By 1st Lt. Lawton King
Regimental Combat Team - 5
1st marine Division Public Affairs
HADITHA, Iraq - A two-year-old Iraqi girl returned to Haditha, March 7, after undergoing open-heart surgery at the Monroe Carell, Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt University and was reunited with her father and the rest of her family.
Ala Thabit Fattah, the girl's father, and several family members traveled with Marines to Baghdad International Airport to meet Amenah, who departed Iraq, Jan. 22, with his wife.
"I am very happy; I was very worried that my daughter would not come home alive," Fattah said through an interpreter. "I am very grateful for the great treatment the American people gave to my family."
The family then flew to Al Asad Airbase in Al Anbar Province, where they boarded an MV-22 Osprey for the final leg of the voyage to Haditha.
Back home, the family served dinner in her honor.
"I've got four children, two boys and two girls myself, I was very happy to see a father, mother and child reunite," said Maj. Kevin Jarrard, Company L's commanding officer and the architect behind the medical effort.
Marines from 3rd Battalion, 23rd Marines, which is assigned to the Camp Pendleton-based Regimental Combat Team 5, discovered Amenah on a routine patrol through the city and noticed her extremities exhibited a bluish hue whenever she exerted herself.
The battalion surgeon, Capt. John Nadeau, recognized the gravity of her condition and coordinated arrangements with the medical staff at Vanderbilt to perform a surgical procedure to remedy her heart defect.
Jarrard, a 35-year-old native of Gainesville, Ga., choreographed the international effort to transport her to the United States and oversaw the entire operation. His wife, Kelly Jarrard, raised the funds to finance the
journey on both ends.
"I am very thankful for Jarrard, Nadeau, and I consider all the Marines in Haditha father to Amenah, and I will do anything as a return favor for the generosity of the Marines helping my family," said Fattah.
"Thank you is just too small of a word to express how I feel," said Amehah's mother, Maha Muhammed Bandar.
When Amenah arrived at Vanderbilt, doctors discovered, among other things, that her heart was turned backwards. Nevertheless, the Feb. 11 operation was success, and Amenah spent the rest of her time in America recovering.
The progress wrought in Haditha by the Marines and their Iraqi partners over the last several years fostered an environment in which a humanitarian operation of this nature was possible.
Haditha is a reviving city on the verge of coalition force demilitarization and Iraqi lead with regard to security and municipal governance. This city's success is the result of cooperative efforts and trust, such as with the care of Amenah. Her story is not an isolated incident but another chapter in the
narrative that is Haditha.
"Haditha got really bad in 2005: all of the government facilities (hospital, Iraqi police) were useless because insurgents controlled the town. If anyone spoke out against the insurgents, they would either threaten the person or kill them," Capt. Samir Miflih, a local government official who attended Amenah's homecoming, said through an interpreter. "At the end of 2006, the Marines who used to be here helped organize the police system again and encouraged the people to return to work."
Date Taken: | 03.08.2008 |
Date Posted: | 03.10.2008 08:15 |
Story ID: | 17164 |
Location: | HADITHA, IQ |
Web Views: | 70 |
Downloads: | 56 |
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