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Warriors for Peace(17 images)
This is a portrait series of Iraq War veterans who are resisting the wars. It is national in scope and a work in progress. If you are interested in prints or licensing, please contact me directly.
We as a nation and a people are disconnected from the reality, intimacy, and emotions of war and especially from the soldiers who fight in it. We see the wars as "over there", being...
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  • Jeremy was a mortuary technician in Iraq and was repsonsible for dealing with hundreds of his fallen comrades.  He is photographed infront of a wall of photographs of fallen soldiers, near his home in Chicago. This is from a portrait series I am doing on Iraq War veterans who are resisting the war. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • Logan Laituri filed for concientious objector status on religious grounds after serving one tour in Iraq with the 25th Infantry Division. This is from a portrait series I am doing on Iraq War veterans who are resisting the war. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • Jared Hood, an Iraq War Veteran and Denver chapter president of the Iraq Veterans Against the War, photographed at his home in Denver, CO.  This is from a portrait series I am doing on Iraq War veterans who are resisting the war. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • Garett Reppenhagen was one of the first outspoken critics of the Iraq War while still serving in Iraq as a calvary sniper.  He was a co-founder of the blog "fight to survive" and was photographed at an antiwar rally in Denver.  This is from a portrait series I am doing on Iraq War veterans who are resisting the war. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • James Redden was a journalist for the Army and served in Kuwait and Iraq.  He finds series contradictions between the teachings of the bible and the religios rhetoric being used in justifying the war in Iraq.  This is from a portrait series I am doing on Iraq War veterans who are resisting the war. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • "I joined the army to protect my family," says Floyd Holt.  He deployed to Iraq in 2005 in full support of the war and it's mission.  With his wife at home pregnant with their first son, he felt he was doing what needed to be done.  However, "after seeing the death and destruction of Iraqi families, it made me question what I was really doing there and eventually I realized that to really protect my family and country I needed to end my part in this illegal and unjust war."  Floyd got his tattoo after returning from Iraq while he was still enlisted, to remind himself and others that the army, the death and destruction that it represented could not take his soul and his humanity from him. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • Domingo Rosas served in Iraq as a sergeant from April 2003 to 2004 as a guard in a detention center.  Some of the images of abuse and torture he witnessed “seared themselves into my minds eye and I can’t forget them, I won’t forget them.”  He is haunted by those images and the memories of the friend he lost in Iraq.  He speaks out against the war out of necessity and has found a form of therapy in working with the other members of Iraq Veterans Against the War. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • Mark Wilkerson filed for concientious objector status after one tour in Iraq.  When he was denied he went AWOL instead of going back to Iraq.   After a year he turned himself in and spent five months in jail.  This is from a portrait series I am doing on Iraq War veterans who are resisting the war. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • “I voted for Bush in 2000 and in fact, I worked to get him elected.  But when I realized I was going to be an oppressor in Iraq my viewpoints changed.”  Ben Schrader started to explore the true reasons for war and didn’t like what he found.  The dedication he once had as a member of the Young Republicans was directed into discovering more truths about the war and U.S foreign policy. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  •  By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • Cameron White deployed to Iraq twice.  Before his first deployment he was in full support of the war.  When he got there though, he found himself securing oil fields, causing him to wonder what the real intention of the mission was.  After extensive research and re-education Cameron began working within the peace movement while still on active duty.  He was introduced to Buddhism by a fellow soldier in Iraq, and upon returning from his second tour he began studying with Claude Anshin Thomas, a Vietnam veteran turned Buddhist monk.  “Buddhism is about understanding the self.  In the military the mentality that is encouraged is to do things without asking question and not look at the humanity involved and the consequences.  What drew me to Buddhism and opened my eyes within the practice was realizing that I have to pay attention to what I am doing each and every moment because there are consequences to all the choices we make.”  Cameron now works for Disabled American Veterans and sees his work as service to the world. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • After three months in Iraq, the vehicle Zack was traveling in was blown up by an improvised explosive device.  