Sgt. José Pequeño / Age 34 / Sugar Hill, New Hampshire
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War Is Personal
Eugene Richards: In New Hampshire, a mother is reunited with her grievously wounded son.
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War Is Personal: Mona Parsons/Age 52/Mt. Vernon, Ohio
Eugene Richards: The hidden toll the Iraq War takes is exposed in this photo essay on how one mother braces for her son's second deployment to Iraq.
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War Is Personal: Carlos Arredondo/Age 45/Roslindale, Massachusetts
Eugene Richards: War Is Personal: A photo-essay on how grief has transformed the father of a slain US marine.
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War Is Personal: Tomas Young/Age 26/Kansas City, Missouri
Eugene Richards: In the first installment of a new series called Photo Nation, a young soldier from Missouri recounts the ambush of his unit in Iraq.
I used to work nights. I got home at 7 am, couldn't sleep, when there was a phone call. "We need to notify you that your son had an accident and is in surgery." But they couldn't give me any news how bad he was. I hung up, called my daughter and his dad, then kept calling Casualty Affairs every fifteen minutes. "As soon as we know, ma'am." Then, "They're flying him into Germany." Finally, when he got to Germany, they told me it was an injury on the head. "How bad is it?" "He's getting cleaned up, but we don't know the extent of the injury." I finally got to a nurse. "You tell me." "I'll have a neurosurgeon call." Two o'clock in the morning, I got a call from the neurosurgeon. "I'm still evaluating your son. I'll call you when I'm done." "How long?" "I've got like twenty minutes to go." And I said, "You've got twenty-two minutes. I'm his mom, for God's sake."
Twenty-five minutes later I got a call. A voice said, "Is this your
son?" "Yes." "Such a beautiful son," he said. "What a terrible waste, a
young man with such a life ahead of him, and he's going to die." Right
there, a piece of me just left. "You're such a liar!" I yelled. "Of
course my son is going to make it." After that, I asked, "Are you
finished with your evaluation? Tell me exactly what's wrong with my son.
Please." And he said, "He has a severe brain injury, severe bleeding;
he's lost the bottom two lobes of his brain." And at that time, my
daughter's boyfriend heard me scream and fall off the bed. I started
throwing things. My next-door neighbor came running, and I sat down and
cried and said, "I can't do this."
--Nelida Bagley
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