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‘Gold Star’ Moms to Admit Non Citizens
Group came under fire for barring Filipina mother of slain GI

DALLAS (AP) June 28, 2005 - A group for mothers whose children died in war voted Monday to allow non-U.S. citizens to join, after coming under criticism for denying membership to a Filipina mother whose son was killed in Afghanistan.

The 1929 charter of American Gold Star Mothers had prevented foreign citizens from joining. Earlier this year, the organization's 12-member executive board voted against changing the rule.

That prevented Ligaya Lagman, of Yonkers, N.Y., from joining, although she is a legal resident and her son, 27-year-old son Army Staff Sgt. Anthony Lagman, was a U.S. citizen. After hearing about her interest in joining, New York Gov. George Pataki and other lawmakers urged the group to change its rules.

"Quite simply, the loss a mother endures when her son or daughter makes the ultimate sacrifice for our nation — is no less honorable or admirable because of her citizenship status," Pataki said Monday.

The change was approved unanimously Monday during the American Gold Star Mothers' annual convention in the Dallas area.

"This change to our constitution was the right thing to do, but we had to make the change the right way," said Judith Young, the group's new president.

More than 140 military service members who were not U.S. citizens have died in Iraq and Afghanistan. Legal residents who are not citizens have long served in the U.S. military.

 

Gold Star: Two Very Different Stories

 

Group Shuns Non Citizen Mother of Slain Soldier
White Plains, N.Y. Gold Star organization rejects woman because she's not a citizen

 

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (Associated Press) May 28, 2005 - Everyone agrees that Ligaya Lagman is a Gold Star mother, part of the long line of mournful women whose sons or daughters gave their lives for their country.

Her 27-year-old son, Army Staff Sgt. Anthony Lagman, was killed last year in Afghanistan when his unit came under fire during a mission to drive out remnants of Taliban and al-Qaida forces.

But the largest organization of these women, the American Gold Star Mothers Inc., has rejected Lagman, a Filipino, for membership because — though a permanent resident and a taxpayer — she is not a U.S. citizen.

“There’s nothing we can do because that’s what our organization says: You have to be an American citizen,” national President Ann Herd said Thursday. “We can’t go changing the rules every time the wind blows.”

That explanation isn’t satisfying the war veterans who sponsored Lagman’s application, some other members of the mothers’ group or several members of Congress.

“It is disheartening that any mother of a soldier, sailor, airman or Marine who has died in the line of duty would be denied membership in an organization that honors the memory of fallen service men and women,” said Rep. Nita Lowey, whose district includes Lagman’s home in Yonkers.

Rule 'smacks of xenophobia'

Rep. Eliot Engel, who represents an adjoining district, said the group should change its rules immediately.

“Whatever the excuse, American Gold Star Mothers’ decision smacks of xenophobia and is in stark contrast to what Mrs. Lagman’s son fought and died for,” Engel said.

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton said, “We now have many noncitizens serving honorably in our armed services, and I hope that this can be satisfactorily resolved.”

A past president of the mothers’ group, Dorothy Oxendine, of Farmingdale, said, “There’s no discrimination in a national cemetery. There’s no discrimination when they get killed side by side. So how can we discriminate against a mother?”

Another past president, Ann Wolcott, of York, Pa., said, “Times have changed since this organization was started, and there are a lot of men and women serving today whose parents are not citizens. I think they deserve every honor and privilege that we have as Gold Star mothers.”

Oxendine and Wolcott said they believe that given the increasing diversity of the armed forces there have been noncitizens in the 1,200-member organization who overlooked or ignored the citizenship question on the application.

Lagman has lived in the United States for more than 20 years. She was not at home Thursday, apparently tending to her husband, who is hospitalized. But her other son, Chris Lagman, said in Thursday’s The Journal News that all she wants “is recognition as the mother of this fallen soldier.”

Lagman’s application was initiated by Ben Spadaro, a veteran from Yonkers, who said he learned about the citizenship rules of the American Gold Star Mothers while working on a national cemetery committee of the Veterans Administration. When he learned of Anthony Lagman’s death and saw Lagman was a citizen but his mother was not, he thought, “He’s buried in a military cemetery, with full honors. She should be able to join.”

“We decided to tell the absolute truth on the application,” he said. “We put down, ‘I am not an American citizen.’ It was a ploy to get them to reject her, and then we said they should change the rules.”

But the organization’s 12-member executive board voted against any change.

'We don't change the rules'

“We can’t go changing the rules every time we turn around,” said Herd, the national president. “When we have problems within our organization with people not abiding by the rules, we just get it straightened out, we don’t change the rules.”

Oxendine, the former president, said she is sure the general membership would approve a rules change if the board did.

“I can’t believe that 12 intelligent women would ever not have it in their hearts to think about another Gold Star mother,” Oxendine said. “You pay a high price to join the American Gold Star Mothers. I figure her dues were paid.”

Spadaro isn’t giving up. He had his brother, a Florida lawyer, write to the Department of Justice, noting the mothers’ organization has received federal assistance and demanding an investigation.

And on Monday, during Memorial Day observances at Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 2285 in Eastchester, Lagman will be presented with a gold necklace bearing a simple gold star.

 

 

Gold Star Moms Keep Alive Memories of Fallen Soldiers

Phoenix, AZ. Then there is Post 41. An icon of thoughtfulness and caring

 

PHOENIX (Jacqueline Shoyeb, Arizona Republic) May 28, 2005 - The two hard raps on the front door is the clearest memory Mary Moraga has of Sept. 15, 1951.

The rest of the day was a foggy hurt for then 19-year-old Moraga and her family. The visitors knocking at the front door were U.S. Army personnel there to say that 21-year-old Benny Duarte, Moraga's brother, died in action. He had been in Korea less than a year.

"My mother didn't respond or anything," said Moraga, now 73. "We got a letter on the eighth from him that he'd written before he died on the 12th so mom thought he was alive."

That day Teresa Duarte became a Gold Star Mother, a title given to moms who have lost a child in war. To honor Benny, she joined other Gold Star Mothers at the local American Legion. Before she died, and after 31 years of service in the Legion, Teresa made Moraga promise to carry on the title and tradition of the Gold Star Mother.

Moraga has and now she and 28 other women are keeping their mothers' organization moving as the Gold Star Mothers and Sisters of American Legion Post 41, Phoenix's first Hispanic American Legion post.

 

The group, at least 50 years old, remembers Latino veterans and fallen soldiers through a Mass, breakfast and cemetery ceremony each Memorial Day. It's a tradition they hope their own children and grandchildren will carry on.

And Monday, the women will gather again, first beginning the day praying for the living and end remembering the fallen with a Mass at 8 a.m. at St. Anthony's Catholic Church, 909 First Ave., and then with a ceremony at 11 a.m. at St. Francis Catholic Cemetery, 4800 E. Oak St. The services are open to the public.

"It's our way of honoring them and at the same time remembering them," said Mary Angulo Cordova of American Legion Ladies Auxiliary Unit 41. "It's also a time to thank the Lord for who we do have. It's in our corazón, especially after 9/11."

The concept of giving gold stars to families of dead soldiers started in the early part of the 20th century with World War I. In 1928, a group of mothers organized themselves as the American Gold Star Mothers, a national organization set up to help veterans and unify mothers in their grief.

Membership of the club grew with WWII, the Korean and Vietnam wars, but eventually the mothers grew too old and the organization shrunk, said Judith Young, a Gold Star Mother service officer at its headquarters in Washington, D.C.

"A lot of the mothers seem to join their local groups because we don't have chapters anymore because after WWII and Korea, down to Vietnam and starting with the Iraq moms, there aren't a whole lot of moms," she said. Officially, the organization has about 1,000 members, Young said.

The women at Post 41 aren't affiliated with the national organization because there is no local chapter and only a couple of mothers left. Either way, the group's Memorial Day tradition will carry on through women like Moraga.

"To me, it (Memorial Day) has always been special," she said, holding back tears. "So many young men died. My brother was one."

Of the 36,574 U.S. personnel killed in the Korean War, 881 Hispanics lost their lives like Benny Duarte, according to a Department of Defense Web site.

But Moraga, whose husband is a WWII veteran, is worried that soon no one will remember Benny and the thousands more who have died. Her children are too busy, and her grandchildren don't understand why she attends Mass and visits the cemetery each year.

"I keep telling them (children) every year," she said. "But nobody feels the way we do."

Like Moraga, Alice Santana carries her mother's unwanted title. On a recent afternoon at the post, Santana brushed her 76-year-old fingers across an old portrait of "the baby."

In the old photo, the baby is 21, with broad shoulders, a dimple in his chin and rosy cheeks. He's dressed in a dark green Army uniform that matches his eyes.

Her brother, Frank Murrietta, was killed in Vietnam when the helicopter he was flying was shot down. Eight other soldiers were with him.

"I was told, 'There's three of us left, but the baby's gone,'" she said crying as she remembered the day they got the news decades ago.

Frankie, as they called him, loved planes and flying. As a boy, his room was lined with model airplanes that hung from the ceiling. When he finally earned his pilot's license, the newspaper delivery boy would fly stacks of newspapers to Yuma, just to be in the cockpit again.

On Nov. 15, 1967, the Army announced he was missing.

"My mother was devastated because he was the baby of her life," Santana said. "She wouldn't eat or drink because she knew my brother was missing. She said, 'How could I eat or drink knowing my son was (missing). Who knows whether he has water or food.'"

Two weeks later, his 22-year-old body was returned. Santana later joined the mothers at Post 41.

After her mother's death, Santana has kept the title alive as a Gold Star sister.

And like Moraga, she'll continue the tradition for as long as she can. But she's not as worried that it will fade away.

"A lot of young people are coming (to Memorial Day events)," she said. "They'll keep the tradition going."

 

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