[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 149 (2003), Part 7]
[Senate]
[Pages 8592-8593]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




              TRIBUTE TO PRIVATE FIRST CLASS LORI PIESTEWA

  Mr. DASCHLE. Mr. President, I want to take just a couple of minutes 
of my leader time to make a statement with regard to a very special 
young woman.
  Throughout America--especially in Native American communities--
Americans are grieving the loss in combat of Army PFC Lori Piestewa. 
But we are also feeling pride for Lori Piestewa's remarkable life.
  PFC Piestewa was a member of the Army mechanics unit that was 
ambushed by Iraqi soldiers on March 23.
  Her body, and the remains of eight other soldiers, were recovered 
last week from a hospital in southern Iraq when Special Forces stormed 
the hospital to rescue another member of the 507th Maintenance Company, 
PFC Jessica Lynch.
  Private Piestewa is the first Native American woman in the U.S. Armed 
Forces ever to die as a result of combat.
  She was 23 years old. She leaves behind two small children--a 4-year-
old son and a 3-year-old daughter. . . .
  She also leaves behind a broken-hearted but proud family--and 
countless friends.
  There are more than 12,000 Native Americans serving in our military 
today--including many from my State of South Dakota.
  They and Private Piestewa are part of a noble tradition that too few 
Americans know much about.
  It is a tradition that includes heroes like the ``Code Talkers'' of 
World War II--the service members from the Lakota, Navajo and other 
Indian nations who developed the only military code that was never 
broken by the Japanese.
  The Code Talkers were key to U.S. victories throughout the Pacific 
theater. Their service helped turn the tide of the war--and saved 
untold numbers of American lives.
  Today, Private Piestewa takes her place alongside them as an American 
who risked everything to protect her land and her people.
  Over the weekend, memorials began to appear all over the reservation 
near Tuba City, AZ, where Private Piestewa grew up and where her family 
still lives.
  At one of the memorials, someone left a group of red, white, and blue 
balloons. Included in the bunch was one green balloon, the team color 
for Tuba City High School, where Lori Piestewa had been a softball star 
and a junior ROTC commander.
  On May 24, Private Piestewa will be honored at another memorial. Red 
rose petals will be place in her honor in the reflecting pool of the 
Women in Military Service for American Memorial at Arlington National 
Cemetery.
  When I heard about the memorials to Private Piestewa, I thought of 
another cemetery--at Wounded Knee, on the Pine Ridge reservation in 
South Dakota.
  I remember the first time I visited it. As I walked toward the 
cemetery, I was

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surprised to see little American flags dotting many of the graves. When 
I got close enough to read the headstones, I could see that many of the 
people there were veterans.
  Some--like Private Piestewa--had died in the service. Others had died 
years after they took off the uniform. But they wanted it recorded on 
their graves: This person loved this Nation.
  I have never seen a more profound expression of American patriotism.
  The thoughts and prayers of our Nation are with the family and 
friends of PFC Lori Piestewa.
  She was an American hero. We are deeply grateful to her for her 
service and sacrifice--and to all Native Americans who are serving, and 
have served, our Nation in uniform.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
  Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I compliment the distinguished minority 
leader for this very sensitive and very important statement about this 
wonderful person. As someone who belongs to a family which has lost my 
older brother, and lost a brother-in-law--an older brother in the 
Second World War, and brother-in-law in Vietnam--and then have another 
brother-in-law who is suffering tremendously from his war wounds, who 
fought both in the Inchon Reservoir in Korea and also in Vietnam, I 
have to say these are the greatest of all Americans. I really 
appreciate his sensitivity in delivering this message for the Senate 
here today.

                          ____________________