登陆注册
10778800000001

第1章 FOREWORD

WHILE SERVING AS AN ARMY NURSE IN THE RICE paddies and jungles of Vietnam in 1968 and '69, I didn't consider the possibility of becoming a prisoner of war. I was twenty-two years old, and my high school and college education had starkly omitted the stories of the Army and Navy nurses held prisoner during World War II in a camp in the Philippines. Nor did I know that during that war, over five hundred American women died in the line of duty, more than two hundred of them Army and Navy nurses. I remember studying Florence Nightingale, who founded modern nursing during the Crimean War, and learning of Clara Barton's heroic role in the Civil War while founding the American Red Cross. But more recent role models and examples were not offered.

War is hell for men. We've always known that. As you read this book, you will discover that war is hell for women, too. When World War II broke out, tens of thousands of women seized the opportunity to serve their country in the military. No law has ever been passed for the conscripting, or drafting, of women into the armed forces. Women were not forced into the ordeal of war, yet they wanted to do the right thing and, without regard for personal safety, volunteered for duty. This book wonderfully conveys the contribution of women who faced the heartbreak of war by nursing the wounded and dying. These were daring women, shining beacons for those of us who came after them.

During the Vietnam War, unlike any other war in our history, journalists were given unparalleled access. I knew my parents would be watching the 6:00 news showing body bags or dead or bleeding civilians, helicopters crashing into the jungle, napalm and white phosphorus burning villages, and Vietnamese men, women, and children running from the flames. But what they did not see were the nurses in helmets and flak jackets running to the hospitals and treating the men whose torsos and limbs had been ripped open by high-velocity weapons. They did not hear the sound of mortar thuds and rockets piercing our billets and hospital roofs and walls or see us throwing mattresses on top of patients to protect them from shrapnel. They did not see us hanging blood bags, suctioning tracheotomies, and frantically evacuating patients from the hospital to allow more room for mass casualties. In following the footsteps of all military nurses before us, we did the best we could on the battlefield, sharing the tragedy of the spilled blood of our brother soldiers. Reading the heroic stories in this book of the Army and Navy nurses working in the Philippines brought back painful shared memories-of my own time on the battlefield and how much we cared, how we moved beyond our own suffering, and how skilled we became in our work to save lives.

The grim realities of women's service in military nursing, with its hardships and perils, have been underrepresented or lost in the annals of history. Too often eclipsed from the public memory of war and hidden behind cameras, behind male images of war, invisible to our nation at large, are the military women. This gap in our knowledge can be filled, but not so easily now that thousands of the veterans have already passed on, their stories buried with them.

With two memorials in Washington, D.C., now honoring military women-the Vietnam Women's Memorial at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and the Women in Military Service to America Memorial, which honors all military women, past, present, and future-their service is now honored and their visibility heightened.

Wars have a face, and until now, with our modern integrated military, that face was masculine. War stories favored those men on the front lines or behind the scenes who were directing the war. In any war, however, the distinction between combatants and noncombatants is meaningless, for both groups are rocketed, machine-gunned, bombed, taken prisoner, and killed. Since women by tradition were not supposed to be in those dangerous situations while in service to their country, historians had largely ignored or purified the experience of military women in the Nurse Corps.

You are about to read an unpurified war story of shared sacrifice among ordinary women caught up in the horrors of close-quarters combat, while doing their best to perform their duty of caring for the wounded. With vivid detail, Mary Cronk Farrell puts a feminine face on warfare. I loved reading about these ordinary women who became extraordinary from the stark terror of the ravages of war. These women were not called warriors or soldiers. But in today's definition, they were warriors and soldiers in every sense.

These women have all passed now. We will never fully know their personal agonies of perpetual fear and living under the hateful eyes of the enemy without comforts of any kind. They endured the trauma of watching young men perish and left a lasting impression on all those thousands of souls they touched. They themselves tried to forget the worst of it.

Reading their stories enriched my life, and I hope it will do the same for you. This book comes close to telling it all. It honors these courageous women and memorializes their mercy, kindness, compassion, and strength of spirit. It captures the pure grit of the finest soldier and the best of humanity.

FIRST LIEUTENANT DIANE CARLSON EVANS, RN, CPT, USA

Army Nurse Corps, 1966-1972

Vietnam, 1968-1969

Founder and President, Vietnam Women's Memorial Foundation

同类推荐
  • Death of a Naturalist

    Death of a Naturalist

    'Between my finger and my thumb/ The squat pen rests; snug as a gun' - from "e;Digging"e;. With its lyrical and descriptive powers, "e;Death of a Naturalist"e; marked the auspicious debut of one of the century's finest poets.
  • Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque(IV) 怪诞蔓藤花纹的传说

    Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque(IV) 怪诞蔓藤花纹的传说

    This work is a collection of previously-published short stories from the dark pen of Edgar Allan Poe, first published in 1840. In this volume we examine some Tales of The Grotesque And Arabesque from the dark pen of Edgar Allan Poe. He was born Edgar Poe in Boston Massachusetts on January 19th 1809 and tragically orphaned at an early age. Taken in by the Allan family his education was cut short by lack of funds and he went to the military academy West Point where he failed to become an officer. His early literary works were poetic but he quickly turned to prose. He worked for several magazines and journals until in January 1845 The Raven was published and became an instant classic. Thereafter followed the works for which he is now so rightly famed as a master of the mysterious and pgsk.com died at the early age of 40 in 1849 in Baltimore, Marylan
  • Prime Ministers Who Never Were

