Letter to first graders,

Thanks so much for thinking of me on Memorial Day, you made me real happy! When I got your envelopes I sat outside under my favorite tree to read them. It was a beautiful sunny day, much like it was in Vietnam as I read each letter and looked at your drawings. You asked a lot of questions. I'm 62 years old and still feel great. I love to run and swim and I love ice cream with lots of bananas, chocolate and whipped cream. When I was in the Vietnam War way back in 1967-68 I was only 19 years old. I was a sergeant in the Army Rangers and the leader of a five-man team that searched the jungle for bad guys that we captured and turned into good guys.

Posted
AuthorRobert Ankony
CategoriesVietnam War

I was born in Detroit’s Providence Hospital in 1948 and raised in an upstairs flat on Sixth Street, near Michigan Avenue and Tiger Stadium. My mother would later tell me how I loved watching the cars drive by our house and hearing the roar of the fans at the stadium each time a Tiger made a home run. But those were my mother’s memories, not mine. I was just 3 years old when we moved from the flat to our home in southwest Detroit. My mom picked the house because she felt her kids could safely walk down the alley to Patton Park and play without crossing any streets. And my dad was happy because he would finally have his own garage to tinker in, and because we were near the south end of Dearborn, where he was raised—the largest Arabic area in the United States.

Posted
AuthorRobert Ankony

It was cold windy run. There was no sun and it wasn't much fun being outside other than sharing time with my dog, Sarge. So I tucked him in his yard, gave him a bone and hurried inside to take a nice hot bubble bath. And that's when it happened. I was laying back relaxing, happily jabbering away on my old reliable Sanyo Taho flip cellphone when she just slipped from my hands and plunged into the deep white bubbly bath.

 

Posted
AuthorRobert Ankony
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