Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Soldier seen as 'larger than life'
By TREVOR MAXWELL, Staff Writer Portland Press Herald Thursday, April 5, 2007

Staff photo by Jack Milton
Staff photo by Jack Milton
Members of the 82nd Airborne Division carry Sgt. Jason Swiger's coffin from his funeral on Wednesday.
Staff photo by Jack Milton
Staff photo by Jack Milton
Members of the 82nd Airborne Division carry Sgt. Jason Swiger's coffin from his funeral on Wednesday.
Many of the people at Wednesday's funeral for Army Sgt. Jason Swiger were at the funeral for Marine Lance Cpl. Angel Rosa two weeks earlier.
The same group of Patriot Guard Riders held American flags outside the church. Funeral attendants stood solemnly on the periphery. There were friends, teachers and civic leaders from South Portland, a city that has lost two military men in the past month.
Several hundred gathered at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Portland to attend the funeral Mass for Swiger, a 24-year-old member of the Army's 82nd Airborne Division. Swiger, serving his third tour in Iraq, died on March 25 when a suicide bomber attacked his convoy in Diyala province.
"It just fills my heart to see all these people here that cared for him," said a brother, Corey Swiger, 16.
After the Mass, people crowded into the Thomas Room in South Portland for a reception. Several generations of the family reminisced about Swiger. They became silent, and many wiped away tears, as a projector showed photographs of Swiger as a curly-haired toddler sitting on his mother's lap, as a smiling young man holding a high school diploma, and as a confident soldier in uniform.
"He said, 'I want the 82nd Airborne, and I want to be a cavalry scout, and if I can't be those things, then I'm sorry I wasted your time,'" recalled his mother, Valorie Swiger.
Jason Swiger was 17, a recent graduate of South Portland High School, when he signed up with the Army. His uncles, cousins and other relatives had served.
"To begin with, we're a very humble family, a blue-collar family," said Carl McAfee, one of Swiger's uncles, who served two tours in Vietnam as an Army paratrooper with the 4th Infantry Division.
As a young boy, during visits to McAfee's home near Fort Bragg, N.C., Swiger used to watch paratroopers drop from training planes.
"He was willing to put himself out there in order to protect us," McAfee said. "He brought so much to our family."
Swiger's wife, Alanna Swiger, wore on her lapel the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart that were awarded to her husband.
"Jason was a very larger-than-life person," she said. "He was everything."
Swiger was the second South Portland native to be killed in action last month.
Angel Rosa, who was 21, died on March 13 while serving with a Marine expeditionary unit in the Anbar province of western Iraq. He was a 2004 graduate of South Portland High School.
Bound by grief and circumstance, the families have found comfort in each other.
"We're sharing the same nightmare," said Elise Rosa, the 21-year-old widow of Angel Rosa. Coincidentally, both couples were married last May, and neither had any children.
"The second I heard about it, I wanted to contact his wife immediately," said Elise Rosa, who attended the reception for Swiger on Wednesday.
Rosa waited a few days, though, because she remembered the shock and tumult that followed the death of her husband. When Rosa did call, she said, she was welcomed by Alanna and the rest of the Swiger family.
"They are so warm and kind," Rosa said. "If we can do anything at all to help them, we will."
Walter Swiger, an uncle from South Portland, said the outpouring of support in the city has helped both families. Yellow ribbons can be seen on telephone poles and street signs.
Four years ago, Valorie Swiger lobbied city officials to allow those ribbons on public property, as tributes to U.S. troops. She ultimately lost that fight, when other residents complained that the ribbons were political statements in support of the war.
Last week, city councilors voted unanimously to lift that ban for a month. Since that vote, hundreds of ribbons have been hung, from Spring Point to the roads around the Portland International Jetport. Members of the Swiger family said Wednesday that they will seek a permanent change in the ordinance.
"It is going to take a little while for the whole community to heal," Walter Swiger said. "Today brings a closure, somewhat, to the past 10 days. We have had the chance to celebrate Jason's life."
Staff Writer Trevor Maxwell can be contacted at 791-6451 or at:


Reader comments

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Dawn Swiger of South Portland, ME
Apr 9, 2007 9:27 AM
Old Tom,
Thank you for your kind words, but I am not Jason's widow. He was my cousin. Well I should say brother, I am an only child and we grew up very close so he was just like the brother I never had. Anyway just wanted to clear that up.report abuse
MaineCitizen of Portland, ME
Apr 7, 2007 4:02 PM
This may sound dumb, but I wonder if we could display another color ribbon showing support for the soldiers but not necessarily the war?

I don't mean a ribbon that says "I don't support the war," but one all people can display simply to say we support our troops?

I know the yellow was supposed to do this but it has become so politicised I am not sure it can be donereport abuse
Old Tom of Portland, ME
Apr 7, 2007 3:57 PM
Dawn

First and foremost, I am so sorry for your loss, I did not know your husband but I know thousands like him, good men doing their job for their country

Second, thank you for saying what many of us have been saying for years, coming from the widow of a soldier there can be no argument about your motives

May your husband RIP

##33

Dawn Swiger of South Portland, ME
Apr 6, 2007 11:49 AM
Thank you to all that have supported my family in the past couple of weeks. We wouldn't have been able to hold together without support from our community. To all of you who still try to Politicize the "yellow ribbon" issue. I can be one to tell you that we do not support the war, but the people like Jason who are over there in danger every day to keep us safe from harm.

I take great pride in knowing that Jason was an American soldierreport abuse
Dawn Swiger of South Portland, ME
Apr 6, 2007 11:49 AM
Thank you to all that have supported my family in the past couple of weeks. We wouldn't have been able to hold together without support from our community. To all of you who still try to Politicize the "yellow ribbon" issue. I can be one to tell you that we do not support the war, but the people like Jason who are over there in danger every day to keep us safe from harm.

I take great pride in knowing that Jason was an American soldier.report abuse

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