A 13-year-old Port Hope girl has figured out how important a simple visit to the hospital can be to the recovery of a wounded soldier
By JOE WARMINGTON
Sometimes it takes a kid to put things in perspective.
When 13-year-old Kate Fearnall heard about several wounded Canadian soldiers recovering in hospital, she wanted to help.
"They are good people who are serving our country," she said. "They have a lot of courage."
That's why the Port Hope teen is heading to the St. John's Rehab Hospital today to visit wounded Canadian warriors -- including Sapper Mike McTeague, a 20-year-old for whom the Wounded Warrior Fund was named.
She will find a brave young man battling back from extreme wounds from a September suicide bomb attack in Afghanistan.
The fund was inspired by his experience of living for months with nothing to do but suffer alone. Capt. Wayne Johnston wants to make sure no wounded Canadian soldier will ever again go without a TV or some way to stay entertained.
And when Fearnall's dad Michael told her about this, Kate immediately "wanted to see if we can help them."
It started yesterday with a hug for one wounded warrior recovering in her home town of Port Hope. It was appreciated by Cpl. Brock Vigon. "I am so impressed with the youth of today," Vigon said.
Despite being seriously hurt in the "friendly fire" incident Sept. 4 he will soon go back to Petawawa with his pregnant wife to start planning a future. He understands he could have been one of the 42 fellow soldiers who won't have that luxury.
And so does Kate. The eighth-grader at Dr. M.S. Hawkins school took an idea to her classmates of doing something for these recovering soldiers. "We want to pay them back for all that they have done," she said. "We are going to write letters to companies like Apple and Microsoft and see if they can do something -- you know, laptops and IPods."
Good for them. Working with the families Capt. Johnston has found himself thrown into the most difficult phase of his military career. "There has been days when I have been in tears," he said.
But there are days like this when you see a kid who gets it.
It has been special to watch the response of Canadians with this fund because what Johnston noticed was while these young people were in hospital getting top-notch medical treatment, there was not an awful lot for them to do.
Turns out it costs $10 a day to rent a TV and that can add up if you are in hospital for a year. Try coming up with $3,365 on a soldier's salary. Try lying in a bed for a year without a TV.
"We are creating a Wounded Warrior pack to send these guys," said Johnston, adding they will consist of books, movies, DVDS, CDs, IPods, MP3 players and other electronics and games.
The response has been overwhelming. More than $22,000 has been raised so far. Johnston would love to get $100,000 in the fund ahead of the spring when the risk of more casualties is highest.
If you want to donate, send a cheque to the Sapper Mike McTeague Wounded Warrior Fund at PO Box 141, Stn. Brooklin, Whitby, Ont., L1M 1B5.
If anyone has any neat ideas of how we could do a fundraiser let me know. My pal, former police association boss Craig Bromell at AM 640, made an excellent point when he said "m aybe we won't have to go out and raise this money because the military really should be providing for this."
"Positive things with this guy Gen. Hillier seem to happen when he hears about issues like this."
Craig likes the idea of pressuring government to cover these expenses and I agree. If someone in government wants to do that, today is as as good a day as any. Why wait?
We can't have our soldiers stuck in hospital having to pay for their own TV and not having something to pass the time. We are better than that.
"You have been through a traumatic event and all you do is just lie there and think," said Vigon, 29. "Some music or something is needed to get your mind off things."
He knows first hand since he is one of dozens of Canadians recovering from severe wounds from the Sept. 4 "friendly-fire" incident.
The pain you feel, he said, is not just the physical. "I lost five friends in 24 hours," he said.
"I was standing right next to Cpl. Mark Graham when he died," Vigon said. "He was an awesome guy and it seems only the good ones die young."
And sometimes it takes a youngster like Kate Fearnall to help the rest of us understand it's okay to wear your heart on your sleeve.