Emily Perez: first female African-American Officer KIA At Age OF Only 23
Emily Perez was the first black woman to achieve the rank of Cadet
Command Sergeant Major in the history of the United States Military
Academy - Pic Credit: defaultcrossfit.com
Emily Perez was the first black woman to achieve the rank of Cadet
Command Sergeant Major in the history of the United States Military
Academy. Upon her graduation from the academy in 2005, she was
commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the U.S Army.
Born on February 19, 1983 in Heidelberg, Germany
to a military family, Perez helped start an HIV-AIDS ministry at her
church while in High School. She was also an educator with the
Red Cross.
Described as the “diminutive young woman calling out orders to the
freshman cadets on the castled military campus of West Point. She was
often seen sprinting the third leg for Army’s 400-meter relay team. Or
in the school’s gospel choir, filling her lungs and opening her mouth to
sing”. Emily was a member of Peace Baptist Church in Washington, D.C.
“Emily, as far as I’m concerned, was one of the most brilliant people I
ever met. She was the consummate intellectual,” said the Rev. Michael
Bell, executive pastor at Peace Baptist Church in Washington. “But she was not the kind of person who was only book-oriented. She always wanted to help someone, to help the community.” In a bid to help others, Perez made personal sacrifices. “Shortly
before shipping out to Iraq, Lieutenant Perez flew from Texas to
Maryland to be a bone marrow donor to a stranger who was a match,”
Pastor Bell said. She went on to the United States Military Academy at West Point where she was a four-year letter earner on the track team, served as Cadet Command Sergeant Major.
Perez, the first female minority Cadet Command Sergeant Major in the history of the U.S Military
Academy, had a short life. “She was like a little superwoman . . . so
full of energy and life, and she was just willing to do anything,”
Meghan Venable-Thomas, a senior who also ran track and sang in the choir
with Perez said.She was deployed to Iraq with the 204th Support Battalion, 1st
Infantry Division in December 2005 as a Medical Service Corps officer
and there the 23-year-old soldier from Fort Washington in Prince
George’s County, 2nd Lt2nd Lt. Emily J.T. Perez was killed while on duty
in Al Kifl, Iraq, on Sept. 12 2016. She was KIA when an improvised explosive device detonated near her Humvee during combat operations in Kifl, Iraq.
Emily was the first female graduate of West Point to die in the Iraq
Wardia, the first West Point graduate of the “Class of 9/11” to die in
combat, and the first female African-American officer to die in combat.
Perez earned numerous awards including the Purple Heart, Bronze Star,
Army Commendation Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Army Service
Ribbon, the Overseas Service Ribbon, and the Combat Action Badge. She
also posthumously received the NCAA Award of Valor in 2008 that recognizes a
“courageous action or noteworthy bravery” by persons involved with
intercollegiate athletics. The soldiers in her former unit have honored her with a street named
“Emily’s Way” and a medical center named the, “Emily J.T. Perez
Treatment Facility” in Iraq. One of her mentors, Roger Pollard, who worked with her when she
volunteered with the Alexandria Red Cross education
program, recalled her remarkable ability to stay focused, always on
time, always ready to work.
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