    Prime Ministers Who Never Were

    Each of these chapters in this book of political counterfactuals describes a premiership that never happened, but might easily have done had the chips fallen slightly differently. The contributors, each of them experts in political history, have asked themselves questions like: what shape would the welfare state and the cold war have taken if the Prime Minister had been Herbert Morrison instead of Clement Attlee? What would have been consequences for Northern Ireland had Norman Tebbit succeeded Margaret Thatcher? How would our present life be different without New Labour - a name we would never have heard if either Kinnock or Smith had become Prime Minister and not Tony Blair? Each of the chapters in this book describes events that really might have happened. And almost did.
  • Now You See It

    Now You See It

    In Now You See It, the prolific master of suspense and screenwriting (I Am Legend; The Incredible Shrinking Man) delivers a knock-out tale the likes of which have not been seen since Henry Clouzot's devlilish thriller Diabolique.
  • Let's Get This Party Started

    Let's Get This Party Started

    Let's Get This Party Started is a guide to more than 15 parties you can throw for your kids that are inexpensive, wildly inventive, and fun. Each party includes two crafts, one game, and one recipeall of which you can put together with your child. Author Soleil Moon Frye also offers countless tips and ideas that will inspire you. Among the thematic parties featured in the book are the fairy party, the pirate party, the movie-on-the-lawn party, the camp party, the '80s party, the rainbow party, the Halloween party, the luau, and many more, captured in gorgeous and colorful images by Frye's brother, photographer Meeno. Timely and fun, this book is a must-have for parents who love entertaining with their kids. Praise for Let's Get This Party Started: Quality children's party books are high in demand, so this may be a welcome resource for families with young children … Recommended."Library Journal
热门推荐
  • 异世之清冷舞儿

    异世之清冷舞儿

    前世身为孤儿的她,因男友和挚友背叛的‘坦白’心脏病发作死去。今世重生的她,没有受到眷顾,反而是家人的排斥和厌恶。不过早就将一切抛开的她,没有因此而受伤,一步步的完善自己的人生,一步步的努力,学医,学武..争取暗夜堂主的地位,创造第一画师的名号...本将爱情抛弃的她,遇见他后,是否会将心中的冰墙一点点打碎......
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 跨越24区的留学生

    跨越24区的留学生

    一个人,一群人,生命绽放着无比精彩的岛屿,你可曾抵达?爱吐槽的南八区留学生小姑娘高兴,开启了为期180天的奇妙留学生活。靠谱的朋友?不存在的。不互坑何来真金白银的友情。为人师表的导师?你当导师都是佛系的咩?酷酷的恋人?这个可以有!所以,明年你会申请去留学吗?————————————————感谢投资本书的读者大大(*??`*)感谢投推荐票的读者大大(*'ω'*)
  • 松开

    松开

    鲍贝:居杭州。中国作协会员,二级作家,浙江省作协签约作家。出版长篇《爱是独自缠绵》,《红莲》,《伤口》;中短篇小说集《撕夜》;随笔集《悦读江南女》,《轻轻一想就碰到了天堂》等。
  • 科技传播系统

    科技传播系统

    罗修,一个杂役院弟子,天生的废物,直到有一天,他偶然间得到了一个来自异界的系统,为他打开了新的天地,也为他的修炼带来了天翻地覆的变化,看他一步步走向虚空,走向宇宙,走向无尽的未来。精彩内容期待您的关注!
  • 华佗的锦囊

    华佗的锦囊

    《中国好故事·故事家林华玉经典作品集:华佗的锦囊》收录了《俺想要个女娃》;《为你撑了十八年》;《皮日休吟诗露踪迹》等故事。
  • 腹黑神帝,傲娇妃

    腹黑神帝,傲娇妃

    向来痴,从此醉。新书【快穿之我和男主组CP】求关注!
  • 逃婚弃妃

    逃婚弃妃

    “我死了吧!”当慕容雨再次争开眼睛的时候,不禁对自己说:“这里是天堂?还是地狱?”犹豫了一下,苦笑道:像我这种自动放弃生命的人,死后应该是会下地狱的吧,并且是十八层的阿鼻地狱吧。一想到待会有可能要忍受“上刀山、下油锅”的痛苦,慕容雨不禁直打寒战,心里暗自懊悔。如果,如果可以重来,她决不会走这一步。回想从前,她是多么的热爱生命,即便从小就生活在悲伤中,她也从没动过……
  • 人类未解之谜

    人类未解之谜

    人类总是充满好奇心,富有求知欲望,不仅对历史积淀的文化知识和日益发展的科学技术具有浓厚的兴趣,而且对世界上许许多多的未解之谜都充满了好奇心。这是人类的心理特征,也是人类社会进步的一种基本动因。从地球到宇宙,从自然到历史从科学到艺术,在这许许多多的领域中,无不存在着这样或那样的“未解之谜”。
  • 镜子

    镜子

    林那北:本名林岚,已出版长篇小说《剑问》《我的唐山》《浦之上》,长篇散文《宣传队运动队》,中短篇小说集《唇红齿白》《寻找妻子古菜花》等二十部著作。大型历史人文纪录片《三坊七巷》《过台湾》《闽南望族》总撰稿。福建省作家协会副主席,现供职于《中篇小说选刊》杂志社。当时是这样的,邓宏三来说要出大事了。邓宏三为此前后加起来共来了五次,当然余多顺只见到两次,另外三次家里门关着,余多顺不在。房子要被收走,地也不留,家里的东西更不客气,总之都要充公。什么意思!房子、地和家里所有东西都是祖上留下的,房契、地契白纸黑字摆在那里,充公?充哪个公?