Chicago Vietnam Veterans Against the War and supporters honor fallen servicemen on Memorial Day
By Chicago VVAW
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Chicago Vietnam Veterans Against the War and supporters honor fallen servicemen on Memorial Day
For Immediate Release
May 26, 2004
For More Information:
call Barry Romo 73-276-4189
Tracy Slyke 312-315-1127
Bring the Troops Home
Chicago Vietnam Veterans Against the War and supporters honor fallen
servicemen on Memorial Day
Calling for an "end to the Iraqi War," members and supporters of the
group Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) will join together for its
annual commemoration of military veterans at the corner of Wacker and
Wabash from 11 a.m.-noon, on Memorial Day, May 31. The event is
endorsed by Military Families Speak Out.
Currently, over 700 American troops have been killed while stationed in
Iraq with the number of Iraqi civilians deaths reach into the thousands.
"The Bush Administration started this war under false pretenses and
has put the lives of our family members, our friends and our loved ones
at risk with their continued lies and mismanagement. No one can
understand the courage, the hard work and the danger that our fellow
service men and women face everyday better than us. It is time to honor
these troops and their lives by bringing them home," says VVAW National
Staff Member Barry Romo. "I don't want to have a thousand more dead
American soldiers by next Memorial Day."
Speakers at the event will include Vietnam War veterans, an Iraqi war
veteran and family members of military personnel currently stationed in
Iraq.
Rosemary Dietz-Slavenas's son, a member of Military Families Speak Out,
lost her son Lt. Brian Slavenas, a helicopter pilot on November 2, 2003
with 15 other U.S. troops when his Chinook helicopter was shot down over
Falluja.
"There is a Bible passage, 'I will build my kingdom and the gates of
hell will not prevail.' Initiating a war, we have opened the gates of
hell and sent our children through them," says Dietz-Slavenas. Slavenas
will be speaking at the VVAW Memorial Day event.
The event will also announce the new VVAW-sponsored counseling program
for American military personnel to help with issues while on duty and
afterwards.
Vietnam Veterans Against the War has more than 1,000 members throughout
the country and includes veterans from World War II and on. It
currently organizes for better benefits for all vets and has become one
of the most outspoken and respected peace organizations in the country.
The first group to organize Vietnam veterans in 1967, it was founded
to voice returning service-men's and women's growing opposition to the
Vietnam war and grew to include more than 30,000 members. The group
started the first rap groups to deal with the war's traumatic
aftereffects on GIs, helped make known negative health effects of
exposure to chemical defoliants and exposed Veteran's Administration
attempts to cover up Agent-Orange-induced illnesses.
VISUALS: Veterans speaking, Military family members speaking.
VVAW members and supporters will surround the former Vietnam Veterans
Memorial for a moment of silence and throw flowers into the fountain at
the end of the program.
Press Releases on VVAW.org:
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