Sunday, December 19, 2010

For Susan Luz, being a nurse has meant a life during wartime

WOMAN OF WAR: For Susan Luz, being a nurse has meant a life during wartime
By Linda Murphy
Special to The Herald News
Posted Dec 18, 2010 @ 03:09 PM


TIVERTON —
The guiding force that drove Susan (Corry) Luz through the University of Rhode Island’s rigorous five-year nursing program was her desire to become an Army nurse in Vietnam. Inspired by her father, a decorated World War II combat veteran, Luz avoided the college party scene, and the anti-war sentiment on campus, and focused intently on her plan to serve in the war.

But her father, Patrick Corry, who saw a military nurse killed in World War II, and silently lived with the resonating images of the horrors of war, wouldn’t hear of his young daughter joining up. Instead, she joined the Peace Corps, but her chance to serve came decades later: At age 56, Army Reservist Luz left behind her husband and family in Rhode Island to serve as a nurse in war-ravaged Mosul, Iraq.

Colonel Susan Luz, who was the highest-ranking female soldier in the Army Reserve’s 399th Combat Support Hospital when she was called to active duty, will be discussing her experiences and signing copies of her book, “The Nightingale of Mosul, a Nurse’s Journey of Service, Struggle and War,” at an upcoming event sponsored by the Friends of Tiverton Library.

Luz, who was awarded the Bronze Star in 2007, followed in the footsteps of a storied family history of military service. Her father fought in the Battle of the Bulge and was awarded the Silver Star and the Purple Heart, and her husband George’s father, George Luz senior, was a Fall River native whose experiences in World War II were featured in the book and HBO mini-series “Band of Brothers.”

It didn’t take very long for Luz to experience the danger of being a nurse serving “behind the front line” in war zone firsthand. On her forth day at the hospital in Mosul, a nurse who was scheduled to leave within a couple days of Luz’s unit taking over was hit by mortar fire and seriously injured.
It was the first MASCAL (code for mass casualty) of 14 MASCALS that her unit would handle during their year in the Middle East. In all, they treated more than 30,000 wounded soldiers and endured 300 mortar attacks in Mosul and Al Asad, where they relocated to open a Level I hospital when the United States Military ramped up forces in 2007.
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For Susan Luz, being a nurse has meant a life during wartime

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