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From Green Bay to the Persian Gulf North to Kuwait City |
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In the Bayan neighborhood, one team stopped to inspect a local store which had been picked as a future distribution point. Before any inspectig could be done however, a smalll crowd gathered and the team's interpreter, SGT Hamad Al-Sabah, began speaking with the people. SGT Hamad was a memher of the royal family, but at this point the most important thing was the desire of the people to start describing their seven-months' ordeal.
The conversation and the gesturing commenced, at rapid fire speed. Soon a lady appeared in the crowd with a tray bearing a tea dsipenser and enough cups for the entire team. SGT Hamad relayed the story to the other team members of how that lady was the heroine of the neighborhood. She was the first to enter the nearby jail, freeing Kuwaiti prisoners after the Iraqis left, getting a bomb defused, and raising a Kuwaiti flag over the jail. She praised the Americans and offered to cook for them all.
Other people in the crowd had their own stories to tell: of friends being pulled out of bed by the Irais, taken into the street and shot; of a father who shot an Iraqi who killed his son; and of less painful things, merely inconveniences, like scarce water and no utilities. People in the crowd offered the team bottles of water, and refused to take them back when team members objected. How the lady had cooked tea remained an unanswered question. People, both team members and local residents, took pictures. Children were picked up; kisses were exchanged. Why does it take war to make people so happy? Another unanswered question.
Somehow, after a couple hours, the team left and returned to its base. The first day of work was done. One site was visited. How would the 432nd manage to visit hundreds more?
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