[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 108 (Wednesday, July 21, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6073-S6074]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
KISSES FOR OUR TROOPS
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I am honored to share a Vermont community's
tribute to the stout hearts and brave souls of the service men and
women serving overseas.
This year, in recognition of Vermont's largest military deployment
since World War II, the townspeople of
[[Page S6074]]
Clarendon, VT, sought a way to show their support for Americans
stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan. At the town's elementary school, 39
children of the ages of 7 to 10 recorded a song called ``Box of
Kisses'' for our troops in the National Guard. With the help of two
local musicians, James Mee and Michael Mugrage, the students of
Clarendon Elementary School devoted their lunch and recess time to this
project. Students also spent their free time handcrafting more than 500
paper boxes filled with brief personal messages and pieces of candy as
tokens of their thanks for the sacrifices being made by these
Vermonters serving abroad.
Although Box of Kisses is being sent to hundreds of soldiers, this
community's project is a highly personal act for many families in
Clarendon. Within this school community of only 198 students, 12 people
have family members serving in Afghanistan. Marcelle and I are so proud
of and grateful for our Nation's servicemembers and their families. So
are Vermonters in every community throughout our State, who are showing
support for our soldiers' families in ways small and large every day--
by mowing lawns, babysitting, shoveling sidewalks, and through many
other small kindnesses. Clarendon's story is another example of why I
am proud to be a Vermonter.
I ask unanimous consent that there be printed in the Record an
article, published in the Rutland Herald, in which reporter Cristina
Kumka tells this heartening story from Clarendon.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the Rutland Herald, July 14, 2010]
Love in a Box: Vermont Residents Send Kisses to Afghanistan
(By Cristina Kumka)
All it took was one small Vermont community and one song to
connect troops overseas with home.
Shortly after Vermont's largest military deployment since
World War II occurred this January, residents of Clarendon
and students from the town's elementary school wanted to do
something for 10 families in their community with loved ones
sent off to battle in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Children in grades 2-6, some of whom with mothers or
fathers serving overseas, recorded a song by Rutland musician
James Mee and fellow artist Michael Mugrage called ``Box of
Kisses'' and made 200 CDs.
Then they crafted boxes using simple white paper and
crayons and filled each one with a note and red, white and
blue candy donated by the Vermont Country Store.
The children wrote what they knew--a simple ``thank you,''
``I love you'' or other thought--to remind 500 troops
individually what their purpose there was and how much their
sacrifice meant to the children.
Most of the project was documented--the song posted on
Internet and aired on public access television and student
fundraisers for materials and support filmed on DVDs.
The CDs and the boxes are in the process of being airlifted
or parachuted in to troops in populated or desolate areas of
the Middle East until each gift is gone.
What began as simple gestures intended to remind troops of
home has caught the attention of Americans across the
country.
Mee said that in all in his 30 years in the music industry
no other tune or project has drawn so much attention.
On Tuesday, Mee said he's been contacted by a major candy
company looking to invest in the children's idea, a top music
industry professional from New York and a Texas-based radio
station serving a million military personnel and other
listeners in more than 177 countries.
``I feel like I'm in a Disney movie,'' Mee said.
The song he originally created 10 years ago as a love
ballad with the lyrics, ``When you're far from home, Feeling
like you're all alone, Don't be afraid . . . cause you're
always with us, When you open up your box of kisses,'' has
never been so popular.
But the exposure is mere icing on a larger cake, Mee said.
``The kids are singing their hearts out, many who skipped
recess and lunch, and there's something about that,'' Mee
said. ``No matter how skeptical and cynical you may be, kids
singing like that just melts your heart.''
Clarendon's Maria Stephan is hand-delivering one of the
boxes and a copy of the song to First Sgt. Francisco Herrera,
for his three children. Two of his children, Abigail and
D.J., attend Clarendon Elementary School and were key members
of the volunteer project.
The project was a way for them to keep their dad close to
home even when he's away.
Stephan, a strategic planner with the Office of the
Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization who directly
reports to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, said the
troops need reminders of home and America needs a reminder of
them.
``People (some troops) have a sense when they come back
that it's a forgotten war,'' Stephan said.
``With the whole McChrystal (former Gen. Stanley
McChrystal) thing . . . sometimes the dangerous stuff gets
forgotten,'' she said. ``It's nice to know people do care.''
____________________