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Master Carl P. Roberts, FDM, FDD, PGK

 Assemblies

Charles Carroll, 375
Justice Taney,  376
Bishop McNamara, 384
Pangborn, 387
Adm. Benson, 381
Cardinal Gibbons, 379
Msgr. Mickle, 378
St. Francis Xavier, 380
Arch. Keough, 385
St. Elizabeth Seton, 1620
Fr. Mosley, 1929
Christopher Columbus, 2272
Pope Paul VI, 2367
Arch. Carroll, 2378
Fr. Gardiner, 2454
Fr. McGivney, 2595
Fr. Lutz, 2702

Sergeant Rafael Peralta, USMC
1st Platoon, Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment
San Diego, CA,
 Age: 25
Killed in Action, Fallujah, Iraq
Nov 15th, 2004

By Gordon Trowbridge
The Army Times

FALLUJAH, Iraq; Sgt. Rafael Peralta built a reputation as a man who always put his Marines'Sgt. Rafael Peralta, USMC interests ahead of his own.

He showed that again, when he made the ultimate sacrifice of his life Tuesday, by shielding his fellow Marines from a grenade blast.

"It's stuff you hear about in boot camp, about World War II and Tarawa Marines who won the Medal of Honor" said Lance Cpl. Rob Rogers, 22, of Tallahassee, Fla., one of Peralta's platoon mates in 1st Platoon, Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment.

Peralta, 25, as platoon scout, wasn't even assigned to the assault team that entered the insurgent safe house in northern Fallujah, Marines said. Despite an assignment that would have allowed him to avoid such dangerous duty, he regularly asked squad leaders if he could join their assault teams, they said.

One of the first Marines to enter the house, Peralta was wounded in the face by rifle fire from a room near the entry door, said Lance Cpl. Adam Morrison, 20, of Tacoma, who was in the house when Peralta was first wounded.

Moments later, an insurgent rolled a fragmentation grenade into the area where a wounded Peralta and the other Marines were seeking cover.

As Morrison and another Marine scrambled to escape the blast, pounding against a locked door, Peralta grabbed the grenade and cradled it into his body, Morrison said. While one Marine was badly wounded by shrapnel from the blast, the Marines said they believe more lives would have been lost if not for Peralta's selfless act.

"He saved half my fire team," said Cpl. Brannon Dyer, 27, of Blairsville, Ga.

The Marines said such a sacrifice would be perfectly in character for Peralta, a Mexico native who lived in San Diego and gained U.S. citizenship after joining the Marines.

"He'd stand up for his Marines to an insane point," Rogers said.

Rogers and others remembered Peralta as a squared-away Marine, so meticulous about uniform standards that he sent his camouflage uniform to be pressed while training in Kuwait before entering Iraq.

But mostly they remembered acts of selflessness: offering career advice, giving a buddy a ride home from the bar, teaching salsa dance steps in the barracks.

While Alpha Company was still gathering information, and a formal finding on Peralta's death is likely months away, not a single Marine in Alpha Company doubted the account of Peralta's act of sacrifice.

"I believe it," said Alpha's commander, Capt. Lee Johnson. "He was that kind of Marine."



Rick Rescorla, 7th Cavalry, Ia Drang Valley

 

 

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