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POL–E-CHARKI,
Afghanistan, Aug. 2010
– When Marine Corps
Lance Cpl. Gerardo
“Josh” DeAvila was
wounded in Marja,
Afghanistan, July 10,
he was half a world
away from home. But he
quickly was surrounded
by family and friends,
due to a strong
military family and
community.
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Marine
Corps
Lance
Cpl.
Gerardo
“Josh”
DeAvila,
left,
poses
with,
left
to
right,
his
cousin,
Army
Staff
Sgt.
David
DeAvila;
his
father,
Army
Sgt.
Jerry
DeAvila
of the
Georgia
National
Guard;
his
brother-in-law,
Army
Spc.
Josh
Head;
and
his
uncle,
Army
Maj.
David
DeAvila.
Courtesy
photo
(Click
photo
for
screen-resolution
image);high-resolution
image
available.
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DeAvila, assigned to
Company I, 3rd
Battalion of the 6th
Regiment, heard shots
fired and then felt
what he described as
“a baseball bat”
hitting him. Shortly
after a medic came
around, DeAvila saw
the blood and realized
he had been hit.
He
was evacuated to Camp
Dwyers and then Bagram
Airfield for surgery.
Doctors discovered he
had been shot twice;
one bullet missed
major arteries in his
arm, and the other
barely missed his
spinal cord and lodged
in his pelvis.
Meanwhile,
Army Maj. David
DeAvila of Holland,
Mich., serving in
northeastern
Afghanistan, received
word from home that
his nephew had been
hurt.
“I
myself am on orders
with the 82nd Airborne
attached to the 101st
at Camp Blackhorse as
the day shift chief of
operations,” the
major said. “I
received text messages
from the States that
Josh had been hurt and
would be headed to
Germany.”
Major
DeAvila cleared it
through his chain of
command to arrange
transport to Bagram to
be with his nephew.
“I
was able to spend 12
hours with him,
feeding him water and
juice through a straw
and helping to keep
him comfortable,” he
said. “I sat by his
bed the entire
night.”
The
DeAvilas are a
close-knit, very
pro-military family,
the major said. “It
was a bit difficult
for me to see him in
that condition. … I
held Josh the same day
he was born,” he
recalled. “In fact,
my son David, a staff
sergeant in the Army,
and Josh are more like
brothers than cousins.
Josh’s father
recently joined the
National Guard after
being out of the
military for 20 years.
Major
DeAvila said Josh kept
waking up, asking if
his uncle was
comfortable. He said
he told his nephew,
“I have been in the
Army longer than you
have been alive. Don't
worry about me.”
Major
DeAvila helped to
transport his nephew
to the bus that would
take him to the
flightline. There, a
plane awaited that
would carry him to
Germany for more
surgery.
Once
in Germany, the lance
corporal got another
surprise. The chaplain
who came to visit him
was Chaplain (Col.)
Douglas Kinder. Kinder
had married his
parents as a civilian
pastor in Roswell, Ga.
The
young Marine now is
recovering at home in
Braselton, Ga.
“Everyone
I tell this story to
is amazed at the
coincidences,” Major
DeAvila said. “It is
amazing how God
orchestrated the
little pieces.”
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