ROCWheels

Mobility and Hope For the World, One Person at a Time


CNN HERO

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Brad Blauser lives in war-torn Baghdad, where he doesn't earn a paycheck and is thousands of miles from his family. But he has no intention of leaving anytime soon.

Since 2005, Brad Blauser's Wheelchairs for Iraqi Kids program has distributed nearly 650 free wheelchairs. 1 of 2 For the past four years, the Dallas, Texas, native has been providing hope to hundreds of disabled Iraqi children and their families through the distribution of pediatric wheelchairs.
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See the full story here!
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/07/30/cnnheroes.blad.blauser/index.html 

Video Here
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/world/2009/07/30/cnnheroes.brad.blauser.profile.cnn

http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/world/2009/07/30/cnnheroes.brad.blauser.extra.cnn

Dallas Morning News Article
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/city/irving/stories/DN-cnnhero_05met.ART0.State.Edition1.4ba7839.html


CNN NEWS COVERAGE

February 15, 2008 Broadcast
February 29, 2008 Broadcast

Distribution Sunday, February 10, 2008


Hi Everyone! The distribution went awesome today! We had 6 teams fitting children in chairs, and gave out 55 chairs in 4 hours.

I did the Quality control, and the troops did the fittings. These troops were experienced in this, as they also participated in the fittings on 13 Dec. They had a great time, and everyone was really touched.

There were various ethnicities present from 10 different segments of Baghdad. Truly an event which brought warring factions together in a common bond - they all had disabled children.

I'm uploading pictures right now, and will post the pictures on my blog as soon as I get them uploaded. I have 67 pictures, and will be getting together with SFC Jurack tomorrow night to do a picture exchange. The Military Transition Teams (MiTT Teams) and medical support troops from the Combat Hospitals have been taking them out a few at a time when they're made aware of a need. They all took pictures, and SFC Jurack has worked feverishly to retrieve the pictures so we can send back to you.

I was told by the Directory for the Iraqi Women's Association that word of the wheelchairs has spread throughout Baghdad, and even to surrounding provinces. Soon, the whole country will be asking for pediatric wheelchairs from ROC Wheels!

The CNN Baghdad Producer was very touched, along with Along with Arwa Damon (the CNN reporter who interviewed Angela Jolie on Thursday in Baghdad regarding the Iraqi refugees [see story here] ) and the camera operator.

The CNN coverage will run 'tomorrow night' - sometime starting your Monday morning. CNN International TV, CNN USA TV and CNN.com will all run stories. Time and day will depend on the news calendar - they don't want it to have to compete with breaking news stories. They're saying it could possibly gather 1,000,000 hits on the website the first day.

Thanks to you all for the great level of support you've given. I did mention ROC Wheels at least twice during the interview. (see picture) I'll get the pictures to you some how in the near future. God bless!

Brad




ROC WHEELS CHAIRS ARRIVE IN IRAQ !

click here to see pics at http://www.rocwheels.org/iraq_pics
Micheal Yon's blog http://michaelyon-online.com/wp/brad-blauser.htm
click here Iraq ~ April 2007 Newletter: http://www.rocwheels.org/April_2007/pages/April_2007_Page_04.htm

Hello Friends,
  
As we approach the July 4th Holiday I'm reminded daily of our services to the world as Americans.  Each day new e-mails roll in from various soldiers in Iraq.  Each e-mail includes a personal story that was impacted by our mission to send 100 ROC Chairs to Iraq.  These pictures and the short stories below provide an insight into a world apart from our own.  Our service men and women are extending themselves beyond their call of duty.  They are taking extra time and potential risk to custom fit wheelchairs to children in war zones.  I am proud to play a small part in this mission to improve relations with the Iraqi people.  
  
