A great husband, a wonderful father, a successful businessman, a Veteran who gave his life to and for his country and a community member who did so much quietly. I will miss our chats in his store and his smile, among many other happy memories. Mark is the kind of man who was always there for those he cared about and the difference he has made in people's lives will remain forever in our hearts.
Rest in Peace, Mark.
Listed below is a piece by Allan Dollison which speaks about Mark. I had it two days ago but being on the computer was not where my mind or heart was; Mark and his family were. This ran as a My Word in today's T-S:
Through both my personal and military business travels, I
have been extremely fortunate to go to Washington DC several times. Most
recently earlier this spring. I always seek out the memorials honoring our
wars, and did so on my very first trip with my mother in 1985, before I had
joined the military.
That year, the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial Wall had been
constructed the year before. On that trip, I was asked by a childhood high
school friend, “Heh find my dad’s name. He is on there somewhere on that wall.”
My friend was raised by his grandmother, and I always asked myself why he had
not been raised by his parents. With that prophetic request, I now knew why. He
had never talked about it.
Like I said from the beginning, I have had the great fortune
to go to Washington several times. In 2011, I finally got to see the WWII
memorial which had heretofore not existed. There are many people in Humboldt
County who have never gone, nor will they be able to go and see that very
powerful Vietnam Memorial Wall. Many of those are Vietnam veterans who did
survive, and lost their buddies, and would be no doubt brought to tears by
seeing those names. (I have visited the grave of a fellow soldier from
Afghanistan at Arlington, and I know how this effects you.)
Many communities are full of folks who cannot make it to
Washington DC, sometimes for physical reasons, others purely economic.
Therefore, countless replica walls have been built and they travel to
communities all around America. Humboldt has been visited by one such wall, but
it was over 30 years ago. I personally have officiated at countless Vietnam
veteran funerals/remembrances in the past year and a half such that it is
obvious, we are losing that generation of great heroes at a far earlier point
in their lives than the WWII and Korean generation. The power of seeing those
names and finally getting respect is truly a cathartic healing process for all
those involved. I am 48 years old, so I am too young to know the horrific way
our returning Vietnam veterans were treated. I have only read about it in
History books, but one thing is clear, that America can and will never do that
again to its servicemen and women. They were merely following orders and doing
what they were told, and fighting for their country, like my friend’s dad. The
Vietnam Memorial Wall is the best healing process to reverse that shameful
treatment.
I recently got to participate in the unveiling for the first
ever time here in Humboldt, of the Global War on Terror Remembrance Wall, by
giving the opening remarks. This wall is inspired by the Vietnam Memorial Wall,
and lists all casualties of the GWOT. While there, I stood next to former
AMVETS POST 96 Commander Mark Sanchez, and
heard him say that he was committed to bringing the “Wall that Heals” back to
Humboldt. Mark tragically had only 12 more days to live when he uttered those
words to me and his fellow veteran friends. Mark was proud of the GWOT wall
coming here for the first time, but he also knew that we needed to bring the Wall
That Heals back. Now that Mark has passed, it will be up to his friends, fellow
veterans and veteran’s supporters to make his dream a reality. Mark first made
the request of the Honor Guard to participate in the GWOT Wall, when I bumped
into him at the Republican of the Year Dinner in March. For more information on
the Wall that Heals, please check out the following website: http://www.vvmf.org/. We
need to raise approximately $12,000 to bring the Wall That Heals back to
Humboldt. To make your donation:
Go to www.giveforward.com In the upper right go
to ‘Find a fundraiser’; Type in ‘Vietnam
War Remembrance Wall’; Click on the site set up by Dean Glaser, AMVETS Post 96
Commander OR go to a direct link at http://gfwd.at/1iv4bLo Information: Dean
Glaser: 707 725-3880. Thank you. By LTC Allan L.
Dollison, USAR
That's "The Cheeze", or "Cheeze", to those of us from the old Det 1, 570th, 670th, 870th. A great guy and a good friend.
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