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Thursday, August 12, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M. A small town grieves over one family's loss in Iraq By Hal Bernton
That evening, three Marines in full uniform knocked on her door, asking to speak with her and her husband, who works the late shift at a local processing plant. "I didn't have to wait for them to speak. My heart already felt something, as a mother," she said yesterday. The Reynosos' oldest son 27-year-old Marine Sgt. Yadir Reynoso had been killed, shot in the face during the fighting in Najaf, Iraq. He is the 23rd service member from Washington to die in the war, many of whom came from small towns such as Arlington, Concrete, Sedro-Woolley and Prosser, where patriotism is often strong and job opportunities scarce.
Many of Wapato's residents were drawn to the area for its farm jobs. Gloria and Jose Reynoso, Mexican nationals, arrived in 1982 from Stockton, Calif. More than two decades of toiling in asparagus fields, fruit orchards, packing warehouses and processing plants have brought them a modest piece of the American dream. They own their own home, a wood-frame house bought in 1986 for less than $9,000 and painstakingly fixed up over the years. And their four children all born in the U.S. made it through high school and found lives beyond the fields. For motivation, Jose Reynoso took Yadir, then 6, into the asparagus fields along with his younger sister Patty to work. "He wanted us to experience what his life was like, so we would go to school," recalls Patty Reynoso, now an accounts representative at Yakima Valley Radiology.
They also negotiated with the aid of U.S. Sen. Patty Murray to join the Marine escort that accompanied their son's body across the mountains from Seattle to Wapato. Their son, they say, was a lean, handsome man and a father of five. Just recently Reynoso, who was divorced from his wife, Lisa, spoke of getting out of the Marines to spend more time with his family. Yesterday, the family opened their home to reporters from The Seattle Times and the Yakima Herald-Republic. On the chain-link fence outside their home hang four red-white-and-blue American pennants, and another four are tacked to the front porch, along with a black ribbon with Yadir's picture over the door. Inside, pictures of the Virgin Mary and religious scrolls are outnumbered by pictures in a new shrine to honor their lost son. A picture of the 130-pound Yadir as a youthful high-school wrestler is positioned across from a sober-faced Yadir in Marine uniform.
He loved coming home to Wapato, as well as taking fellow Marines on south-of-the-border visits to Tijuana, where his grandmother lives. Though his body was amply covered with tattoos, he promised his grandmother that he would save a special place over his heart for a tattoo to honor her. He sent her flowers just before he was sent to Iraq in May, his family recalls. As a boy, helping his father work on the house, Yadir Reynoso once spoke of being an electrician. But his dreams changed. Jose Reynoso, his voice breaking with emotion, recalled how his son came home from high school one day to pore through a Marine recruiting brochure. "He said, 'Is it OK if I join them Marines?' I responded that it was his decision. If that's what he wanted to do, I would support that decision. If that was the career he wanted," Jose Reynoso said in an interview translated by his daughter, Patty. His son enlisted in 1997. Later, a proud Yadir came home from boot camp in uniform. "He said, 'I know that I am a man now I am respected the way I always felt I wanted to be respected,' " his mother said.
Reynoso ended up with the Battalion Landing Team 1/4, 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, I Marine Expeditionary Force, based in Camp Pendleton, Calif. The family said he got an early taste of the carnage of war when he was asked to help retrieve the bodies of U.S. sailors killed when the USS Cole was attacked by terrorists in Aden, Yemen, in 2000. Reynoso was deeply disturbed by what he saw, and he told his family he didn't want to die that way.
His family now struggles to come to terms with his combat death. Patty Reynoso recalls how she came to visit her parents last Thursday and was full of anger and grief upon learning of her brother's death. "My mother said, 'This is what God wanted.' I said no. I had spoken to Yadir earlier [this month]. He said he was going to come home." Hal Bernton: 206-464-2581 or hbernton@seattletimes.com Seattle Times researcher Gene Balk contributed to this story.
Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company
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