Freedom Flight's POW / MIA Message From Above
Sunday, 07.01.2007, 02:48pm (GMT)
Jim Tuorila's most memorable hot air balloon flight comes with a small
bit of irony attached to one of its more prominent elements, altitude.
The veteran balloon pilot and co-founder of Freedom Flight, Inc., a
non-profit organization that raises awareness as well as hot air
balloons, had flown hundreds of times. But when one of his passengers
requested that he take his distinctive black balloon with the easily
recognizable POW/MIA logo to 5,000 feet, Tuorila acquiesced with little
enthusiasm.
"I don't like to fly high," he said, laughing. "I'm afraid of heights.
I can't lean over the side of a tall building and feel comfortable. I
probably wouldn't be flying this balloon if it weren't for the issue."
But the POW/MIA issue and the balloon are inseparable. The striking
black craft with its three 30-foot high POW/MIA logos is like no other
and is easily spotted even in a sky like Albuquerque's in October, when
mass ascensions at the Albuquerque International Hot Air Balloon Fiesta
might number more than a thousand colorful balloons in all shapes and
sizes gliding over the city.
Tuorila's three guests that day came with special significance. So he
opened up the balloon's gas burners and the black craft rose into the
air. His passengers were women married to men still listed as MIA from
the Vietnam War. He doesn't remember which one asked that he fly to
5,000 feet, but Tuorila has been a psychologist at a VA Medical Center
in Minnesota for 20 years; he was curious to see what would happen when
they reached that altitude. Balloon flights generally skim the earth,
the better to see and be seen. At 5,000 feet, people on the ground are
barely able to see the balloon. He couldn't imagine why his passenger
wanted to climb that high.
He said that the moment they reached the requested altitude will stay with him forever.
"We get up there and she says this is the altitude the military said
her husband was at when he ejected from his plane over Vietnam," he
said. "She wanted to see what the world looked like when he ejected. It
touched me so deeply that I'll never forget that flight with those
women."
Freedom Flight, the POW/MIA Hot Air Balloon Team, has flown in more
than seven hundred events since its first flight in November 1989. The
non-profit now has three balloons that attend 35 to 45 events a year,
staffed entirely by volunteers. The organization grew out of Tuorila's
vocation, psychology, and his avocation,hot air balloons.
In 1981, while attending graduate school at Texas Tech University in
Lubbock, he worked with a group of World War II ex-POWs called the
"Lost Battalion," all of them survivors of more than three years in
Japanese prison camps. That work inspired Tuorila to write his doctoral
dissertation on the effects of captivity, especially regarding the work
of Victor Frankl and his famous writings following his own imprisonment
in Nazi concentration camps.
While doing his doctoral internship at the Topeka, Kansas, VA Medical
Center, Tuorila and his wife volunteered to crew for a hot air balloon.
When he went to work in Minnesota, they saw a balloon in flight one day
and decided to volunteer again.
In 1987, he appeared on a local TV program to talk about the emotional
difficulties families face when a loved one returns after years of
captivity. On the program he met the daughter of a Navy pilot shot down
and declared MIA. The daughter told him that the government story of
her father's disappearance was very much at odds with the story told by
her father's wingman, who made a point of finding the pilot's family to
tell them the true story of the incident.
By then, Tuorila and his wife were crewing on a balloon flown by a
Vietnam veteran who had been encouraging him to set up a non-profit
with an eye toward calling attention to the POW/MIA issue.
Then one day at work, his professional life and his weekend life coalesced.
"I told my co-therapist, 'You know, I've been flying and working with
balloons for five years now. What about a black POW/MIA balloon? What
kind of attention would that get?' "
The co-therapist and co-founder of Freedom Flight, Vietnam veteran Bill
Nohner, thought it was a great idea. A year later, Freedom Flight,
Inc., obtained status as a non-profit educational organization.
In 1989, the first flight went up. Its first passenger was Henry Sha, a
World War II veteran and ex-POW who happened to stop his car when the
balloon landed nearby. Invited onboard, he didn't hesitate.
Now in its sixteenth year, Freedom Flight continues to attract
attention, sometimes through a little luck. At the 2005 Albuquerque
International Balloon Fiesta, Tuorila volunteered to give rides to the
media. A Voice of America camera crew making a documentary on the
balloon fiesta accepted his offer. When the crew members found out who
they were flying with, a new angle for the documentary emerged.
"When they found out what we were doing with the balloon, I think the
program changed to include Freedom Flight and everything we were
doing," Tuorila said.
The change was in keeping with how Tuorila describes the past sixteen
years. "The reception we've gotten over the years make the hair on the
back of my neck stand up," Tuorila said. "It's been incredible. I've
had what I assume to be a Vietnam veteran come up, put $100 in my
pocket and say, 'Keep it up,' then walk away. I've had family members
of the missing come up to me with tears in their eyes. I've had ex-POWs
come up and thank us. Everywhere we go, the reception has been positive
and overwhelming, and that keeps us flying."
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