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JOINT BASE LANGLEY-EUSTIS, Va.– Army Sgt. Maj. Jose Velazquez, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command public affairs sergeant major, is one of the more than 158,000 Hispanic Americans serving in the military today. Reflecting on National Hispanic Heritage Month, which began Sept. 15 and runs through Oct. 15, he recalled what joining the Army meant to him and how it changed his life.
Velazquez said he grew up in the lawless Essex Street Projects of Lawrence, Massachusetts, with his mother, who had moved from Puerto Rico to the United States. “My mother worked in factories to help provide and raise me,” he said. “Her hopes for me were to not become another statistic of the city, with working in a factory or ending up dead on a street corner.” After graduating from high school, Velazquez said, he tried his hand at community college, but fell short. “At the time, I was [still] struggling to not be a statistic, but in many ways I already was,” he explained. “By 1990, I had already failed out of college and had been hired by a clothing factory, working in what was known as the ‘sweat shop.’” Velazquez said he knew this was not the life he wanted to live, but was not sure about how to survive otherwise. ‘I knew I couldn’t stay there’ “I still remember like it was yesterday,” he said. “What I remember the most is the blank stares of the good, decent men and women who worked there. It felt like their hopes and dreams had died amongst those mill walls. I knew I couldn’t stay there. I knew I had to find a way out.”
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July 3, 2014 - Freedom is a fleeting and fragile way of life. It has rarely existed. It can be taken from without. It can be lost from within. The military protects against the former. The people protect against the latter. On the Fourth of July I think of those pivotal decisions made by our great military leaders and servicemembers. Where would we be today had George Washington not determined to cross the Potomac? What if the garrison had elected not to stand out the British bombardment at Fort McHenry? Where might we be had Gen. Anthony Clement McAuliffe not simply replied "nuts!"
My uncle is buried in Luxembourg from that battle. My young cousin served in Afghanistan. My relatives have been in the Marines, the Air Force and the Army. And friends are at the tip of the spear in Afghanistan. Of late I ponder to what extent we are worthy or their sacrifice. Teachers, lawyers, reporters, and politicians help administer and organize our freedom. But only after it has been gained and protected for us by our soldiers. Without them most all else would be moot. Another different system would overtake and hand us its rules to obey. And I suspect they would not be as personally enjoyable and healthful as those we write for ourselves. The world is full of bullies, desirous of structuring other peoples' lives, and removing thinkers and writers who oppose them. That is not the American way. We are the chief agents of freedom in the world. Absent the counterweight of America's force, the weight of the dark forces would gradually push outward to more of the planet, diminishing our safety.
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