My
wife and I became acquainted with Bill and Jan Schutz through the
friendship of our daughters
at school and at our church. Early in 2005 Lt. Col. Bill Schutz
volunteered to go to a combat zone. He didn't have to go. He
had already been through one deployment and spent months away
from
his family at that time. I couldn't understand why a soldier
who had fulfilled his duty would volunteer to place himself in
harms way. The last time we saw each other before he left, I
presented him with a flag and asked him what could be done. All
he said was to send him an e-mail every so often and we left it
at that. Bill arrived in Baghdad, Iraq and
sent the first e-mail with pictures to his friends on April 29,
2005. Bill said that all his needs were met and that he was doing
fine.
Four
months went by with very little communication because my life
was busy with a family business, a wife who has a demanding
career and three teenagers at home. In September, I called
Jan and asked her what I could do for Bill beyond what I was presently
doing, which was nothing. Jan gave me Bill's address
and suggested that I go down to the post office, pick up a
domestic
flat rate box and for very little postage, mail some items
to him. Armed with a box I went to my grocery store and began
walking
up and down the aisles trying to decide from the packed shelves
what to include in the box. I suddenly realized I had taken
for granted that the groceries would always be there, that the
success
of my business or the safety of my family was in my control,
and
how trivial my "problems" were in comparison to those
of the military families. The box in my hands was now not big
enough to say thanks to soldiers like Bill.
On
October 1, 2005 a single box was mailed to Baghdad filled with
granola, snacks,
canned goods, and a book on CD and one week later I received
a most grateful and heartfelt e-mail from Bill. If one box
is so fulfilling an experience, what about a few dozen? The pastors
and staff at Morningstar Community Church in Salem Oregon
were
excited about the idea of asking the church members to send
boxes to deployed soldiers, that were from families within our
membership,
and to their buddies within their units.
On
November 14, 2005 with a pile of 147 boxes, prayer support from
friends, and
a
hope that 50-75 people would take a box, the project was
presented in our first service. The boxes lasted 6 minutes.
Some grateful
spouses of deployed soldiers were in tears, and many a
veteran expressed their thanks to the church for this effort.
After
second service, the sign up sheet contained the names of members
requesting
246 more boxes. The Lord had answered our prayers. We began
to receive thanks from soldiers in Iraq, Kuwait, Afghanistan,
and Bahrain. On December 4, 2005 with a mountain of over 600 boxes,
the members took over 500 home with them.
It became clear that this was a larger project than just
one church. On that day Operation: Love Boxes for our Troops
was
born. Its sole mission is to encourage American citizens
to fill a box and mail it themselves to a soldier far from
home.
The
two purposes it serves are to thank the soldiers and their
families for their sacrifice on our behalf and to raise
the awareness of those of us at home the debt of gratitude that
we owe the men
and women
who put on the uniform. Now, thousands of boxes later with
other box efforts starting up all over the area, this website
is for
the use of every American to start their box project in
their own city or state. But if you do, be ready to see
tears from
veterans that were never thanked for their service, be
forewarned to gracefully accept the appreciation of deployed
soldiers
families, and be prepared to understand why American soldiers
continue
to volunteer to place themselves in harms way.
This website is dedicated to Lt. Col. William J. Schutz,
his wife Jan, their two daughters, and all the military
families that they represent, who are honorably serving
and sacrificing
for
me. God Bless you all.
John W. Baker
Operation: Love Boxes for our Troops