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BammerFan anonymous snipe artist (178.76.190.97) on 9/27/2012 - 12:10 p.m. says: ( 12 views , 2 likes )

"The author is a friend of mine....in case you forgot who we are fighting...."

http://www2.tbo.com/news/opinion/2012/sep/22/5/my-bodyguards-afghan-children-save-marine-sacrific-ar-509919/?referer=http://www.facebook.com/&shorturl=http://tbo.ly/ScnUkd 

My bodyguards: Afghan children save Marine, sacrifice for others

A year ago I found myself trotting through the streets of Kabul

on my way to work at headquarters, International Security Assistance

Force (ISAF). Like many other international personnel who entered and

exited the base, a cluster of small children often greeted us. I was

amazed at how westernized these children were and how much they embraced

skateboarding down the neighborhoods of Kabul. Even the girls, who in

other neighborhoods would have been confined to their homes,

demonstrated their proficiencies.

I was overwhelmed and implored my brother, Joe, and his colleagues at

Skate Park of Tampa, to send their used skateboards, extra wheels and

other mounting tools to provide better equipment to the children.

It wasn't out of some need to demonstrate a benevolent act of

charity. No, these children had become my family. We would exchange

greetings in Pashto or Dari. Watching them board and stupefy the crowd

with their abilities reminded me of watching my young brother thrash

through downtown Tampa or Washington, D.C.

A beautiful little girl, Parwana (which means butterfly in Dari),

would hold my hand on the way into work and declare that she was my

"body guard." Impressive for someone who barely stood 36 inches,

probably not many more pounds, had ratty hair and wore the most charming

dusty smile you've ever seen. As a big brother to four younger sisters,

you can't help but attach yourself to this type of embrace and

familiarity between otherwise distant strangers.

More importantly, you attach yourself to the innocence that has been

missing for generations in a war-torn country. You attach yourself to

the idea of hope and a future in these young children, many of whom

speak at least three or four languages, and are desperately trying to

improve their quality of life by selling trinkets to the visitors. These

children, my bodyguards and surrogate brothers and sisters, would make

sure I was safe as I walked to work and greeted me happily as I returned

in the evening to my temporary home in Kabul.

Parwana was a little pistol of energy and delight. She and her

sisters, Basira and Khorshid, were as loud, rambunctious and touching as

any other kid on the street, and could thrash as well as any boy on a

skateboard! Khorshid, in particular, would display all of the tricks she

had learned while visiting Skatistan, a charity which provides a safe

venue and equipment to Kabul's children to learn and practice the sport.

These were magnificent sights and sounds to absorb each morning and

evening. Their embrace grew, my familiarity with their language and

families expanded, and friendship replaced the continual hustle of

selling me trinkets. Instead, we would practice ordering food in Pashto,

bartering with the local shopkeepers for better prices on pomegranates

for breakfast. There are few expressions more luminating than an Afghan

child's face when they bite into a pomegranate ("anar" in local dialect)

the size of their dusty little heads. The only moment that seemed to

top the breakfast runs to the market was the day Skate Park of Tampa

forwarded more than dozen skateboards for these young Kabul riffraff.

Passing out the skateboards my brother sent and watching the

amazement experienced by these kids was the highlight of an otherwise

disparaging deployment. It was a glimmer of hope and true joy in a city

that has experienced far too many atrocities.

Atrocities such as those that happened just a couple of weeks ago, on Sept. 8.

It was Massoud Day, a national holiday in Afghanistan marking the day

of martyrdom for the famous Ahmad Shah Massoud, who was a mighty

mujahidin during the Afghan resistance to the Russians and ardently

opposed the Taliban. On that morning, several of the aforementioned

children stood outside of the base, waiting to greet other individuals,

like me, who resided off base. It is a heavily secured area, with the

constant presence of Afghan National Security Forces. Yet, that did not

matter.

It was the alarms raised by a few tiny voices, their shouts at the

guards, that something terrible was under way, which signaled another

horrific example of the enemy we are fighting in Afghanistan and

Pakistan.

A young suicide bomber, 13, integrated amongst the other children,

was waiting for ISAF personnel to leave the base. When the little ones

who normally greet their friends with smiles realized the boy was

wearing an explosive-laden vest, they screamed for help.

Parwana, always the consummate 8-year-old bodyguard, her sisters and

many other children warned of danger with their very last breaths.

The children could have remained quiet. They could have walked away

from a danger and allowed those of us who frequent their paths to meet

the demise of unspeakable pain. Instead, the little bodyguards alerted

the foreigners of danger; they sacrificed everything to save strangers

who had become their friends, their surrogate big brothers and sisters.

And as such, six of their little bodies lay sprawled across an Afghan

street, four more rushed to a hospital with life-threatening injuries,

and a radicalized teenager, brainwashed in a perverse religion among

them, reaping his martyrdom while his masters continue on to a new

recruit.

These little strangers, tiny butterflies of innocence, placed the

lives of strangers above their own. They sacrificed their lives because,

in their own way, they were scared of what this wanton individual would

do to those for whom they cared.

When some cower from the horrors of this war, those like Parwana,

Khorshid and Basira take up arms against the monsters who would destroy

this country.

May we all have the courage of an 8-year-old, someday — for the sake of a better Afghanistan.

Brad Pupello served with the U.S. Marine Corps for eight years

before returning to the private sector and his hometown of Tampa. He is

currently a socio-cultural analyst and linguist.

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