Pubdate: Sat, 04 Oct 2003 Source: Bennington Banner (VT) Copyright: 2003 by MediaNews Group, Inc. and NENI Newspapers Contact: http://www.benningtonbanner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2424 Author: John LeMay, Staff Writer Cited: Veterans Against Drugs http://www.vva.org/veteransagainstdrugs/ FINDING WAYS TO HEAL BENNINGTON -- Few who lived through the Vietnam War era weren't touched by it, but those who fought in the war carry it with them for life. Some of those veterans, members of Vietnam Veterans of America, have found that by getting together to help each other and the community, they're better able to live with the memory of the war and turn that memory to good use. John Miner, president of Chapter 601 of the Vietnam Veterans of America, based in Bennington, calls the organization's work "healing through service." The chapter has 88 members and received its charter in 1992. The national organization named Miner member of the year in 2001. Perhaps the most impressive project the chapter has completed under Miner's guidance is getting the Veterans Administration to locate a health clinic in Bennington that now serves 2000 veterans. "There've been so many projects that I forget what I've done," Miner said. "But it's everybody believing in it. I alone could not have done it." It took the sudden shock of seeing newscasts of bombing in Iraq during the 1990 Gulf War to change Miner from a man who kept his thoughts of Vietnam to himself to a man who spends most of his waking hours working for veterans' causes. "It brought back a lot of memories," Miner said, memories that he had to face and deal with. "At that time I got very involved in the local chapter." Other projects of the chapter include bringing a traveling replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington to Bennington in 1994. Two years ago the chapter brought a traveling Vietnam war museum to Mount Anthony Union High School, and last year the chapter completed a drive to line the driveway of the Vermont Veterans Home with flagpoles and American flags. Chapter 601 has completed these and other projects in addition to lobbying Montpelier and Washington on veterans issues. The chapter has helped countless veterans get health care and counseling and, if needed, pay for food, shelter and clothing. The latest project is to bring a national program, Veterans Against Drugs, to Bennington's schools. State Rep. Joseph Krawczyk, R-Bennington, a platoon leader in Vietnam, a retired army colonel and a member of the chapter, said veterans are working with administrators and teachers to design a program to teach core values, and help students become responsible citizens and steer away from drug and alcohol abuse. The program will start with fourth and fifth graders, following the advice of Sue Maguire, principal of Mount Anthony Union High School, to start with young students. Ronald Elwell, a chapter member and retired Bennington police officer who has worked with youth in the past, is devoting time to the program, and the veterans have sought the guidance of substance abuse prevention specialist Judith Fellows, Krawczyk said. Vietnam-era veterans, who served when substance abuse was rampant in the military, are well suited to the task of addressing the issue today, Krawczyk said. In Vietnam, four out of 10 soldiers would test positive for substance abuse, he said. By 1994 when he was a commander in Germany, the military had reduced that fraction to one in 2,500, he said. Like other Vietnam veterans, it has taken Krawczyk time to come to terms with his service in the war. "I had experiences I think about every day," he said. In 1983, Krawczyk found the courage to visit the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., where he was stunned by its emotional impact, he said. These days he corresponds by e-mail with his daughter, Michelle Krawczyk, an Army captain commanding troops in Tikrit, Iraq. Phil Young, the chaplain of Chapter 601, served as a Marine in Vietnam. "I took an AK-47 round right in the throat," he said. The wound took him out of action and put him in the hospital for five months. But it healed faster than the survivor guilt he felt for not completing the mission and for leaving his fellow combatants behind. That, plus the common experience of Vietnam veterans that they weren't received well when they returned home, made Young's emotional recovery a long one. Like Miner, a shock woke him up and started him on the road to recovery. For Young, it was seeing the moving wall when it came to Bennington. Young wrote in an e-mail to the Banner, "The healing cannot be accomplished by an individual. Alone we can only suppress the dark side the war has left us. True healing begins when we admit to ourselves the depth of pain we suffer and then reach out to others for help, be they friends, family or professionals." For him, family, work, volunteerism and remembering his fallen brothers are the keys, he wrote. Young started and maintains the annual Vietnam Veterans Veteran Day Road Race, a fundraiser for veterans that's about to hold its ninth race. Miner credited Robert Hannan, a vocational rehabilitation counselor in Bennington, with getting the ball rolling that resulted in Chapter 601 receiving a charter. Hannan told the Banner that Vietnam Veterans of America is a vital organization because it serves a need that no other organization can for that generation of soldiers. "A lot of these people might have been lost by the wayside had this not happened," Hannan said. "I'm proud to have been at least part of making it happen." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake