America Supports You - Steak Night Treats Vets Toughest Injuries
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Subject: America Supports You: Steak Night Treats Vets' Toughest Injuries
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/May2006/20060501_4989.html
America Supports You: Steak Night Treats Vets' Toughest Injuries
By Paul X. Rutz
American Forces Press Service
1 May 2006
WASHINGTON, May 1, 2006 – For the past two and a half years, veterans of wars
past have been helping heal the latest generation of wounded troops every Friday
in a basement steakhouse here.
Members of Disabled American Veterans help a wounded servicemember before the
final Friday night dinner for wounded troops at Fran O'Brien's steakhouse in
downtown Washington, D.C. Groups like DAV and Helping Our Heroes Foundation
bring dozens of wounded troops out to the Friday dinners, which now will be held
at various locations in the nation's capital, beginning May 5.
Fran O'Brien's, a low-lit, sports-themed place with red leather chairs, wood
paneling and hundreds of signed photos lining the walls, has become a source of
healing for many troops as they convalesce in nearby military hospitals. The
restaurant closed this weekend, but its owners, Hal Koster and Marty O'Brien,
have vowed to keep putting on their free steak dinners at other locations. Some
troops have been coming to steak night since it began in October 2003.
"We call them seniors," said Koster, a Vietnam veteran. "They're mentors to the
newly injured; they have a job other than just drinking all my beer." One of
those soldiers, Army Sgt. Wasim Khan, lost both legs in Baghdad during the
invasion in 2003. "I was one of the first ones to come here," he said. "When I
was in the hospital, I didn't talk to anybody at all," Khan said. "I was
worried, angry, mad, upset, depressed.
But once I started getting out here, I saw the changes in me. I started talking
to people, socializing with my own people, military people." Khan said he
continues to find valuable therapy in talking with veterans from the Vietnam and
Korean wars. "They told us their stories about when they came back home," he
said.
"Those 'Nam vets are doing their best to give us the best possible care and
facilities out there." Having attention and support from all over America makes
him feel very lucky, Khan said, but he knows it took work to change America's
attitude: "They don't want us to go through what they went through.
... The older vets, they said, 'This is not going to happen to this
generation of veterans.'" Army Staff Sgt. Chris Bain, another of the "seniors,"
suffered severe arm injuries in April 2004.
He said he comes to steak night every week and does his best to pass his good
attitude on to the new guys: "I still can't cut my food, so you know what? I
purposely sit next to somebody who doesn't have legs. You know why? Because I'm
all, look, you got two great arms and great hands. ... You cut my steak. I'll
get your food.
That's what it's all about." When he doesn't have physical therapy, Bain said he
tries to give back to the older veterans, especially the owners of Fran
O'Brien's. "I come down and ask Hal if he needs any help: 'Hal what can I do for
you?
You give so much to the troops, and it means so much to us and me.' ... Hal and
Marty both are just the greatest individuals I've ever met." At his restaurant's
final Friday dinner, April 28, Koster said a change of location would be a
difficult thing for some troops because his restaurant kept them from feeling
out of place.
"The regular customers that we have are accustomed to seeing people without legs
and arms, some of the things that maybe the general public isn't," he said. For
the next month, the dinners will be held at a hotel in downtown Washington,
except on May 19, when the Italian embassy will take a turn. "I think the troops
would enjoy that," Koster said.
"We're trying to set up something nice for them, and if they like it, great. If
they don't, we'll change it because the dinners are for them." Koster talked to
several reporters April 28 as he and his staff made final preparations to
receive young people in wheelchairs and prosthetics.
The restaurant's bar filled with regulars, including veterans and members of
troop support organizations such as Rolling Thunder and Disabled American
Veterans. When the wounded troops arrived, carefully negotiating the stairs into
the basement, reporters were given some time to chat with them.
Then everyone but the troops and their families were asked to leave the dining
area, and the doors to the room were closed. Koster said in March 2004 he
stopped letting reporters view the dinners "because the troops don't want that.
They're here to relax." The dinners began in October 2003, soon after the
conflict in Iraq started, he said. Jim Meyer, a veteran wounded in Vietnam, came
to Koster and said he thought troops would heal better if they could get a night
away from the hospital. Buying some dinners for the troops and their families
seemed like a great thing to do.
Koster said he's seen some incredible recoveries happen between the time troops
arrive for their first dinner and the weeks following. "We have a young man now,
Brian Anderson, who's only been down here twice," he said. "He lost both legs
and an arm, and he's up walking. He's got his two prosthetic legs, and his one
prosthetic arm, he's got a pair of crutches, and he's out getting around.
Just absolutely outstanding in that short a period of time." Collaboration with
local troop support groups has been a great help to the weekly events, Koster
said. Some rent busses and provide other logistical support, while others get
the word out to troops at Walter Reed Army Medical Center here and the National
Naval Medical Center in nearby Bethesda, Md.
Koster said he will do his best to help provide the same welcoming atmosphere as
always when the weekly dinners move to new places, hopefully allowing troops to
become relaxed in the new environment.
"What we're trying to do is get the new guys that aren't that comfortable with
their amputations or their face disfigurations or whatever their injury is, and
they don't have the strength necessarily to get out and go to a regular place,"
he said. "First time out of the hospital, they're not strong yet, but they're
determined, and that's important."
Related Site:
America Supports You
Army
Staff Sgt. Chris Bain talks to reporters before the final Friday dinner at Fran
O'Brien's for wounded troops in downtown Washington, D.C., April 28. Bain, who
was wounded over two years ago, said he tries to take every opportunity to help
newly wounded troops recover. Photo by Paul X. Rutz

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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)