He was sent back to the states for several months to recover his injuries and then voluntarily redeployed to Iraq for the remainder of his tour.  "I went back thinking that maybe we were going to do some good.  But it continued, day in day, countless pointless missions... It was a lost cause, we went over, we participated in things we probably shouldn't have participated in, we made choices we'll have to live with forever and then we get on a plane and come back here and nothing is ever said about it..."..Zack Choate, Iraq War Veteran from Atlanta GA By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • Maggie Martin deployed once to Kuwait and twice to Iraq.  She was a part of the initial invasion in 2003.  "I think about the kids I met in the market that were 10, 11, 12 years old that are now 14,15, 16 year old young men who have had an occupation in their country their whole adolescence and I wonder what it must be like for them having their whole childhood destroyed by this war and the occupation and I'm sure all the happy little kids that were there in 2003 that were getting candy from us and standing on the side of the road, are probably now a large part of the Iraqi resistance and I don't blame them."..Maggie Martin, Iraq War Veteran from Savannah, GA By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • "The common theme through all the stuff that we were doing, everywhere we went the Iraqis always told me that we shouldn't be there, that their lives were better before we got there and that now there lives were ruined because we were there.... On top of seeing things I didn't agree with I was finding out I was completely lied to... The military teaches you to dehumanize people; you can't pull a trigger on someone you feel equal with, you just can't.  Being in Iraq though, I actually learned to see the Iraqis as equals."..Jason Hurd, Iraq War Veteran from Kingsport, TN By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • "No one is being liberated."  William Stewart-Stark deployed to the Anbar Province of Iraq as a medic in 2004 in full support of the war.  He soon began to wonder though, why he was even there and what they were really fighting for.  "We knew we weren't fighting Al- Qaeda, we were fighting civilians who were fighting back and were just perpetuating the violence."  Still, William wanted to believe he and his fellow soldiers were part of a just cause.  The longer he spent in Iraq the more holes he began to see in what the media had been telling him before he deployed.  While deployed though, he had very little time or energy to really process what he was a part of and it wasn't until he was back in the U.S. that he began to put the war into historical, political, and economic context.  Then he was sure that it must be stopped.  William now heads up an organization on the University of Kansas campus in Lawrence, Kansas that is made up of students and veterans who are working to end the wars.  ..William Stewart-Stark, Iraq War Veteran from Lawrence, KS. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • Bobby Whittenberg joined the marines in March of 03' just after the Iraq conflict started.  " I grew up in small towns that were largely conservative Christian and that is what you were expected to do.  I truly believed we were going to be liberating the people of Iraq and keeping the people here safe and I saw on T.V, fathers leaving their children, husbands leaving their wives, mothers leaving their kids and I thought that maybe if I went I could keep someone else from having to."   After being shot on a security convoy in Iraq though, his nationalism began to turn to anger and later compassion.  At first "I was angry at the people of Iraq but than, I realized they had nothing to do with it.  They were just trying to live their lives the same way I was and my anger needed to be directed not towards them but at the people that put us all in this terrible situation, that get to sit back in their ivory tower and watch it all play out like a video game." ..Bobby Whittenberg, Iraq War Veteran from Austin, TX. By photographer Jon Orlando
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  • I started realizing that as I was yelling these obscenities and threatening to hurt these people, that I didn't want to hurt them.  That all my commands for them to stop were just pleas for them to stop that I was really just begging them to stop because I didn't want to hurt anybody..... I brought my rifle up to aim and put my finger on the trigger and took the slack out of the trigger.  I was getting ready to fire and they came halting to stop. I saw the little red dot on the little girls forehead and I realized I was aiming a rifle at a little girl and I saw her crying. I didn't want to do anything but freeze it all and hold her and tell her it would be ok..... Shortly after that my friend Heredia died... the way everyone reacted, everyone just went on like it was another day... no one really batted an eye... it all just messed with me a lot....We have to realize that PTSD is a symptom of an attack of conscience and my conscience is telling me something is wrong.  I don't need to take a bunch of pills to silence my conscience.  I need to take steps to listen to it.  I need to take steps to end this war and take steps to make sure no one suffers like I did or does what I did."  .. Brian Hannah, Iraq War Veteran from San Marcos, TX. By photographer Jon Orlando
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