What We Can Learn From Our Veterans

As more and more service members take the long and winding trip home, America is bracing for their return. But beyond the stories of struggling with adjusting to civilian life is a group of men and women who are returning to make amazing contributions including volunteering, feeding the homeless and building playgrounds.
But rather than recognizing these accounts along with those of vets who suffer from mental illness or post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), most of these stories go unheard.
That’s because fewer than 1 percent of Americans have participated in the wars on Iraq and Afghanistan (only about 5 percent if family members are included) — a stark contrast to previous generations who had direct connections to military life.
But a new book from Howard Schultz, chairman and chief executive of Starbucks Coffee, and Washington Post correspondent Rajiv Chandrasekaran is seeking to change that disconnect and help weave our veterans back into the American narrative. “For Love of Country: What Our Veterans Can Teach Us About Citizenship, Heroism, and Sacrifice” details numerous accounts of life on the warfront and how the valor and bravery of our service members transcends back home.
“In 1946, if your neighbor was watering the street at night because he was kind of crazy from shell shock, you knew that everyone coming back wasn’t crazy because your brother or son or husband had served and was successfully transitioning,” Chandrasekaran tells the New York Times. “We don’t have that common understanding anymore. So if someone goes and shoots up Fort Hood, there are all those people who think all vets are a bunch of killers-to-be. And that’s not the case. So the aperture needs to widen.”
While politicians and media continue to focus on vets who struggle with life back home, Schulz and Chandrasekaran aim to illuminate accounts — even those who suffer from trauma or injury — of service members who have made huge contributions to or continue to thrive in business, education, community service and government.
“We want the legacy of this generation of veterans to be serving with courage when the country called on them to serve overseas and then, when they came back, making the country stronger through continued service here at home,” says Eric Greitens, a former Navy SEAL and Rhodes scholar.
In 2007, Greitens formed Mission Continues, a nonprofit that connects about two dozen teams of veterans with community service across the United States. The group works with nonprofits and offers veterans fellowships to volunteer for six months while providing a food and rent stipend. More than 1,000 fellows had volunteered at 600 various groups by mid-2014, according to the Washington Post
Of course, there are plenty who still struggle with the transition, and it is our responsibility to ensure they’re welcomed back with respect. The Office of Veterans Affairs estimates that around 11 to 20 percent of more than 2.4 million post-9/11 veterans suffer from PTSD, and while more companies are pledging to increase the number of veteran hires, it’s important to diminish the bias that all vets are damaged, and that those who are, are not worthy. More than anything, it is these men and women that can teach us about leadership and valor.

“It is I who should be learning from you,” Schultz told a group of West Point cadets while speaking about leadership in 2011 . “You are the true leaders.”

It’s a lesson we should all remember.

MORE: The Military-Civilian Divide Doesn’t Have to Be as Wide as It Currently Is

 

How Going to the Movies Can Help Veterans

In 2005, Danny Dietz and three other Navy SEALs went on a mission to locate Taliban leader Ahmad Shah in the mountains near Asadabad, Afghanistan. It ended in tragedy. Caught in a firefight and radioing for help, Dietz and two others were killed. When a helicopter carrying eight more Navy SEALs and eight U.S. Army Special Operations aviators attempted a rescue, it was shot down by a Taliban rocket. Dietz was awarded the Navy Cross for his bravery during the brutal battle.
MORE: Bravery After Battle: How This Navy SEAL Uses His War Wounds to Help Fellow Soldiers
A new movie, “Lone Survivor,” is based on the story of Marcus Luttrell, the only Navy SEAL to survive the battle that killed Dietz. The backers of the movie have partnered with veterans organizations to form the Lone Survivor Fund, encouraging moviegoers to donate. When movie fans purchase their tickets on Fandango, they will be invited to contribute to the fund. The donations collected will be distributed to the Navy SEAL Foundation, Got Your 6, and the Lone Survivor Foundation, a non-profit started by Luttrell that offers education and rehabilitation services to returning vets. Actors in the movie, including Mark Wahlberg, who portrays Luttrell, and Emile Hirsch, who plays Dietz, are spreading the word about the Lone Survivor Fund as they promote the film. Now that’s a better way to spend your change than on a bucket of popcorn.

A Bold Idea for Empowering Today’s Generation of Veterans

Veteran services organizations have played an important historical role in protecting the interests of veterans. However, most of the old politicized models have failed to keep pace in addressing the concerns of new veterans. Paul Rieckhoff is building a new type of non-partisan veterans organization that aims to equip veterans with “real time information about resources they need to manage the transition back to civilian life and become leaders in their communities,” according to a recent article. Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA) has programs supporting new veterans in health, education, employment and building a lasting community for vets and their families. Visit their website for more info on the programs offered and check out this special section profiling five IAVA members featured on the cover of TIME magazine.
Source: Ashoka – Make It Bright