Journey of Hope Fall 2015 | Page 38

ANYONE CAN BUILD A SCHOOL FEW BUILD RELATIONSHIPS. THAT MAKES ALL THE DIFFERENCE. BY CHRIS KOLENDA I n early 2007, my unit — roughly 800 men and women of 1-91 Cavalry, 173rd Airborne Brigade — was scheduled to deploy to Iraq. We were busy with pre-deployment training that focused on the history and culture of Iraq as well as the basics of the Arabic language. Some of the paratroopers with an exceptional aptitude for languages even received special Arabic language training. All of us were doing our best to learn as much as possible in a short amount of time. Then, unexpectedly, orders changed. We were instead headed to Afghanistan. All of our research about Iraqi culture and our Arabic language training suddenly became useless. In a crunch for time — deployment was only a few weeks away — I frantically read everything about Afghanistan that I could get my hands on. Despite it all, my unit and I were not prepared fully for the complexity of Afghanistan. Then we were deployed to one of the most violent areas of Afghanistan. The firefights in the complex mountainous terrain were intense and deadly. We won every time, but four of my paratroopers had been killed and scores were wounded in an area roughly the size of Rhode Island. 32 | JOURNEY OF HOPE I picked up Greg’s book expecting a feelMost recently, in late August 2007,