
Posted February 21,
2006
'Voices in Wartime'
By
Sharon
Roznik
The Reporter
sroznik@fdlreporter.com
http://www.fdlreporter.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060221/FON04/602210354&SearchID=73236340420546
Voices in wartime are too often silent — the
bearer of mute grief passed down from generation
to generation.
Bill Zierdt, a Vietnam veteran and professor
at Marian College, knows now he passed down his
broken coping skills to his daughter. "I don't have a friend because I push people
away. I don't have the desire or the skills," he
said Saturday morning in a room at the
University of Wisconsin-Fond du Lac filled with
about 30 people who came to hear and share
personal stories of war.
His daughter, Katrina Bruns of Illinois,
cried her heart out. At age 10, while her father
was going through his own horror serving in
Vietnam, she was caring for her siblings,
abandoned each night by an alcoholic mother. "I know you don't even know about this," she
said, turning to her father.

Caption:
Community residents gather Saturday at
University of Wisconsin-Fond du Lac to talk
about
how they have been personally affected by
war.
The Reporter photo by Justin Connaher
The story panel was part of a daylong series
of events that focused on the impact of war and
the community's response to a Friday night
showing of the full-length feature documentary,
"Voices in Wartime." Andy Himes, the film's
executive producer, flew in from Seattle, Wash.,
to participate in the local project.
"It takes great courage for a person to
expose themselves to the real consequences of
war," said facilitator Martin Dronsfield,
director of intentional communication for
Opening of the Heart. "It's natural to protect ourselves and shy
away, but it leaves veterans returning home
feeling excluded," he said. "It takes a
willingness to feel discomfort and pain." The stories were gut-wrenching and poignant.
As Kristan Gochenauer, a Fond du Lac mother
of three, listened to the father and daughter
tell their story, she reflected on her own life
and how different her experience is. Her
husband, Vince Gochenauer, is serving his second
tour in Iraq, stationed at Camp Patriot in
Kuwait since last October.
After viewing "Voices in Wartime," she said
she went home and e-mailed her husband. "I wanted to know if he was scared and if
there were things he felt he couldn't share with
me," she said. He e-mailed her back a definite "no," but she
isn't so convinced.
Marcus Oksa, a veteran of three wars, broke
down when he recalled his first encounter in a
bar after serving his country during the Persian
Gulf War. "I wasn't expecting anything from anyone, but
a Vietnam veteran came up to me and criticized
me because my war wasn't long enough," he said.
Boxes of tissue circled the room several
times as he told his story and the way a soldier
"walks out the door, leaving his (or her) heart
at home." "There is no length of war that makes it
better or worse," he said. "The first day there
is always the worst because you don't know how
long you are going to be there."
Zierdt said he has been “haunted by the demos
of war” all of his life because of his Vietnam
experience, something he never discussed with
his family. He has relived countless times a
decision he made in April of 1969, when he sent
his troops forward and 17 soldiers died. He was
the one who wrote letters home to the next of
kin of the dead, including to a three-year-old
chaild. “I’m convinced anyone who has
experienced combat is haunted the rest of their
lives,” he cried.
Zierdt listed some common reactions veterans
have in an attempt to kill the pain of coming
home from war—homelessness, domestic violence,
substance abuse.When Zierdt’s wife told him she
didn’t care if he came back from his second tour
in Vietnam, he recalls not caring either. “I was
mother to 338 soldiers and my real family—my
troops—were going with me,” he said.
Gochenauer said she knows that something deep
down inside her husband drives him, something
she can’t understand but can support. She knows
it doesn’t mean he wants to leave his family.
“People ask me how I am doing. I tell them what
they want to hear—that I’m fine. I have days I
break down when I’m alone. I don’t ever let my
children see it,” she said.
Oksa turned to her quietly and said, “You can
call my wife any time.”
The majority of soldiers said they believe in
their heart of hearts that they are doing what
they do, not to kill anyone, but to save, he
explained. “When you are sent home, as a
soldier, you believe you should still be there,”
Oksa said. “Back here is where the real problems
are.”
Himes said he had learned from his daughter
and her boyfriend, a naval pilot returning from
Iraq. His daughter had told her partner that she
did not want to hear anything about his
experiences in the war because she was worried
about him and because she was against the war.
Then she realized she needed to hear his stories
and understand what he had gone through.
“I believe war is the most difficult and
painful subject in the world and has the most
impact on generations,” Himes said. “For that
reason, it’s important we understand it
together, not in conflict.”
Dronsfield echoed a statement he came across
in a self-help guide published by the Veterans
and Families Support Network that, for him, sums
up veterans’ homecomings. “It reads: ‘Let’s get
it right this time. If we get it right, we might
not have to repeat the suffering over and over
again,’” he said.
The Fond du Lac event was sponsored by the
Fond du Lac school district, the University of
Wisconsin/Fond du Lac school of education, and
the organization Opening of the Heart.
Back to
http://openingoftheheart.org
Food for
Thought, 3 a.m.
They moved in unison
like dancers in a ballet,
the spider, twenty inches from my rifle,
the VC, twenty feet farther out, in
line,
each slowly sliding a leg forward.
I let the man take one more step
so as not to kill the bug.
David Connolly
57-year-old Vietnam veteran
South Boston, MA
|

Caption: “Voices of Wartime” executive
producer Andy Himes
shares a story about his
daughter’s relationship with an Iraq war
veteran.
The Reporter photo by Justin
Connaher
|