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Jessica Lynch, Former Prisoner Of War, Plans To Become A Teacher

Jessica Lynch

First Posted: 12/14/11 06:30 AM ET Updated: 12/15/11 04:26 AM ET

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (Associated Press) -- Jessica Lynch was just 19 when the world first saw her - a broken, blond soldier caught on combat video in Iraq, her face wearing something between a grimace and a grin.

The Army supply clerk was being carried on a stretcher after nine days as a prisoner of war. She had been captured along with five others after the 507th Maintenance Company took a wrong turn and came under attack in Nasiriyah on March 23, 2003. Eleven of her fellow soldiers died.

Lynch had joined the Army at 18 to earn money for college and become a school teacher. This Friday, at 28, she completes that mission.

She'll spend Thursday finishing her training as a student teacher at the same elementary school she attended in sparsely populated Wirt County. Then, on badly damaged legs and a right foot that still pains her, she'll walk across a stage Friday evening and get her education degree from West Virginia University at Parkersburg.

"It's tough to walk, but I look at it as, `At least I'm walking,'" she says. "At least I have my legs. They may not work. I have no feeling in the left one. But it's attached, at least. ... At least I'm alive."

Nearly 4,500 Americans died and some 32,000 were wounded during the war in Iraq, winding down this month as the last American troops withdraw. The first woman lost was Lynch's friend and fellow soldier, 23-year-old Army Pfc. Lori Ann Piestewa of Arizona, killed in the convoy attack.

"Knowing she died right beside me and that could fairly well have been me brings a whole new perspective," Lynch said. "You're just thankful for what you've been given, even if it's not what you wanted."

Today, Lynch and longtime boyfriend Wes Robinson are parents to 5-year-old Dakota, whose name honors her fallen American Indian friend. Marriage, she says, is in the plan, but there's no rush. What matters is the comfort she finds in her family. They are there when she's overcome by stress or shaken by the nightmares that still sometimes come.

"By looking at me through a picture, you'd never know anything is wrong," she said. "I fake it. But my family, my friends ... they know when I'm really in pain."

When she was rescued, the U.S. government used footage of Lynch to spin a tale that exaggerated the truth. To make her seem more heroic and rally public support for the war, the military claimed she'd gone down firing - when, in fact, her rifle had jammed. She wrote a book, "I Am A Soldier, Too," with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Rick Bragg, and has repeatedly worked to set the record straight.

"The bottom line is the American people are capable of determining their own ideals of heroes," she told Congress in 2007, "and they don't need to be told elaborate lies."

And the lies cost her. For a long time, she got hate mail. Some said she'd done nothing to deserve the attention or the title of hero. She once told Glamour magazine she felt like "the most hated person in America."

Every now and then, after a high-profile appearance, a hateful missive still arrives.

"They say things like, `Who do you think you are? That was so eight years ago,'" Lynch said. "I just don't respond. It just doesn't bother me anymore. It used to, because I couldn't understand why people were hating me. I was just a soldier like the 100,000 others over there."

Literally and figuratively, she said, she now has a stronger backbone. "I just let things roll off."

Lynch said she'll take a semester off to travel and spend time with Dakota before the child starts school. Lynch hopes to start work soon on a master's degree in communications.

She'll also continue her speaking engagements with children and with veterans' groups. At those events, without fail, the most common question is whether she was shot.

"I can't answer because I don't even know myself," she says. "There's never been actual proof."

The crash of her Humvee is believed to have caused her injuries, which also included spinal fractures, nerve damage and a shattered right arm.

Sometimes Lynch is paid for her appearances. Often, she asks the audience to donate to Jessi's Pals, a venture she launched to provide blankets and stuffed animals to patients at WVU Children's Hospital.

Awkward questions aside, she thrives on the interaction of those three to five lectures a month. Four years ago, Lynch said she wanted to bow out of the spotlight and have a normal life. But now, attention is normal.

She is often recognized. Sometimes she's caught with a mouthful of food as people speak to her and try to touch her. She is no longer annoyed. She embraces it. She says hello and introduces herself to people who know her face but can't quite place it.

"Honestly, it does surprise me that so many people still are familiar with the story. I sometimes get taken aback when I hear people talking about it because it's like reading it in a book," Lynch said. "I forget, `That's me.'"

If her fame has one benefit, it's the reminder that people are still thinking about U.S. troops, at home and overseas.

"And that's good," Lynch said, "because they still need our prayers just like they did nine or 10 years ago."

