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National A Soldier’s Sacrifice
‘No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.’
Catholics remember Sgt. Tollett and all those who died for us.
BY TOM McFEELY CONTRIBUTING EDITOR May 27- June 2, 2007 Issue |
Posted 5/22/07 at 7:00 AM
ELYRIA, Ohio — Marti
Miller Sparks remembers one of the key reasons why her unmarried son Lane
decided in 2004 to enlist in the Army. “He had a friend who had just gotten
home from the Navy,” Sparks said. “He was a young dad and a young husband. And
Lane said, ‘Mom, if I could just take the place of at least one husband, one
young dad, so that he wouldn’t have to go and leave a family, then that’s the
difference I want to make.’” On April 30, during his second tour of duty in
Iraq, Sgt. Norman Lane Tollett of Company C, 1st Battalion of the 504th
Infantry Regiment of the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division, was killed by an
improvised explosive device while on foot patrol in Baghdad. He was buried May 6 with full military honors
after a funeral service
at Elyria Catholic High School’s coliseum, one day
before his 31st birthday.
We tell his story this Memorial Day
as a way to honor all those who gave their lives in military service for their
country. As U.S. Military Services Archbishop Edwin O’Brien put it, “Though
they are not all professedly religious, the young members of our Armed Forces
are, in large numbers, spiritual and God-seeking. In a shimmering but
unmistakable way, as they willingly offer their lives for others, they reflect
the greater love that Jesus praised.”
Sgt. Tollett gave his life for his
friends, said those who knew him.
“This dangerous duty was a natural
mission for Sgt. Tollett, and we mourn his loss,” Maj. Gen. David Huntoon,
commandant of the U.S. Army War College, said at the funeral service, the
Elyria Chronicle-Telegram
reported. “It’s clear he was an outstanding leader who always looked out for
his fellow troops.”
Said Huntoon, “He was a true hero;
the epitome of selfless service.”
Tollett’s great-uncle, Father Allan
Laubenthal, presided over the service. Father Laubenthal, a retired priest of
the Diocese of Cleveland and the former rector of St. Mary Seminary in
Cleveland, will also be the principal celebrant at a June 2 memorial Mass for
the eldest of his niece’s three sons.
Many of Tollett’s relatives and
friends were in attendance at his funeral service, the Chronicle-Telegram
reported, including his father Dave Tollett, his brothers Don and Ryan, his
stepfather David Sparks and his girlfriend Lesley Graham.
“We salute his devotion and his
extraordinary example,” Huntoon said before presenting Tollett’s family with
the Bronze Star, a Purple Heart and a Good Conduct Medal.
Growing up, Lane attended Catholic
schools and was co-captain of the football team in his senior year at Elyria
Catholic High School. He also sometimes served at family Masses, Father
Laubenthal said.
Lane’s mother said that her son’s
Catholic faith was the bedrock upon which his ethic of service was founded.
“His Christian convictions — that’s
what added to his compassionate nature and his drive for serving this way,”
Sparks said.
Along with the return of his friend
from his Navy service, Tollett’s decision to join the Army was prompted by two
other events. In 2001, a few weeks after 9/11, he visited Ground Zero.
“If I never remember anything else about
the rest of that weekend,” he told his mother after returning to Ohio, “I will
never forget the sights, sounds, smells, the entire atmosphere of that entire
area.”
Another influence was the example of
Pat Tillman, the pro football player who gave up his career to join the Army
Rangers in 2002 and who was killed in action in Afghanistan in April 2004.
Sparks said that when her son
finally decided to leave his job and join the Army in the summer of 2004, she
told him of her concerns about the dangers he would face. But once she
understood that Lane had made up his mind after a long period of careful
consideration, “I told him that I respected his decision and supported him
100%,” she said.
Tollett was named honor grad of his
battalion when he completed his training at Fort Benning, Ga., in November
2004. Beginning in September 2005, he served a five-month tour at Camp Suse in
northeast Iraq, returning home in January of 2006.
Twelve months later, he returned to
Iraq for a second combat tour, serving this time in the violent streets of
Baghdad, where he was killed.
Outpouring of Love
Asked if the death of her oldest son
has challenged her Catholic convictions, Sparks emphatically said No.
“It hasn’t changed it at all,” she
said. “God did not do this to Lane, I don’t blame God or the faith — I thank
God I do have the faith, that I know everything is in God’s hands, that I know
that he was protecting Lane as long as he was able to. I don’t have any
wavering in that.”
Sparks and her uncle, Father
Laubenthal, both said they were deeply moved by the outpouring of love that has
been triggered by Lane’s death in combat.
One of his college friends has
established a website (lane-tollett.memory-of.com) in his memory, and a fund
has also been established to fund a new scoreboard in his honor at the Knights
of Columbus Field at Elyria Catholic High School.
“It’s unbelievable — I still can’t
fathom it,” his mother said. “There are strangers from all over who are
offering prayers and things like that, and there is not one negative from
anyone.”
‘True Patriot’
Father Laubenthal remembers his
great-nephew as “a young man that was proud of his family and his country and
his state. I think he was a true patriot in that sense, that he did join [the
military] because it was a worthy cause.”
Father Laubenthal noted that such
expressions of patriotism are in keeping with Catholic doctrine.
“The Christian faith has always been
known for supporting patriotism, and the Christian faith has always supported
people’s generosity in serving their country,” he said. “As a virtue,
patriotism has always been something that the Church has blessed and has
fostered.”
Added Father Laubenthal, “I think a
young man like Lane, who saw this as a contribution to his country, would
certainly see himself supported in that by his faith.”
Msgr. Philip Hill, chief of staff to
the Army’s chief of chaplains, said there are no figures for how many Catholic
soldiers have lost their lives in the Iraq conflict. But Msgr. Hill said that
they likely constitute about a quarter of all battlefield deaths, proportionate
to the overall percentage of military personnel who are Catholic.
As of May 17, a total of 3,403
members of the U.S. military have been killed since the Iraq conflict began in
March 2003, according to the Associated Press.
Msgr. Hill said that a solid faith
is a strong asset for soldiers in combat.
“A person who is a good person
morally brings to the fight a person who is more stable, a person who has a lot
more hope, a person who can look beyond even this life to things that are more
important in the next,” Msgr. Hill said. “And all of that has a great deal to
do with the soldier’s ability to function on the battlefield.”
Pope John Paul II paid tribute to
members of the military with a Jubilee Year day in their honor. That day he
spoke of those who had fallen:
“Forgetting themselves and despising
danger, they rendered the community a priceless service. … But where did they
find the strength necessary to do their duty to the full? … Many of them
believed in Christ, and his words illumined their existence and gave exemplary
value to their sacrifice.”
Mourning
While they are sustained by their
own faith, Tollett’s relatives are nonetheless deeply wounded by their loss.
“It’s been devastating,” said Father
Laubenthal. “I’ve seen my sister and my niece age in front of me.”
“I’ve had to dig deep into my own
faith to find the strength to be an uncle, a priest, a guide, a comforter … to
be on hand for support,” Father Laubenthal said. “The same as I am as a priest
always, but of course the demand is increased when you’re a relative, when
you’re dealing with one of your own.”
For her part, Lane’s mother singled
out the prayers of others for helping her family to cope with their grief over
Lane’s battlefield death.
“That’s the only thing that’s
keeping us going these last couple of weeks — the tremendous outpouring of
support that’s given us the strength to weather it,” she said. “Not to get over
it, we never will. But that is helping us.”
Tom McFeely is based in
Victoria, British Columbia.
INFORMATION To learn
how to send care packages to the troops, see page 8.
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