Monday, July 30, 2018

The Face of Number 4,000

Listen, I want you to read part of an article that I recently came across. I cut and paste the political crap out of it because I don't believe it has a place in between paragraphs about a man who died for his country. If you want to read the whole thing you can here

Chris Hake was from my hometown in Oklahoma. He was a good person and a patriot. He died for our country on March 28, 2003, in Baghdad. It was Easter Sunday. He left behind a wife and son. He left a hole. Let us not forget him.

"... I want to tell you about number 4,000, because he has a name and he had a wonderful life to come.
His name is Christopher M. Hake. He was a U.S. Army Staff Sargent. More importantly, he was a husband to wife Kelli and a father to 1-year-old son, Gage.
He was from Enid, Oklahoma — and he was 26 years old.
We can’t say for sure that Hake was number 4,000 of our Iraq dead because Pvt. George Delgado, 21, of Palmdale, Calif., Pfc. Andrew J. Habsieger, 22, of Festus, Mo. and Spc. Jose A. Rubio Hernandez, 24, of Mission, Texas all died in a horrible blast earlier this week when, according to the Defense Department, “their vehicle encountered an improvised explosive” in Baghdad.
...
Hake, a graduate of the Oklahoma Bible Academy (OBA), who lived with his wife and infant son near Fort Stewart, GA, was described by grieving family members as a man devoted to his belief that he was helping the Iraqi people and, more than anything, the men with whom he served.
“He was 100 percent sure we should be there, and he talked of the love of the Iraqi people for him and his guys,” said his father, Peter Hake, who also said his son loved the men in his command. “He said they would die for each other, and they did,”
And he had made a quick decision to sign up. The boy described by his father as an “energetic, rambunctious kid” simply went to the military recruiter’s office after he graduated from high school and returned home having enlisted in the Army.
“He got out of high school and didn’t know what to do. I mentioned the service, and I was thinking the Air Force,” Pete Hake said. “He went down to see his recruiter that day and came home and told me he had joined the Army.”
The 26-year-old, who was on his second combat deployment to Iraq, was remembered by his former high school principal as respectful and quiet.
“We saw him go on after graduation in 2000 to show his true heart as a kid who is very devoted. He still had strong ties here at OBA,” said Principal Mark Shuck of the young man who graduated in 2000. “He was an all-American kid. He was ‘yes sir,’ ‘no sir’ and very respectful. I would use him as an example to other kids as they grow up. He always fit that mode very well.”
“He was quietly compassionate. He generally cared for people.”
Chris Hake had been married for just under three years and his father said going on the second tour of duty in Iraq was an enormously difficult choice — made all the more painful by having to leave his baby son.
“It literally tore his heart out to walk out on that boy,” said Peter Hake. “It made him wish he could be done with the war.”
As do the vast majority of Americans.
...
And near or on number 4,000, we should remember the face of Christopher M. Hake, who died at only 26 years old."


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