Stacy S. Rhee
Ms. Jensen
English 300
28 October 2006
On Call Doctor For God?
Newsweek magazine, on March 20, 2006, featured
Richard Jadick, a Navy rank of lieutenant commander who earned his Bronze Star
with a Combat V for valor. The front page displayed his picture with cover
story, “Hero M.D.: The Amazing Story Of the War’s Most Fearless Doctor.” The
article, “On Call In Hell” by Pat Wingert and Evan Thomas, illustrated Jadick
being a Gunnery Sergeant in the First Battalion, the Eighth Marine Regiment (the
“1/8”) in
Jadick
was shipped out for
At first, Jadick was stationed in the city far from the battlefield that he could not help badly injured comrades. They were dying even before they reach to the hospital. They could not arrive within an hour, the so-called “golden hour”(37). The wounded could be saved, if a doctor treated them right away. Nonetheless, there was no way to transfer them to the hospital before it was too late for them to be saved. Helicopter evacuations were even riskier. Thus, Jadick decided to go to the front line of the fight.
In very effective way, Jadick “set up an emergency room in the middle of the battlefield”(40), where fine dust hung in the air, where he could hear rocket fire and smell cordite from gunpowder. He treated his wounded marines where enemy snipers were hiding and bullets were hissing around him. Rescuing the badly wounded corporals in a moving ambulance, Jadick brought them back to life, handed over to a new doctor at a transfer station, and headed back to the inferno to save more young marines. Because of Jadick’s valor and keen judgments, hundreds of marines were saved in Fallujah, one of the worst urban fighting zones since the Vietnam War. Moreover, Jadick set himself as an example for “Being a battalion surgeon is one of the greatest jobs there is,” and said, “I would do it again”(43).
For enhancing Jadick’s story, the writers of “On Call In Hell,” Wingert and Thomas, quoted a verse from the Bible: “Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, ‘Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?’ And I said, ‘Here I am. Send me!’”—Isaiah 7:8(34), as if Jadick were the one who answered God’s calling. They presented Jadick’s story, as an example of the verse, as an on call doctor who was asked to save the U.S. Marines by God’s name. As a result, Jadick was awarded a Bronze Star with a Combat V for valor. The writers ended the article emphasizing that Jadick did the best he could in the battlefield, and mentioning that without his valor, “the Marines would have lost an additional 30 men”(43).
However, the writers brought up a hypothetical
imperative to readers by quoting the Bible. In the article, Jadick ordered his
men to kill the enemy in order to save his marines. Even though “Jadick had a
struggle with the Hippocratic Oath (“Do no harm”),” he had to make up his mind
that “it’s either kill or be killed”(41). The article implied that one side was
allowed to kill the other side by God’s name, in order to save one side of lives.
Moreover, it assured the readers that God was on
People choose sides, not God. The real valor is not the one who kills the other side of people for saving the one’s side, nor one takes the risk to save one side of people who already harmed by the other side. The best of the best for valor is to stop the war. It is the only way to avoid the world of “either kill or be killed”(41). It is the only world where our children should live. We should stop the war, just like the writers mentioned in the article, the theory of Hippocratic Oath, “Do no harm”(41).
Work Cited
Wingert, Pat and Thomas, Evan. (2006, March 20). on Call In Hell.
Newsweek. 34-43.
'Life > e—live—Library' 카테고리의 다른 글
CHARLOTTE (ANNA) PERKINS GILMAN (1860-1935) (0) | 2006.11.20 |
---|---|
The Yellow Wallpaper - Charlotte Perkins Gilman (0) | 2006.11.20 |
제 3 인간형 - 안수길 (0) | 2006.08.02 |
Luise Rinser (0) | 2006.07.17 |
어떻게 공부할 것인가... <왜 사는가 2>... 무량스님 수행기 (0) | 2006.05.27 |