Last week I spoke on the phone for 30 minutes with COL Randy Espinosa MD, FACS, Orthopedic Surgeon, of the 274th FST(ABN) c/o 47th Combat Support Hospital in Mosul, Iraq.  It was truly amazing to hear his accounts of the medical clinics and his involvement with our wheelchair distribution.  He told one story of a boy named Ali (pic "Brad with boy and wheelchair")  A member of our distribution team, Brad Blauser, was visiting a hospital in Mosul and fitting 10 ROC Chairs to children.  A nurse whispered in Brad's ear that a young boy was just coming out of the surgery and could probably use our help.  Ali was really drugged up, and didn't feel well.  He was shell shocked, as within hours before this pic he had been near a violent car bomb explosion, had both his legs broken badly (suffering untold pain), been medivaced by helicopters onto a restricted taboo airbase operated by the soldiers, undergone needle sticks and extensive surgery to put his leg back together.  I think he's quite resilient, considering the situation and the traumatic experiences he endured just 18 hours earlier.  Brad asked if he could visit Ali and was allowed by Doctors.  Ali was praised for his strength and given a ROC Chair and the paralympic champion barbie doll.  He was grateful for the wheelchair and very excited to have the toy doll.  Through a translator he said that he looks forward to leaving the hospital in the wheelchair and being able to give the doll to his sisters.  Doctors say that Ali will gain full use of his leg again and will walk someday.  In the meantime he will have the use of ROC Chair to help transport him to the hospital for follow-up and rehabilitation.  
  
Some Iraqis are really afraid to have their pictures taken for fear the pic with the Americans will fall into the wrong hands and they'll be beheaded for helping the Americans.  Their fears are sometimes justified.  I'm told the enemy has just as good if not better intelligence capabilities than we do, and they read emails and look at attachments as they go across the satellite waves.  We always ask before taking pics, and try to be careful with who might see them so as to keep the people safe.
  
COL Espinosa told me several stories about his experiences in Iraq.  He firmly believes that the confidence of the people will be won by interactions during these service missions.  He said it may take an entire generation to change their perceptions of America.  What better way to start this process than to put brothers and sisters into specialized wheelchairs with the tender care that goes into the custom fitting process.  
  
Thanks for all your support for this mission.  Please drop a line if you would like to hear more stories.
    
Andrew Babcock
Executive Director ROC Wheels



Wheelchairs for Iraqi Kids’ distributes Humanitarian Aid to children in Northern Iraq

Soldiers and Civilians join forces to deliver pediatric wheelchairs to disabled Iraqi Children
February 14, 2006
By Brad Blauser
Founder, Wheelchairs for Iraqi Kids
Tikrit, Iraq

It was an unlikely duo, but two like-minded men serving very different roles in a combat zone joined forces to change the lives of thirty-one Iraqi families in late 2005. Now faced with an even greater challenge, Wheelchairs for Iraqi Kids (www.WheelchairsForIraqiKids.com) is poised alongside US combat forces to provide pediatric wheelchairs to 100 more families of disabled children living in Northern Iraq.

Before returning stateside in October 2005, Major David Brown, MD, the 1-24 Infantry Battalion Surgeon and his medical staff routinely entered the city of Mosul for medical screenings in schools to evaluate and assist children with unaddressed medical needs. During the screenings, Major Brown and his staff examined an unusually large number of children suffering from disabilities such as Cerebral Palsy and Spina-Bifida, which rendered them immobile. Birth defects seem all too prevalent in this region of more than 2 million people.

During his tour of duty in Iraq, Major Brown was actively involved in activities at Marez Memorial Chapel, FOB Marez in Mosul. Brad Blauser, a civilian contractor serving on the same base, was also active in chapel activities alongside Major Brown. The two men became friends and joined efforts to create what was to become ‘Wheelchairs for Iraqi Kids’.

“One day in July (2005), I approached Major Brown and asked him what he needed that I could help provide through backing of a growing support base in the states”, Blauser commented. His email update distribution list had grown to well over three hundred addresses, from which he had raised support for a Bible drive, netting over 325 study Bibles donated to soldiers on the front lines in Mosul (see story - http://cbn.com/spirituallife/biblestudyandtheology/perspectives/ans_frontlines.asp).


Major Brown spoke of the situation in the city with disabled children pulling themselves along the ground just to get around. I offered to try to get him some pediatric wheelchairs for the kids he met at the screenings, and he jumped at the opportunity.”

Blauser described how through the efforts of his family, friends and total strangers, thirty one pediatric wheelchairs were secured via grassroots efforts of normal, everyday Americans.

