![]() ![]() The Nation's #1 Independent Veterans Web Site Click here to make VA Watchdog dot Org your homepage VA NEWS FLASH from Larry Scott at VA Watchdog dot Org -- 06-26-2008 |
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57 YEARS -- "If Ralph had not carried me down that hill, there is no doubt I would have died. The Chinese did not take wounded prisoners."
For more about Korean War veterans, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here... Story here... http://www.vindy.com/news/2008/jun/25/battle-comrades/ Story below: ------------------------- Two Korean War veterans
are reunited after 57 years
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Then the two men, friends who had met on the
front lines in Korea in 1951 and had depended on each other for survival
in battle, lost track of each other.
Pariza, 75, of Austintown, formerly of West Middlesex, Pa., fresh in the
United States from Romania, had dropped out of Hayes Junior High School in
Youngstown and joined the National Guard. A year later, he enlisted in the
regular Army and arrived in Korea in August 1950.
He has three daughters: Jill Pariza of Austintown, Janice Pariza Bender in
Colorado, and Terri Simpson of Youngstown. His fiancee is Beverly Poidmore
of Boardman. He worked several years at Republic Steel Corp. in
Youngstown, and then 30 years at Wheatland Tube Co. in Wheatland, Pa.,
retiring in 1993.
Yovino, 79, served on active duty in the Army’s 3rd Division in 1948 and
1949 and was in the Army Reserve when he was called back to duty during
the Korean War. He arrived in Korea in January 1951. Yovino and his wife,
Nancy, have two children and four grandchildren.
“I’m bad on remembering names,” said Pariza, explaining why he could not
find Yovino when he tried. “I remembered Ralph, but not his last name. I
called the regimental association to get a roster, but our records had
been destroyed in a fire in St. Louis, Mo.”
More than half a century went by, and Yovino was attempting to get
benefits through the Department of Veterans Affairs but did not have a
record of his wounds suffered in Korea because he hadn’t gone to the
hospital for treatment.
“I told the VA John Pariza could verify it, but I was never able to find
him because I had his name spelled wrong. I thought he was Italian and I
spelled it ‘Parrissa,’” Yovino said.
Then something happen that brought the two men back in contact with each
other, leading to a reunion on May 10 at Cleveland International Airport
and a visit to the Korean War Memorial in Wickliffe Park in Austintown.
“He hugged me and kissed me at the airport,” Yovino said of Pariza.
“It felt so good to get together with him. If it wasn’t for Ralph, I
wouldn’t be here,” Pariza said.
How did they find each other 57 years after coming home?
A friend of Yovino’s, using the Internet, found a name on the 5th
Regimental Combat Team Web site that sounded like the one for which Yovino
was looking.
“It was the same company and everything, so it had to be him,” Yovino
said.
The 5th RCT Association called Pariza and told him: “This guy is looking
for you.”
Excited, Pariza called Yovino, but he wasn’t home, so Pariza left a
message.
“I couldn’t believe what I was hearing on my message machine. I choked up.
I called him back the same day, and we began making plans to meet,” Yovino
said.
Yovino flew here from Texas for their May reunion, but stayed only a
couple of days because his wife was recovering from an illness at home.
They were interviewed during their visit to the Korean War Memorial in
Austintown.
“We put the memorial here so the Korean War is not forgotten,” Pariza
said.
From June 25, 1950, to July 27, 1953, when the cease fire occurred, the
U.S. military suffered 54,246 total deaths, including 36,574 in-theater,
of which 33,739 are combat deaths; 4,549 missing in action; and 1,891
captured and declared dead.
Since their reunion in May,Pariza and Yovino have spoken many times by
telephone, and may get another chance to reminisce this coming weekend.
Yovino is planning to return to Youngstown for a ceremony Sunday at the
memorial in Austintown, where Korean War Veterans Chapter 137 will conduct
a Laying of the Roses ceremony in honor of the 120 veterans killed in
action whose names are inscribed on the memorial.
Also that day, Chapter 137 and the Tri-State Marine Corps Detachment Honor
Guard will unveil and dedicate a new plaque placed at the memorial in
honor of Marine Pfc. John D. Kelly, who was killed in action in Korea in
1952 and was awarded posthumously the Medal of Honor.
Kelly was born in Youngstown on July 8, 1928.
Returning to their talk about the war, Pariza said he spent eight weeks in
the hospital in Japan recovering from his leg wound before going back to
Korea.
Yovino said, “John jokingly told me I almost killed him. I had put his
patch on the front of his leg, but didn’t have anything to plug the hole
in the back of his leg. He told me he almost bled to death,” Yovino said
with a laugh.
Yovino said he never went to the hospital with his injuries. It was the
same with Pariza when his elbow was damaged by shrapnel earlier in the
war. He said he didn’t report it because he wanted to stick with his
outfit.
“That happened a lot, thousands and thousands of times,” Yovino said.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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