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thedrifter
09-25-03, 06:25 AM
Mass. man's comic-book care packages come to the rescue of bored troops


By Patrick J. Dickson, Stars and Stripes
European edition, Wednesday, September 24, 2003


WASHINGTON — It may not be as lofty as truth, justice and the American way, but Chris Tarbassian has swooped in to help people he’s never met.

The Framingham, Mass., native was in contact with a friend he met while both worked as trauma nurses at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in nearby Boston.

He wanted to help U.S. Air Force Capt. Tom Chafe, a flight nurse who deployed to Afghanistan as part of Operation Enduring Freedom. And he wanted to relieve the boredom and pain of the patients Chafe was helping.

So Tarbassian, 40, shipped his friend a package of comic books.

“It’s called diversional activities, to take their minds off things for a while,” Tarbassian said. “We just get these to wounded GIs, to see if they can make the guys feel better.”

The size of the project exploded.

When word got out that he was willing to send comic books to servicemembers overseas, e-mails started pouring in from friends and family members of those deployed. Tarbassian launched Operation Comix Relief.

Tarbassian started making the rounds to comic book stores in his area, and talking with major distributors, such as DC Comics and Diamond Comic Distributors, who have donated to the cause.

It mushroomed so quickly that he soon needed a staff to run his Web site and write a newsletter, and he even drafted his nephews to help box things up.

In the months since he started shipping packages, Tarbassian has sent close to 400 boxes containing 4,000 comic books.

And the response is something Tarbassian said he’ll never forget. He’s getting invitations to family parties for returning servicemembers, as well as a lot of e-mails from the field thanking him for what he’s doing.

“Your package and motivation helped lift me and my platoon’s heads sky-high, and also helped get our mission complete,” wrote one young Marine. “Thank you from the bottom of my heart.”

While he’s getting donations regularly, what really makes Tarbassian happy is getting addresses where he can send comics.

The U.S. military wants all packages addressed to a specific individual due to bioterrorism scares. Because of that, Tarbassian is getting the word out, asking for servicemen and servicewomen’s addresses so he can get the comics to them directly.

Tarbassian’s father, Vartkess Tarbassian, who said with a laugh that he tries to “stay as far away from the operation as possible,” can’t help but be proud.

The senior Tarbassian is a Korean War veteran himself, having fought with the 2nd Infantry Division.

The operation’s impact is perhaps best summed up by one letter he received from an Army surgeon.

“Now that the direct fighting phase of this war has finished (tell that to the Baathists), it is nice to know that people at home are still thinking about us.”

For more information, go to www.operationcomixrelief.freeservers.com or e-mail Tarbassian at: operationcomixrelief@yahoo.com

http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=17674

Sempers,

Roger
:marine: