SPRINGFIELD,
Ill., Aug.
2010 – Tammy
Duckworth has
achieved much
since being
wounded in
2004, but
regaining her
pilot’s
license has
given the
wounded
warrior and
top VA
official a
unique
perspective on
the control
she has over
her destiny.
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Tammy
Duckworth,
a
wounded
warrior
and
Department
of
Veterans
Affairs
Assistant
Secretary
for
Public
and
Intergovernmental,
shows
off
her
Federal
Aviation
Administration
certificate
to
fly
a
fixed-wing
aircraft.
st
both
legs
in
2004,
when
her
Blackhawk
helicopter
was
shot
down
in
Iraq.
Illinois
National
Guard
photo
(Click
photo
for
screen-resolution
image);high-resolution
image
available.
|
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Gen. George S.
Patton once
said:
“Success is
how high you
bounce when
you hit the
bottom.”
For Duckworth,
a major and an
Illinois Army
National Guard
aviator, the
bottom came in
2004, when her
Black Hawk
helicopter was
shot down in
Iraq. As a
result of the
attack,
Duckworth lost
both of her
legs and
partial use of
one arm.
Since then,
she has
devoted her
life to public
service,
advocating on
behalf of the
veterans and
the disabled.
In 2009, she
was confirmed
by the Senate
to serve as
the Department
of Veterans
Affairs
Assistant
Secretary for
Public and
Intergovernmental
Affairs.
And she has
devoted her
time over the
last five
years to
winning back,
for starters,
her fixed-wing
pilot’s
license,
recently
passing the
Federal
Aviation
Administration
certification.
“When I woke
up at Walter
Reed, all I
wanted to do
was to go back
to my unit and
fly again,”
said
Duckworth, a
19-year
veteran of the
Illinois Army
National
Guard. “This
fixed-wing
license fills
in the gap in
my life that
has been there
since the day
I was shot
down,”
Duckworth
said.
She completed
about six
months of
training
before taking
her final
check ride at
Manassas
Regional/Harry
P. Davis Field
in northern
Virginia July
19.
“Tammy was a
great student;
well
disciplined
and hard
working,”
said Ben
Negussie, a
flight
instructor at
Dulles
Aviation in
Manassas, Va.
“She wanted
it more than
any other
student. She
pushed more
and has a
great
attitude. She
never
complained,
which has made
me think a lot
before
complaining
about
anything.”
Duckworth has
not flown a
helicopter
since her
Black Hawk was
shot down, but
said she hopes
to return to
the pilot’s
seat of a
helicopter
again. She
said being a
passenger in
the aircraft
is not the
same as being
behind the
controls as a
pilot.
Duckworth said
aviation
provides a
unique way for
her to control
her own
destiny.
She was able
to climb into
a Black Hawk
while at
Walter Reed
and ever since
has been
excited to fly
again.
“I also got
into the Black
Hawk flight
simulator, and
it just felt
right,”
Duckworth
said. “That
cockpit is
where I
belong.”
The first time
she flew in a
Black Hawk was
to welcome her
unit home from
deployment.
“I cried
riding in the
back of the
aircraft,”
Duckworth
said. “I was
happy to see
the guys from
my unit, but
it hurt
tremendously
to be a
passenger and
not part of
the crew.”
Duckworth said
she plans to
purchase a
small airplane
to help her
commute
between
Illinois and
Washington,
D.C.
In the
meantime, she
said the
fixed-wing
license is a
stepping stone
to get back to
flying a
helicopter
again.
“It took
five years to
work my way
through the
FAA’s
medical system
to prove that
I could fly
again with my
disabilities,”
Duckworth
said. “The
fixed-wing
license was
the best way
to demonstrate
my
abilities.”
Since
Duckworth
already has an
FAA helicopter
license, all
she needs to
do is some
refresher
training in a
new civilian
helicopter.
“I
couldn’t get
to this point
without doing
the fixed-wing
rating
first,” she
said.
Duckworth has
become an
inspiration to
many people,
including
Negussie.
“She is an
example to
others not to
give up on
anything in
life,”
Negussie said.
“Things are
not always
going to go
your way, but
anything is
possible if
you have the
right
attitude.”
But Duckworth
said people
who inspire
her are the
crew members
who helped
save her life.
“Not a day
goes by that I
don’t say
thanks for my
crew and their
heroic effort
in saving my
life,” she
said. “I
wake up every
day knowing
that I have to
live a life
worthy of
their
actions.”