The former Army supply clerk was held captive in Iraq in 2003. She was captured after her convoy took a wrong turn and came under attack in Nasiriyah.

Lynch was rescued, and videotape and exaggerated tales of a firefight made her famous.

Today she says she has a normal life as a non-traditional student. But she still gets recognized and does public appearances.

On Thursday, she'll finish student-teaching at the same Wirt County elementary school she attended.

Then, on legs that still pain her, she'll cross the stage and get her degree.

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MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (Associated Press) -- Jessica Lynch was just 19 when the world first saw her - a broken, blond soldier caught on combat video in Iraq, her face wearing something between a grimace an...
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (Associated Press) -- Jessica Lynch was just 19 when the world first saw her - a broken, blond soldier caught on combat video in Iraq, her face wearing something between a grimace an...
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02:56 AM on 12/16/2011
The cute blond who got into trouble because she was holding a map upside-down becomes a teacher.

Why am I not surprised....
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Endogenous Light Nexus
There actually is light within you
12:28 AM on 12/16/2011
THANK YOU Jessica for not letting yourself be used as a propaganda tool and setting the record straight. It's bad enough our corrupt government put you in harm's way in the first place, but to then use you so callously that way is just so horrifically psychopathic it makes my blood boil.
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boba7576
Proud white cracker from the hills
03:50 PM on 12/15/2011
If people want to blame anyone , not her , blame the spin masters of the administration .
I hope sure has a wonderful life and career as a teacher .
02:51 AM on 12/15/2011
God Bless Her ! No matter what the exact circumstances, She was there, She served, She is an American Hero !
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roaddawg31
12:52 AM on 12/15/2011
Here's the thing: If she actually has the ability to be an exceptional teacher... and she can impart life lessons she's had, in MANY districts across the country who employ strictly according to seniority. She would be unhireable.
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sskepticall
03:43 AM on 12/15/2011
Wow..... How the heck did you come up with that? There are no new teachers in the fantasy districts you are talking about?

Logically speaking....never mind......your statement is so illogical it is pretty stunning that a logic argument would even matter.
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concernedazvoter
"...there's nothing complicated about ordinary equ
08:28 AM on 12/16/2011
huhhhh??? Most districts want to get rid of their highly qualified, exceptional teachers because they cost too much. With tenure comes experience. Your making the assumption that seniority must be they are bad teachers. Not the case, some of us are quite good at what we do. So according to your logic, in 20 years Ms. Jessica will no longer be a good teacher because she has seniority.
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roaddawg31
04:49 PM on 12/17/2011
That is NOT my assumption. I realize that experience is valuable. At the same time, youth is a valuable commodity too. Exuberance, enthusiasm, a freshness of ideas (at the same time, a lower price tag. But that's beside the point) are important too. I'm not railing against experience... I'm railing against the blind acceptance that seniority be the overriding factor in employment. There are MANY lifelong teachers out there, who simply aren't particularly that good at it. They've done it for many years... but their ceiling is already clearly defined. (In sports terms, think of a middle-aged coach who has proven to be an average, .500 coach. e.g. Norv Turner of the NFL.) These people should not block the way for the exceptional teachers who are waiting in the wings, left to linger. It would be like making Mike Tomlin (young NFL coach) wait, because of the Norv Turners of the world. That's a discredit to YOUR profession too, BTW.

We should be recognizing exceptional teachers. Not simply employing, just because one person happened to be procreated before another person. That's ridiculous.
WhatWhat1
Don't believe everything you think.
11:57 PM on 12/14/2011
The candor in this statement is rare, refreshing and much appreciated:

"By looking at me through a picture, you'd never know anything is wrong," she said. "I fake it. But my family, my friends ... they know when I'm really in pain."

Best to her, her daughter and her family.
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Sam1USA
10:42 PM on 12/14/2011
A story that turns out good for an American soldier. About time. She served our nation at war. End of story. She volunteered to take a bullet for each and every one of us, as do all military members. Each of their stories should end this positively and we as a country, who rely on a mere 1% of our population to volunteer and protect us, should not rest until every veteran has a full education to the highest degree they want, full employment in their chosen field, and full health care - all paid for in public funds. Forever.
WhatWhat1
Don't believe everything you think.
11:52 PM on 12/14/2011
WE SHOULD NOT REST "until every veteran has a full education to the highest degree they want, full employment in their chosen field, and full health care - all paid for in public funds. Forever. "
Amen. Amen and another Amen to that!
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sskepticall
03:57 AM on 12/15/2011
We also shouldn't rest until there is a draft in this nation. It would stop this endless effort by our leaders to shove American soldiers into wars we have NO business being involved in.

Iraq IS our Vietnam in so many ways. In Vietnam over 50,000 soldiers died. 50,000 Americans died. For what exactly? I don't say that to take anything away from their service. However, is there any reason that we needed to protect Vietnam from communism? What exactly was their strategic value to protect our nation from halfway across the world?

So many lost for my first POLITICIANS war. There have been too many since then.

The military industrial complex, the current and past political leaders REAP financial rewards for genning up wars to satiate their coffers for political contributions.

That a military industrial complex company can contribute to politicians shouldn't suprise us when it leads to war and valueless spending to purchase valueless goods.
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Sam1USA
08:16 PM on 12/18/2011
Agree. Current state and fantasy state are very far apart.
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anchises868
eminently reasonable, never extreme
10:01 PM on 12/14/2011
Good luck with that. As a service-disabled vet with mobility issues, I can tell you they look long and hard at you when you interview as a teacher. (Walking around monitoring the students is one of the essential functions of the job, so ADA and reasonable accommodation don't apply to that. I learned that one the hard way at the end of last semester.)
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12:17 AM on 12/15/2011
Have you pursued any available legal action either with ADA or the VA? There must be something ...
Best wishes to you.
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anchises868
eminently reasonable, never extreme
01:47 AM on 12/15/2011
Thank you. There's no legal action to take. All the employer has to do is declare something an "essential function" and now they don't need to make reasonable accommodations.

For example, if you are a UPS delivery person, then walking, driving, lifting, and carrying are essential functions. If you develop a back problem and suddenly can't lift or carry, then you can do the job as defined and ADA provides no recourse to the worker. Teachers are expected to move around. If you can't do that, then they don't have to hire you.
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WritingfromAlaska
09:29 PM on 12/14/2011
She is a heroine because she insisted on the truth being told.

However, this story needs serious editing and is inaccurate. Lori Piestewa did not die in the firefight, she died later in the hospital, a single mother of two. She was a member of the Hopi Nation.
WhatWhat1
Don't believe everything you think.
11:53 PM on 12/14/2011
It's HP. You were expecting...?
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12:18 AM on 12/15/2011
Thank you for the corrections.
Yes, a real hero tells the truth and against those enormous odds!
I feel proud of her! Just because ...
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charon
Censorship is the betrayal of democracy
09:14 PM on 12/14/2011
What a beautiful person. I'm sure she'll make a great teacher.
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nix28
Embracing honesty and its ugly step-sister, truth.
08:40 PM on 12/14/2011
Congrats on your achievements! I wish you nothing but the best moving forward!
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ladydragon
Never attribute to Malice that which can easily be
08:30 PM on 12/14/2011
the Bush administration wanted a blond haired blue eyed heroine to justify the war, they used this girl and and she was glad to play along. Jessica lied from the very start of her ordeal and she didn't tell the truth until she got everything she wanted. Same thing with that footballer (so sorry I dont remember his name), what a tradegy, everyone from the very top to the platoon leaders lied about how this young man lost his life. What she needs to do is come clean about what really happened and stop lying, she reminds me of Amanda Knox.
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Sam1USA
10:48 PM on 12/14/2011
Pat Tillman never lied about anything as he was killed on the battlefield and then used by the Bushies to forward their perpetual machine of war. His parents and family dug for the truth and got it.

If you think Private Lynch did anything wrong, I invite you to go and take follow her footsteps. She earned any friggin' cent she received. She served and went into battle. We cannot pay our veterans enough.
WhatWhat1
Don't believe everything you think.
11:55 PM on 12/14/2011
She HAS come clean. Did you read the article?
Maybe she didn't speak up at first because she was afraid of being "Tilmanated".
08:27 PM on 12/14/2011
No knock on Lynch she was a political pawn , but to be awarded the bronze star for getting shot and captured is a bit much .
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Sam1USA
10:49 PM on 12/14/2011
Really??? Have you been captured??? Do you know what it feels like to be in that horrifying position??
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OneSlackMartian
11:10 PM on 12/14/2011
Oh, good lord. You should see some of the paper-pushing REMFs who received Bronze Stars.
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voting4BO
08:23 PM on 12/14/2011
Congrats Ms. Lynch and much success in your new career!!!
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wendoxia
think!
08:21 PM on 12/14/2011
She is a true American hero. Kudos to her.