TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif – U.S. Marine Corps Cpl. Nkundimana Binene Claude, a rifleman with Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 23rd Marine Regiment, 4th Marine Division, commissioned as a second lieutenant after leading his squad through a kinetic live fire range at the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, here, June 17, 2023.
Covered in sweat and motivation, Claude, a native of Democratic Republic of Congo and naturalized U.S. citizen, recited his oath of office as he came off the range to attain his lifelong goal of becoming a U.S. Marine Corps officer.
Claude delayed his commissioning ceremony to run Range 400, an event that brings over 300 Marines together to provide support for the maneuver of a single company to assault multiple positions, one last time with his squad at Integrated Training Exercise 4-23. First Lt. Conor Patterson, his platoon commander, describes Claude as “an undeniable leader within Second Platoon, always leading from the front in all that he does and displays all it means to be an infantryman in the Marine Corps.”
Claude was born in 1996 to Philemon Sebihendo Gasengo, a chief of the Banyamulenge Tribe of the DRC, located in the eastern part of the Congo, specifically the Kivu region. To Claude’s friends and family, he was known as Dani Gasengo, which in his native language of Kinyamulenge means Young Gasengo or Gasengo Jr.
As a result of his father’s job, Claude was exposed to many different cultures from an early age, including the U.S. One such influence came from a foreign aid worker whom Claude’s father befriended and whom became a lifelong friend, Capt. Claude, a retired Marine Officer. Claude’s father was particularly fond of the American fighting spirit and had known about many of the battles U.S. Marines fought which inspired him to name his son after his friend.
Since its beginning, the Banyamulenges live by a code of bravery, honor and honesty, which are values expected of all tribesman. These same values attracted Claude from an early age to the core values of honor, courage and commitment the Marine Corps instills in every Marine.
Claude describes it as a marriage at first sight.
“My tribal values and the values that are instilled in any Marine, that's what led my father to lead me into an enlistment and later the pursuit of becoming an officer,” he explained.
Violence broke out in their home region in 1998 and Claude’s father used all his resources to evacuate as many people as he could, including his infant son, Claude, and the rest of his family. During this time Claude’s father stayed to fight with every able-bodied man and entrusted his family’s safety to Capt. Claude. The family was separated, and Claude would not see his father for the next four years, even believing he had died.
His family was rescued by the U.N. Organization Stabilization Mission in the DRC. The U.N.’s mission was to the protect the civilians, humanitarian personnel and human rights defenders under imminent threat of physical violence and to support the government of the DRC in its stabilization and peace consolidation efforts. After being rescued, Claude’s family was granted asylum in the U.S. in 2011. He now calls Texas home.
Upon arriving in his new home, Claude had one goal set in mind: to become a Marine Corps officer. He knew there were steps he had to take to achieve his goal – the first being U.S. citizenship. In 2016, he enlisted in the Marine Corps Reserve and entered a program called the Basic Training Initiative, a program run by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service. This program allows service members to immediately start the naturalization process so they can become citizens as soon as basic training is complete.
Serving in the Marine Corps Reserve accelerated Claude’s path to commissioning. Now as a U.S. citizen and having earned the title of U.S. Marine, his next step was completing Officer Candidate School and earning a bachelor's degree. He began studies at Texas A&M University in 2015, and he completed the ten-week Platoon Leaders Course at OCS in 2019.
Now all he needed was his degree. Tragically, after he returned from OCS, he was told his father was dying from cancer, and he passed away a few months later. Claude couldn’t continue college after his father’s passing and tried going to community college but ended up taking a break from school.
Marine Corps policy requires candidates who leave college to be dropped from the PLC program. They are allowed to reapply, but they can’t continue the current contract.
Claude did just that after a few years. He reapplied to college, this time at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas. Knowing exactly what he needed to do, he submitted another OCS package and was selected. He completed PLC a second time knowing all that was left was to finish his degree. He graduated from Texas State University with a degree in Political Science in 2023.
Although Claude initially wanted to serve on active duty, he credits his time in the Marine Corps Reserve as an important step to achieve his goals.
“Once I commission, I will go active duty, and the Reserve was a route for me to get my citizenship and that way I could start my PLC application," Claude said. "I've learned so much from the Reserve.”
"I have been fortunate to watch Cpl. Claude mature and grow into a strong leader capable of leading Marines as a non-commissioned officer and now an officer," said Capt. Ryan Petty, Claude's former platoon commander. "His zeal for being a Marine was always strong and now he will pass that zeal to his Marines. As his former platoon commander, I take pride in the Marine leader he has become and look forward his future service and unlimited potential. Through adversity he persevered and took his own losses as the fuel for his strength."
This was Claude’s second time at ITX since joining the Marine Corps.
“It is a once-in-a-lifetime experience, you don't really get to train as much as we do here,” he said. “As an officer, this is exactly what I want to do. I want to be able to command an operation as big as this, maybe in a training environment or maybe in an operational environment.”
Claude is excited about his future as an officer.
“The Marine Corps brings together a lot of people from a lot of different walks of life," he said. "I want to be able to travel, I want to be able to talk to different individuals, and just broaden my knowledge of the geography of the world, of the different cultures. And, of course, everybody has a little something that they bring to the table. I want to get as much of that as possible.”
Claude will continue his officer journey when he attends The Basic School in Quantico, Virginia, in September. He sees this as homage to his father, who had always wanted his son to uphold the values of the Banyamulenge tribe and the Marine Corps.
“My job is to be a warrior and to learn how to fight, and once the time is right, actually go fight,” he said. “I know this made my father proud and he is smiling down on me wherever he is.”
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Date Taken: | 06.17.2023 |
Date Posted: | 06.18.2023 18:56 |
Story ID: | 447448 |
Location: | TWENTYNINE PALMS, CALIFORNIA, US |
Web Views: | 1,839 |
Downloads: | 3 |
This work, From the Congo to U.S. Citizen, Now Marine Officer, by CPT Mark Andries, identified by DVIDS, must comply with the restrictions shown on https://www.dvidshub.net/about/copyright.