|
"The Doc"
To civilians, he is known only as a land-locked sailor, who knows lots of first aid. To the media, they lump him in with all other service personnel and call him a soldier and a medic. The Navy classifies him as a Hospital Corpsman, one of those crazy guys who has chosen to jump ship to get mean & dirty and go and serve with those other lunatics … the U.S. Marine Corps.
But to the Marines, these guys are the Angels of the battlefield … the lifesavers in camouflage, our Brothers, and we simply respect and call them Doc. The combination of Marines and our Corpsmen is unique. It is a partnership of two different military branches working continually to become one. There is no other intra-service union like it. A Marine combat unit can be likened to "The Wrath of God" … believe it !!
With the addition of our beloved Corpsmen … this Marine unit now also contains God’s mercy. When a Doc first joins a Marine unit, they welcome him to the Marines, and soon he will know them all by name and his Marines will know him as their Doc. Here is a bond that will last a lifetime. A bond of brotherhood that few men can ever obtain even in the horror of battle, that is strengthened by the trying times they will share together. "The Doc" will fix you up pronto … anything from a slight case of trench foot to a sucking chest wound. Why ??? Because Doc takes care of his Marines !!!
In the most intense heat of battle, out of the darkest on nights … comes the call: "Corpsman Up" …and there he goes one more time, to answer the call of need. On a field of death, hatred and mayhem, the Doc will courageously surge forth again and again without regard for his own life … to bring mercy, compassion and medical aid to others. The Doc will reach his fallen brother, stick his finger into a bullet hole to stop the bleeding or into a chest wound … his heart and soul always 100% being into his work.
It is the Doc who holds the stricken Marine in his arms and tells him he will be O.K. all the while he is working on his wounds. As things go from bad to worse, Doc will tell his Marine … "Just hold on now !!!"
It is the Doc who comforts the suffering, talks in a low & soft assuring voice, prays for his Marine who is failing fast, and who weeps at his untimely death.
Marines and Corpsmen … it is a wonder why these men who strive, fight and suffer together love and respect each other so very much. On my desk is a small statue of the Iwo Jimo Flag Raising. The most famous photo ever taken of the U.S. Marine Corps is of "Five Marines & Their Corpsman". In both this photo and the statue, these 5 Marines and this Corpsman have been frozen throughout all eternity in their struggle to raise Our Flag over one of the bloodiest battles we have ever been involved in.
It was not just by chance that a Corpsman was included: It was fate … for even as God has given us free will so we may control our fate … God also has a way of moving things around that only God knows the importance of and this makes a bond between us for only He fully understands what is good and proper for each and every one of us in this world.
Doc Bradley had to be included in this most famous moment … it just would not have been right … without him being there.
Semper Fi
Doc Mac McCoy
4 May 2006
|