Le Lézard
Subjects: NPT, VET

The Independence Fund CEO Applauds Honoring of Wounded Heroes in North Carolina


CHARLOTTE, N.C., Feb. 24, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- The following is a statement from Sarah Verardo, CEO of The Independence Fund, a national nonprofit serving catastrophically wounded Veterans and their families. She is also the wife and caregiver of retired Army SGT. Michael Verardo:

North Carolina is home to more than 736,000 Veterans. More than 155,000 of those Veterans have a disability incurred in service to our nation. We owe them a debt of gratitude that can never be repaid. But we owe it to them as a state to make payments on that debt. 

An Alive Day marks the day a Service Member nearly died in combat, but through the modernization of battlefield medicine, grit, determination, and camaraderie, Service Members are surviving wounds what could have killed them just a decade earlier. Home to some of the finest military installations in the country, North Carolina breeds our nation's frontline war heroes. The freedom of many is protected by the bravery of a few. That bravery shines especially brightly in North Carolina. 

On April 24, 2010, Waxhaw, North Carolina resident Michael Verardo suffered catastrophic and life changing injuries in Southern Afghanistan. SGT. Verardo was awarded his first Purple Heart just two weeks earlier when he was riding in the turret of a M-ATV as the gunner and the vehicle hit a buried improvised explosive device (IED). SGT Verardo was ejected out thirty feet and medically evacuated. While recovering in Kandahar, Verardo requested to be returned to his unit as their casualty count was high, and he wanted to help continue the mission. On his very first foot patrol, just two weeks later, Verardo was hit again, this time with life changing consequence. The IED ripped off his left leg, much of his left arm, left him with severe burns, facial damage, and in need of a field blood transfusion in order to be kept alive. Verardo's military brothers loaded him onto the medical evacuation, believing it was the last time they would see him, as the injuries were not conducive to life. 

Verardo clung to life aboard the medical flight, flatlining several times, and staying in a comatose state through Germany and ultimately reached his final destination of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he remained on status: death imminent. Verardo survived, and April 24, 2021 will mark eleven years of life for him post-Afghanistan. Like many of our nation's most catastrophically wounded heroes, the fight is lifelong, and the family fights right beside them. SGT. Verardo has endured one hundred and twenty surgeries and years of speech, visual, physical, and occupational therapies. He lives at home with his wife and three daughters where he requires full-time care. For heroes like Verardo, the battlefield may be in the past, but the battle rages on at home.

Verardo earned two Purple Heart medals on behalf of a grateful nation. What he and others like him continue to give, deserves our endless respect.

Under the proposed "North Carolina Wounded Heroes Day," North Carolinians will join together to honor the sacrifices made by our state's heroes. State Representative David Willis and State Senator Todd Johnson led the charge to introduce the bill in honor of wounded Heroes in North Carolina, identifying SGT Verardo's Alive Day, April 24, 2010 as the day to recognize all North Carolina wounded Veterans. In a time where so much divides us, let us remember that it is the most sacred duty of all Americans to support those who allow us the freedom to disagree. 

We urge all North Carolinians to honor the sacrifices made by our wounded Veterans, and join together to ensure their heroic stories are never forgotten.  

 

SOURCE The Independence Fund



News published on and distributed by: