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By Dennis
Romboy
Deseret Morning News
Published: Monday, Jan. 2, 2006 10:24 p.m. MST
Medic Jill Stevens stitched up a few injured
soldiers here and there but spent much of her time in Afghanistan
running humanitarian aid to the locals.
Stationed
at Bagram Air Base, the 22-year-old Stevens often ventured
via helicopter on missions to a remote village named Jegdalek.
Children particularly caught her attention. She won them over
making funny faces.
"Smiles
and laughter," she said, "I kind of see it as a
universal language."
After
returning to camp one day, Stevens noticed in a photograph
she had taken the crossed eyes of a 5-year-old girl. She went
to work lining up a surgeon to correct the problem. With permission
from the village elders, she took Halima to the base for a
week and "treated her like a queen."
Stevens
showed the girl Disney movies and fed her popcorn. She took
her to a day spa for a hairdo, manicure and pedicure. She
bought her a new pink dress and shoes for the trip back to
Jegdalek.
"She
was just beautiful," Stevens said.
Because
of other duties, Stevens wasn't able to get back to the village
for five months. And when she did, Halima was not among the
children gathered to greet the soldiers. But then, like in
the movies, the crowd parted and Stevens and the girl ran
to each other and embraced. Stevens called it a "magical
moment."
"I made
a difference in her life, and she made a difference in mine,"
she said.
Though
there were some raised eyebrows in the Stevens family when
she joined the Utah National Guard right out of Davis High
School, Stevens has their full support.
"I
love challenges," she said. "How could I not do
this? It's just another chance to serve my country."
A nursing
student at Southern Utah University, Stevens' yearlong tour
in Afghanistan with the 211th Aviation Group set her back
in school. In fact, she had to start all over.
But "I
don't regret going in the least because I got to see what
we're actually doing over there," she said.
Stevens
believes the U.S. presence in Afghanistan has made a difference,
too. The country now has a democratic government and a president.
"It's
like when you find something that works for you, you want
to share it with other people. I think that's what we're doing
in Afghanistan," she said.
The treatment
of women, though, is something that bothers Stevens. She noticed
on her humanitarian missions that they were pushed to the
background. Men brought the children out while the wives were
required to stay in their houses.
An avid
runner with seven marathons under her belt, Stevens thought
about those oppressed women during her training runs around
the mine-filled perimeter of Bagram Air Base.
"It
was probably a little foolish of me, but nothing was going
to get in the way of my running," she said.
And she
did it because, unlike Afghani women, she has the freedom
to run.
On Dec.
12, 2004, Stevens joined more than 200 other soldiers and
civilians (no Afghani women) in Afghanistan's first marathon
at Firebase Ripley, a remote camp near Tirin Kot in central
Uruzgan province.
The 26.2-mile
race consisted of five laps around a bumpy 5.29-mile course,
facing high altitude as well as the threat of attack. Stevens
felt good for the first three laps but tightened on the fourth.
The thought of those women kept her going.
"It
was like an energizer," said Stevens, who ended up the
top woman finisher with a time of 3 hours, 45 minutes. "I
was kind of doing it for them because I know one day they'll
be able to do something like this."
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