Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Family photo
Family photo U.S. Army Sgt. Jason Swiger and his wife, Alanna, in a wedding photo taken last May. "He's my hero and I will love him forever," she said in a statement issued Monday.

Staff photo by Gordon Chibroski
The Thomas Room banquet facility in South Portland displays a message of sympathy for Sgt. Jason Swiger, a South Portland native who died Sunday in a suicide bombing in Iraq.

Staff photo by Gordon Chibroski
Jeanne Crocker, principal of South Portland High School, said at a press conference that Swiger, a 2000 graduate, was "proud to come back" in frequent visits to the school.
SOUTH PORTLAND - A 24-year-old South Portland native who was killed Sunday while serving in the Army in Iraq enjoyed poetry and was so proud of his military service that he wore his uniform back to South Portland High School to talk to students and teachers, his friends and family said Monday.
Army Sgt. Jason Swiger was the second Mainer -- and the second South Portland High graduate -- to die in Iraq this month when he and three other soldiers were killed by a suicide bomber in Diyala province, according to family members. Swiger was on his third tour in Iraq with the 82nd Airborne Division, based at Fort Bragg, N.C.
"He's my hero and I will love him forever," his wife, Alanna, said Monday in a prepared statement. The couple met during a poetry reading at a coffeehouse in Fayetteville, N.C., and were married last May. They moved in with his wife's parents in Fayetteville, and Swiger began his third tour in Iraq in August.
Swiger was the third Maine serviceman to die this year in Iraq. Of the roughly 3,200 U.S. troops killed since the Iraq war started in 2003, 25 are Maine natives or have ties to the state.
The Army had not officially released information about Swiger's death as of Monday night. Swiger's mother, Valorie Swiger, said she was told by her son's wife and Army officials that her son and four other soldiers had stopped their Humvee as they traveled in a convoy between two military camps, Camp Caldwell and Camp Warhorse. Swiger and a couple of the other soldiers started to hand out candy to children when a motorcyclist approached the group and blew himself up, killing Swiger and three of the others, his mother said.
Valorie Swiger said she heard about an explosion in Iraq while watching the news earlier Sunday, but it was not until her son's wife called her shortly before 6 p.m. that she learned her son was one of those killed. The Army later called her with the news, said Swiger's mother, who was active in a campaign four years ago to display yellow ribbons on South Portland streets in support of soldiers in Iraq.
"He loved what he was doing," Valorie Swiger said. "It was meaningful (to him) because it meant we could be free and his nieces and nephews would not have to be afraid."
Swiger joined the Army shortly after graduating from South Portland High in 2000. His mother said he had wanted to join the 82nd Airborne Division since he was a boy. His uncle, Carl McAfee, retired from the 82nd Airborne after 23 years of service. Jason Swiger would sit on his uncle's front porch near Fort Bragg and watch paratroopers jumping from the planes, his mother said.
Tall and thin with sandy blond hair, Swiger liked to write, draw and sing, and to work on his beloved Mitsubishi Lancer.
"When he made his sergeant's stripes, he said, 'Gram, you can't argue with me anymore,' " said his grandmother, Elizabeth Swiger.
Swiger had three sisters and two brothers. He was part of a tight-knit group of high school friends. One of those friends, Ronnie Dahle, signed up for the Army with Swiger.
"We were inseparable," Dahle said. "We went everywhere together."
Swiger's mother-in-law, Alice Regan, said burial will be in South Portland but details have yet to be worked out.
Students at South Portland High got the news of Swiger's death over the public address system early Monday afternoon. The announcement came less than two weeks after the death of a 2004 South Portland graduate, Marine Lance Cpl. Angel Rosa, 21, who was killed during combat on March 13 in Anbar province in Iraq.
Principal Jeanne Crocker led the school in a moment of silence Monday, just as she had for Rosa. "There are a thousand students and hundreds of others, and (there was) absolute silence," she said.
Swiger was a frequent visitor to the high school after he graduated, Crocker said. Sometimes he would come to reconnect with teachers. Several times, he wore his Army uniform to address students in the military history class.
"I think he probably had some kind of a calling to come back and show and model for everyone a young person making good," Crocker said. "I knew he was proud to come back and be that person."
Swiger's yearbook entry lists his nicknames as "Swag" and "The Joker," and refers to "drawing on myself, making jokes about everything and being an all-around nutcase."
An accompanying photo shows a shaggy-haired boy in a blazer and T-shirt lunging toward the camera. Crocker described Swiger as "unique" and "extremely artistic," but said he didn't seem to find his niche until he joined the Army.
"It was clear to all of us who knew Jason well at South Portland High School that he went into the military to find and define himself, and he did just that -- he found the real Jason Swiger through military service," she said.
Crocker said the school would offer grief counseling to students and plans a plaque memorializing Swiger and Rosa.
"It's very difficult to be experiencing this twice in such a short period of time, and to realize how short our time with these young people is and how sometimes their very promising futures are cut short," Crocker said.
Staff Writer Josie Huang contributed to this report.
Staff Writer Beth Quimby can be contacted at 791-6363 or at:

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Jessie Stoddard (O'BRIEN)report abuse
–noun, plural -roes; for 5 also -ros.
1. a man of distinguished courage or ability, admired for his brave deeds and noble qualities.
2. a person who, in the opinion of others, has heroic qualities or has performed a heroic act and is regarded as a model or ideal: He was a local hero when he saved the drowning child. NOW CAN YOU PEOPLE PLEASE LEAVE THOSE US WHO ARE GRIEVING ALONE!! all we want is to be able to share our memories with each other and due to distance this is one place we can all come and mourn together, your views are an interruption and source of anger and pain. i loved him almost as a brother i want his family to be able to see that without have to filter out all your crap.
Sleep peacefully Jason your fight is done and you've earned your rest. I'll see you again in Flanders' field, 'SCOUTS OUT'. report abuse
Gary Beers suggests that my comments, "are not germane to a story about the loss of a young military man". However, the story in question called him a 'hero', and my remarks dealt explicitly with that notion.
He was, I'm sure, a brave young man, and a fine young man. That makes this all the more tragic. And I'm sorry to those of you who, in your grief, feel a need to uphold the war when what you really need to do is honor this man, and all the other men and women, American and Iraqi, who have died.
I believe Gary was correct in noting that many of responses were "caustic". I've tried not to be. How we carry ourselves -- each of us -- is very important. And part of what makes America great is that we can disagree. At best we'll do that with grace and dignity.
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I guess that I am not surprised that you refused my comment yesterday, presumably because you considered it a personal attack, or that it did not stick to the subject. None of your other rules seem to apply.
I reread all 81 comments just now. A sizeable number of them, especially commenter Bill Randall and Arthur Fink's are not germane to a story about the loss of a young military man. Instead they are personal diatribes about the Iraq war.
Another large group, are relatively caustic responses, pointed by name at those two, from those who found the utter lack of sensitivity and compassion by them to be offensive.
That you continued to allow their ego satisfying pap speaks only to your own bias. If you had actually comprehended what I wrote (doubtful) you'd have seen it was no more than a challenge to Randall's statement that those offended were not intellectual or rational. I said that neither was his. He stated nothing more than headlines without substance. Other than that he was opposed to the war with the same slogans from 40 years ago. He offered no forward thinking position or solution. His arguments were lightweight soundbites, without foundation or depth. Certainly with no compassion and nothing to do with Sgt. Swiger.
I was only attracted to register with you because of the desire to make a statement in honor of this young man and in hope that his family who most probably will see this stuff are somewhat comforted to know that many share their pain and wish them comfort.
This forum is not about Randall or Fink's freedom of speech, it is about your own censorship. You did a really poor job. Whatever it takes, kindly remove me from your registry.
garybeers
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This country is free, we celebrate freedom of speech and we are proud of that. I dont support the war, but you can be sure that I will support every soldier and every serviceman that serves OUR country. Maybe Bill and Arthur will take this to heart and use some common sense. You can probably bet that they were draft dodgers in their day and couldn't handle the stress and responsibility that it takes to serve these United States.
Again, may the family and friends of Jason Swiger know that he is appreciated and that their sacrifice will not be forgotten. report abuse
~Proud Baby Sister of US Army Soldiers
PS: Dear Arthur Fink and all that agree with him-- If you don't stand behind our troops, our heroes, FEEL FREE TO STAND IN FRONT OF THEM!!!! Nobody will ever miss you as much as we will miss Jason. report abuse
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