st Soldiers.
Woolsey
thanked family, friends and the school for their support, noting, “We
wouldn’t have gotten through without all of you.”
Peyser
said Woolsey’s visit to Franklin was an educational experience for today’s
students as well as a homecoming. The lieutenant had brought along some captured
Iraqi military equipment, to include a uniform shirt and helmet, for the
students to look over.
“I think
it’s great what Emily is doing for our country,” said Kimberly Sprout, a
seventh-grader at Franklin, noted after Woolsey’s visit. It was, the
12-year-old added, “a great experience to be able to hear her and see her and
learn all about what she did.”
Sprout
said she’d “never understood” what U.S. forces were doing in Iraq before
Woolsey’s visit. “Now, I have a clearer description of what they’re
doing,” she said.
Woolsey’s father, Tim Woolsey, a math teacher at Franklin, noted he’s proud of his daughter’s service and was happy to welcome her home. “We’re proud of her service for our country – she did a great job,” he said.