[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 60 (Wednesday, April 25, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Page S2720]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING OUR ARMED FORCES
Lance Corporal Abraham Tarwoe
Mr. REED. Mr. President, I rise today, along with my colleague, the
Presiding Officer, to pay tribute to Lance Corporal Abraham Tarwoe, a
Rhode Islander who served in the U.S. Marine Corps.
On April 12, Lance Corporal Tarwoe was killed while conducting combat
operations in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. A memorial service will be
held on Saturday in Rhode Island to honor his selfless sacrifice, and
he will then be laid to rest in his native home of Liberia.
When he was about 7 years old, Lance Corporal Tarwoe left Liberia and
started a new life in the United States. He was one among thousands of
Liberians who came to the United States seeking safety from a civil
war. We are proud that so many of these brave individuals and their
families now call Rhode Island their home, and our State continues to
be enriched by this strong community.
Lance Corporal Tarwoe enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps in June 2009.
He was on his second deployment to Afghanistan, assigned to the 2nd
Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine
Expeditionary Force, where he was serving as a mortarman and had
additional duties as a military dog handler.
Each generation of Americans is called upon to protect and sustain
our democracy, and among our greatest heroes are the men and women who
have worn the uniform of our Nation and have sacrificed for our country
to keep it safe and to keep it free.
It is our duty to protect the freedom they sacrificed their lives for
through our service, our citizenship. We must continue to keep their
memories alive and honor their heroism, not simply by our words but by
our deeds as citizens of this great country.
Today, our thoughts are with Lance Corporal Tarwoe's loving family in
Liberia, Famatta and Abraham Kar, his brother Randall, his wife Juah,
and his son Avant, and all his family, friends, and his comrades-in-
arms. We join them in commemorating his sacrifice and honoring his
example of selfless service, love, courage, and devotion to the Marines
with whom he served and the people of Afghanistan he was trying to
help.
Lance Corporal Tarwoe is one among many Rhode Islanders who have
proven their loyalty, their integrity, and their personal courage by
giving the last full measure of their lives in service to our country
in Afghanistan, in Iraq, and elsewhere around the globe.
Today, we honor his memory and the memory of all those who have
served and sacrificed as he did. He has joined a distinguished roll of
honor, including many Rhode Islanders who have served and sacrificed
since September 11, 2001.
All of these men and women who have given their lives in the last
decade in Afghanistan and Iraq have done a great service to the Nation.
It is a roll of honor. It is a roll that Lance Corporal Tarwoe joins,
and it should be for us a roll not just to recognize and remember but
to recommit, to try in some small way to match their great sacrifice
for this great Nation.
In Lance Corporal Tarwoe's situation, it also should remind us that
this young man, born in Liberia, who came as a child and to Rhode
Island, demonstrates to us all that being an American is about what is
in your heart, not necessarily where you were born or what language you
may have spoken as a child. It is about believing in America--believing
so much that you would give your life to defend the values that we so
much cherish.
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