main menu | standard categories | authors | new stories | search | links | settings | author tools |
A Very Desert Christmas (standard:non fiction, 977 words) | |||
Author: pjlawton | Added: Apr 25 2003 | Views/Reads: 3450/2213 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Being away from home is especially hard at Christmas, sometimes little things can made it easier. Desert Shield/Storm 1990 | |||
A Very Desert Christmas By P.J. Lawton Everyone has a special Christmas, one that will remain forever in his or her memory. Some will remember a special gift, or maybe when all the family was able to get together. Others will remember that first Christmas when their child begins to understand and is no longer afraid of the Mall Santa Claus. My special Christmas memory is a little different. You could say that it had to do with my family, my expended family that is, and what I like to consider as a Very Desert Christmas. My military unit shipped out and arrived in Saudi Arabia for Operation Desert Shield on October 3rd, 1990. After a week spent waiting for all our equipment to arrive we moved forward to our desert position. Most of us were not to see a town or village for over six months. The battalion consisted of five companies; four were regular Army and one National Guard comprising approximately 780 men. Since we were a combat unit, no women were assigned. After about a month some of our mail finally began to catch up with us. A few soldiers began to receive mail pretty regularly, while others hardly seemed to get any at all. To help the situation, around the end of November we started to receive 'Any Soldier' mail from folks back home. As Platoon Sergeant of the battalion headquarters platoon, the mail was one of my responsibilities. Knowing the importance of mail to morale, I tried to insure that the 'Any Soldier' mail was distributed equally and encouraged those who received little mail to read and answer several letters. In December we started to receive a large quantity of 'Any Soldier' packages. As Christmas got closer, we were receiving as many as 50 to 75 packages each day. One of my soldiers came to me with what I thought to be a magnificent idea. His idea was simple; hold the 'Any Soldier' packages and not distribute them until Christmas Eve. This way we could insure that all soldiers and especially those without families would get something for Christmas. By Christmas Eve we had accumulated several hundred packages, almost enough to fill a small tent. About three days before Christmas, I had received a package from my wife and daughter that contained a small three-foot Christmas tree, fully decorated. I set it up in the common area of our tent so that all could enjoy it. Some soldiers in my platoon had received packages from home and started putting them under the tree to wait for Christmas Eve. This way all could enjoy the opening of gifts; even they hadn't received any of their own. Christmas Eve morning started like many others had, really cold with the usual, almost daily, dust storm. From the looks of our area of operation, one wouldn't know it was almost Christmas. Since we were 'visitors' to this Moslem country it had been determined that we should not have any decorations that might offend our 'hosts'. Putting up any outside decorations, especially religious ones were unauthorized. Of course that didn't stop us from decorating as best we inside our living areas. After the daily mail run, I sent word to all unit First Sergeants' to come and pick up the mail and packages for their units. To insure even distribution, I had five areas set up outside the mail tent, one for each company. Each 'Any Soldier' package had a customs tag indicating what was inside. To ensure that they were distributed fairly, I had the mail handler's divide the packages into even piles purely at random without reading the labels. By the time we had dispersed them, there were many packages of all shapes and sizes in each pile. I don't know how the other companies distributed the packages; however, ours was done this way. I sent for the Platoon Sergeants and divided the packages from our Company's pile equally among them. Each Platoon Sergeant could then decide how to have his own Platoon's Christmas party. The soldiers of my platoon placed their packages around our tiny Christmas tree. After dinner we had our Christmas celebration. One of the soldiers had Click here to read the rest of this story (34 more lines)
Authors appreciate feedback! Please write to the authors to tell them what you liked or didn't like about the story! |
pjlawton has 21 active stories on this site. Profile for pjlawton, incl. all stories Email: pjlawton1@yahoo.com |