Christian organizations, local hospitals and an untold number of individuals teamed up to make this thing happen,” Blauser recounted. “Joni and Friends’ Wheels for the World (www.WheelsForTheWorld.org) donated the first twelve chairs, Wheels of Love (www.WheelsofLove.org) of San Antonio donated fifteen, and Huguley Hospital (www.ahss.org) in Burleson, Texas provided four wheelchairs. FedEx really came through with free shipping on the first twelve, but we had to provide funds for the second shipment. That’s where TBN and Jan Crouch’s Smile of a Child (www.SmileofaChild.org) organization stepped in and donated over $5000 to cover the costs of delivery for the second group of chairs that came over.”

Unfortunately for Major Brown and his medics, the wheelchairs did not arrive in Mosul in time for distribution by him and his men before they were deployed home to Washington State. The 1-17 Stryker Brigade from Fort Wainwright, Alaska had arrived to take their place on the front lines in mid-September 2005.

Major Brown introduced me to his replacement, Captain Matthew Fargo, MD, and then I knew the wheelchair mission would still be in good hands.” After all thirty one wheelchairs arrived, Captain Fargo and his team were able to deliver them in just three missions around the city of Mosul. They became known as the ‘Battalion with all the wheelchairs’, and were approached by other units looking to distribute wheelchairs in their areas. However, all the wheelchairs had already been given out. Captain Fargo contacted Mr. Blauser in December about the possibility of having more wheelchairs to deliver, as the need for pediatric wheelchairs is still great.

Blauser and Captain Fargo have teamed up with Reach Out and Care Wheels Inc. (ROC Wheels) (www.ROCWheels.org) in Bozeman, Montana to secure 100 new pediatric wheelchairs manufactured by inmates at the South Dakota State Penitentiary in partnership with Hope Haven International Ministries which manages production. Reach Out and Care Wheels is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, providing pediatric wheelchairs and other mobility devices to disabled children in developing countries around the world.

The ROC Chairs are adjustable pediatric wheelchairs, custom fit to each child thanks to the generous support of people who donate to the ROC Wheels Adopt-A-Chair Program. The ROC Chairs have full support of critical areas – head, torso, legs and feet. They also have a recline feature and a tilt-in-space feature that allows a more comfortable position for the child (similar to a rocking chair on wheels). This eliminates pressure points and allows the children to sleep in the chair and be more comfortable, lying flat if they prefer. Andrew Babcock, Executive Director of ROC Wheels, calls the wheelchair, “the best, most specialized pediatric wheelchair produced and delivered at no charge by any non-profit in the world.”

ROC WHEELCHAIR

Mr. Babcock offered us 100 new pediatric ROC Wheelchairs for the Iraqi kids, but our window of opportunity to secure them is really pretty tight,” Blauser related. ȁWe are in the process of trying to raise $20,000 to buy them at a discounted rate from ROC Wheels at $200 each (thanks to cheaper distribution costs), but hits on our new website reflect only about $3000-$4000 in donations at this point. We may be somewhat short of our goal right now.”

Once secured, the 101st Aviation Regiment of Fort Campbell, Kentucky has offered to ship them free of charge via military C130 transport to Iraq. There, they will be handed over to Captain Fargo and the 1-17 Stryker soldiers from Alaska for distribution. Dr. Fargo recently was quoted as saying, “There are so many disabled children in Mosul that we can give out as many chairs as can be sent.”

Blauser hopes this is just the beginning for ‘Wheelchairs for Iraqi Kids’. 𠇍pending on the level of support we get from back home, we may be able to provide chairs for more kids than we originally had hoped. It’s really great to know that we are helping these children; they are going through so much living in a war zone. It also gives the US soldiers a valuable opportunity to help win the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people, and do something tangible for them at the same time.”

If readers would like to assist with this project, please visit www.WheelchairsForIraqiKids.com. Donations are tax deductible through ROC Wheels, and tax receipts will be provided for all donations. The address to send donations is:

ROC Wheels Inc.






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logo ROC Wheels, 301 Gallatin Park Dr , Bozeman, Montana 59715
www.RocWheels.org
Andrew Babcock, Executive Director, Andrew@ROCWheels.org
Phone/Fax #: 406.556.8065  
ROC Wheels is a 501 (c ) (3) Non-profit Organization


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