Waycross (Georgia): Two young citizen-soldiers who became close friends after enlisting in the Army Reserve were remembered at funerals in southeast Georgia on Saturday, nearly three weeks after they died in a drone attack while deployed to the Middle East.
A service for 24-year-old Sgt. Kennedy Sanders was held in the packed 1,200-seat auditorium of Ware County Middle School in Waycross. Fellow soldiers recalled Sanders' courage, her loving personality, and her willingness to volunteer for tasks few wanted to do, including learning to operate earth-moving equipment to help build roads and shelters, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.
Behind her smile was a fierce determination, Col. Jeffrey Dulgarian said during the service, adding that she tackled her responsibility with vigour and skill. Sanders' former basketball coach, Mandy Lingenfelter, remembered Sanders as a point guard for Ware County High's Lady Gators.
It was hard for me to yell at her, Lingenfelter said, because she was always smiling. She had pure joy. She put Jesus first, others second and herself last. A similar welcome marked the final homecoming for Sgt. Breonna Moffett, 23, in Savannah. Moffett's funeral at a Baptist church was scheduled for the same time Saturday as Sanders' service 161 km away. Moffett's family requested that the media not be present.
The soldiers were among three members of their Army Reserve unit who died on January 28 in a drone strike on a US base in Jordan near the Syrian border. Also killed was Staff Sgt. William Jerome Rivers, 46, who was buried Tuesday following a church service in Carrollton. The military awarded all three soldiers promotions in rank after their deaths. They were assigned to the 926th Engineer Battalion, 926th Engineer Brigade, based at Fort Moore in west Georgia.