Monday, June 25, 2007

‘Angels’ to watch over local Guard
Troops will get support from home

By Erica M. Bush
The Winchester Star


Winchester — When the Winchester-based unit of the National Guard mobilizes on Tuesday, the soldiers will leave home knowing that someone is thinking of them.

They will also depart with a guardian angel to watch over them.

Lillian Peck (from left) and Kristina Robinson, members of Girl Scout Troop 381, get some help from Katie Peck while preparing Soldiers’ Angels care packages on Sunday.
(Photos by Ginger Perry)

On Sunday afternoon in Jim Barnett Park, volunteers from Soldiers’ Angels — a national organization whose mission is to provide aid and comfort to members of the armed forces and their families — prepared care packages for the local soldiers.

The packages, which include angel pins, cards, and a soldier’s prayer, will be given to soldiers in the Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3rd Battalion, 116th Infantry Regiment, 29th Division of the Virginia Army National Guard at their mobilization ceremony at Shentel Stadium on Tuesday evening.

“It just lets them know that there is an angel in their pocket,” said Winchester resident Cindy Roach, a Soldiers’ Angels volunteer and leader of Winchester Girl Scout Troop 381, who also helped with preparing the packages on Sunday.

The local National Guard unit was federally mobilized on Saturday.

After a ceremony on Shenandoah University’s campus on Tuesday evening, they will be sent to Camp Shelby, Miss., for additional training for three months before being deployed overseas to support Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Girl Scout Lillian Peck, 10, said it’s important that soldiers know someone is thinking about them when they are away from home.

She sat on a bench under one of the park’s shelters on Sunday afternoon decorating brown paper bags, which will hold the goodies for the soldiers, with stickers and green ribbons.

Peck said her troop adopted a soldier not too long ago who is serving in Iraq. The girls send a card to their soldier once a week and a package once a month.

Volunteers from Soldiers’ Angels gather on Sunday in Jim Barnett Park to prepare items for the Winchester-based National Guard soldiers who will be deployed to Iraq. Pictured from left are Anna-Sofie Hickson of Arlington and Bethany Rice and Anita Austinson, both of Gainesville.

“It’s just so awesome,” Roach said about the Girls Scouts and Soldiers’ Angels efforts to provide support for the National Guard.

Soldiers’ Angels was started in 2003 by the mother of soldier who was deployed in Iraq. The soldier expressed concern that his fellow soldiers were not receiving any support from home.

Volunteers of the organization from Northern Virginia wrote cards on Sunday that local soldiers will be able to take with them when they leave.

Anna-Sofie Hickson, a volunteer from Arlington, will give the cards and care packages to local soldiers at their mobilization ceremony on Tuesday.

Hickson, who served in the Army from 1999-2003, became involved in Soldiers’ Angels after her best friend was killed in Iraq in 2004, she said.

She said the organization relies heavily on the Internet to find other people who are interested in helping to send care to deployed soldiers and their families.

Roach said on Sunday that Soldiers’ Angels and her Girl Scout troop will prepare care packages for the local Guard unit again in September before they deploy for Iraq.

The local National Guard unit has been deployed before, serving as part of Operation Enduring Freedom from July 2004 until July 2005.

The mission sent the unit to Afghanistan, where two members of the company — Staff Sgt. Craig Cherry, 39, of Winchester, and Sgt. Bobby Beasley, 36, of Inwood, W.Va. — were killed in August 2004 when an improvised explosive device struck their armored Humvee.

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