JTF-Bravo runs 388 miles in remembrance of POW/MIAs

  • Published
  • By Tech. Sgt. Sonny Cohrs
  • Joint Task Force-Bravo Public Affairs
Soldiers, Airmen and Sailors here completed a remembrance run Oct. 12 in honor of prisoners of war and those missing in action.

Approximately 170 runners took part in the 24-hour ceremony held at the base track. Laps were completed with each runner carrying a baton and reflecting on the sacrifice of those who are listed as POW or MIA. The runners logged a cumulative distance of 388 miles, with the ceremonial baton traveling 168 miles during the event.

"This was a 24-hour run in remembrance of POW/MIA," said Master Sgt. Daryl Brunelle, Soto Cano fire chief, who helped organize and plan the event. "Each base organization had points of contacts who organized the volunteer runners. The first group and the last group carried the POW/MIA flag, and the rest of the runners kept the baton moving throughout the night."

Col. Howard Jones, deputy commander of JTF-Bravo, said the purpose of the ceremony was to remember those "who have endured special hardships, and who have seen combat and even human nature from a very unique perspective.

"We're proud to demonstrate our strong bond to them and each other with a 24-hour run," he said. "Our remembrance, our recognition and our running tie us to something much larger than ourselves. POWs and MIAs still express the essence of what service to a higher calling really means."

During the run, at least two service members went the "extra mile" to honor those who gave the ultimate sacrifice. Tech. Sgt. Brandon Williford, 612th Air Base Squadron, ran a total of 26.25 miles, and Army Sgt. Pete Schaffer ran a total of 29.5 miles during the event.

Sergeant Williford credits the distance he ran to his marathon training prior to his assignment to Soto Cano. 

"I had been training last year and I ran a half-marathon in February," he said. "I felt really good after 12 miles. I figured I could split it up and do it as many (short) blocks."

Sergeant Schaffer, who completed a 32-mile, two-day road march earlier this year, ran 14 laps with the baton, and then paced himself as if it were a road march, putting "one foot in front of the other," he said. The sergeant said he stopped only for short naps and food between 8:15 p.m. and 9 a.m., the next morning.

"We're doing this in remembrance of all the POWs and MIAs," he said. "They were malnourished, beaten and had no sleep. They continued to push themselves through all of that, so there's no reason I couldn't push myself in memory of them."
 
The ceremony had special meaning this year for Tech. Sgt. Mike Reynolds, 612th ABS. The remains of his great, great grandfather, Private Wilson Wilkes Dozier, were identified last month in a Kentucky cemetery.

Private Dozier served during the Civil War with the Scoggins Light Artillery Battalion from Georgia, and died on Sept. 23, 1862 from "black measles," which is believed to be an early form of Rocky Mountain spotted fever.

"He was buried in an unmarked grave for 145 years," Sergeant Reynolds said. "My grandfather started research 60 years ago, and we finished what he started. On POW/MIA Day this year he got a headstone."

Sergeant Reynolds, who also helped organize the ceremony here, said he has always enjoyed planning POW/MIA recognition events. 

"My dad was a fighter jock in Vietnam and his best friend was lost over Laos. One of my earliest memories was the blue sedan pulling up (with the men in uniform) to tell his family," he recalled of his days living in base housing as a military dependent.

According to the Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office, observances are held across the country on military installations, ships at sea, state capitols, schools and veterans' facilities. POW/MIA Recognition Day observance is one of six days throughout the year that Congress has mandated the flying of the National League of Families' POW/MIA flag. 

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