' By Donna
Miles American Forces Press Service
|
| WASHINGTON, March 11, 2008 - Six New Hampshire volunteers committed to
making sure deployed troops get the sendoffs and homecomings yesterday found
themselves on the receiving end of the thanks they regularly extend -- from the
commander in chief himself and others on Capitol Hill and in the Pentagon.
Representatives of the Pease Greeters group
that greets deploying and redeploying units as they pass through Portsmouth
International Airport at Pease, in New Hampshire, visited the Pentagon briefing
studio yesterday after meetings with President Bush and New Hampshire Sen. John
Sununu. The greeters, from left, are Bill Hopper, air terminal manager; Charlie
Nichols, a World War II veteran; Edmund Johnson, group co-chair and Korean War
veteran; Chuck Cove, co-chair and Vietnam War veteran; Alan Weston, air terminal
maintenance manager; and Hank Page, group chaplain and Korean War veteran.
Defense Dept. photo by Donna Miles (Click photo for
screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available.
| | Six
"Pease Greeters" are spending their second day in the nation's capital after
getting honored for their work yesterday by President Bush in the White House
Oval Office, New Hampshire Sen. John Sununu on Capitol Hill, and defense
officials at the Pentagon.
The president offered personal thanks to the
Pease Greeters, who shower deploying and redeploying soldiers, sailors, airmen
and Marines with applause, handshakes and snacks as their aircraft refuel at
Portsmouth International Airport at Pease, in New Hampshire. "He thanked us for
what we are doing and told us that it's important for Americans like us to show
appreciation to and support the troops," said Edmund Johnson, a Korean War
veteran who co-chairs the group. "It was a tremendous honor for all of us!"
The greeters started almost three years ago as a band of veterans from
the Marine Corps League of New Hampshire who met incoming flights from overseas.
Since then, their numbers have swelled into the hundreds, and the Pease Greeters
haven't missed a single inbound or outbound flight, Johnson said.
As
many as 200 greeters gather to provide boisterous heroes' welcomes to returning
troops and encouragement to those headed overseas.
The greeters range
from young schoolchildren to feisty, 87-year-old Anna Labrie, many driving as
much as 100 miles to greet flights any hour of the day or night, Johnson said.
They assemble within an hour's notice, hoisting banners, snapping photos and
offering hugs along with coffee, pizza or treats baked by the group's "cookie
lady," Kelly Eaton.
Just before the troops reboard their aircraft, group
chaplain Hank Page offers a prayer for their protection. "I feel I have to do
this. It's a duty," said Page, a Korean War veteran. At 73, Page said he's too
old to fight himself, but young enough to offer any support he can to those
going off to war. "Being able to say a prayer for these guys is so humbling," he
said. "It's a very emotional experience."
Page bristles when he thinks
back to the reception troops received when they returned home from Vietnam.
"While there's breath in my body, that's not going to happen -- not at Pease,
anyway," he said.
Al Weston, maintenance manager at the airport, said he
"got hooked" on greeting troops the first time he volunteered to help. "You get
caught up in it all, seeing (the Pease Greeters) in their bright, red suits
clapping and cheering," he said. "When (troops) walk away from here, they know
that people care."
Just before troops leave, the Peace Greeters render a
sharp salute, recognizing those they say are continuing the tradition of
military service. "We talk about warriors as a brotherhood," Johnson said. "We
tell them that we're the old warriors, supporting them, the new warriors, and
offer them our salute in recognition of what they're doing for our country."
| |
Comments