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The American Overseas Schools Historical Society
and Archives both endorses and supports Operation Footlocker.
OPERATION FOOTLOCKER: A UNIQUE FAMILY HISTORY
By Reta Jones Nicholson dream@computerland.net
Those of us who are military brats (we actually are proud
to be called that!) have a very unique history; many of us lived overseas
- or other places far away from extended family - and because of that we
tend to have very strong feelings about what home and family mean. We moved
frequently, leaving friends and pets behind, and often started a new school
year in yet another new school.
We brats couldn't take much of our "stuff" with us at
moving time (there was a weight allowance) so through the years we gathered
items that carried great meaning to us, representing as they did
homes and friends and events that would likely never be returned to. We
lost touch with the people and places, but we had our memories, our portable
traditions, and we had our immediate family who had shared them with us.
As we grew older and started our own lives and families,
we packed our memories away with the objects that evoked them. Those of
us who went into civilian life had long since learned that non-brats often
didn't want to hear about our uncommon lifestyle, the places we'd been,
the cultures we'd experienced...it was easier to pack that life away and
assimilate (we're very good at that). We started new traditions and had
new people to share our more current (and likely more stationary) lives
and memories with.
STAYING IN TOUCH
Some brats who'd gone to high school overseas maintained
contact with each other through their alumni groups, and of course there
were others who had kept in touch as well. There were MILLIONS of us brats,
however, and most of us had lost track of our friends; many of the
military installations we'd lived on (and the schools we'd attended) had
been closed or torn down.
With the advent of the internet, though, military brats
in large numbers began to remember their lives "inside the Fortress" and
they started looking for their childhood friends. We needed to connect
with others who'd shared similar lives, even if lived separately or during
differing eras. We began to find each other and also found we shared traits
and skills and pride and honor from growing up in the shadow of our warrior
parent's mission.
OPERATION FOOTLOCKER
Out of this connecting came a project, begun by two other
military brats and myself almost four years ago, called Operation Footlocker.
We took an old, beat-up, regulation footlocker (a military trunk that was
common in our households) and we put into it stories and photos and objects
from our lives as military brats. We told other brats about it, inviting
them to put their mementos in it, too. We began shipping it to groups of
brats who'd gather to look at the contents and add their items, then they'd
ship it on to the next brat who was organizing a similar gathering.
OpFoot, as we call it, has now criss-crossed the country
several times, been at dozens of events, brat reunions, military reunions,
air shows, parades.... wherever it's appearance has been requested. (So
many places wanted it two years ago we had to birth "OpFoot Jr.", a second
footlocker, to handle the demand.) It's sat in many a living room with
its contents spread about.
Literally thousands of brats and their family members
have poured over the stories and objects - with many hoots of recognition
("I remember these!", "Omigosh, I went to school with her in Turkey!",
"Ugh! Shot records! Remember standing in line waiting to get stuck? And
heaven help you if you ever lost this little yellow record!!") and even
a few tears now and then as you remembered faces and times and places that
were gone forever.
Don't think for a moment, though, that we regret our lives
as brats! Very few will say they hated it, and most will tell you proudly
that they wouldn't trade their experiences for anything....and yet there
is a certain amount of loneliness that came along with the lifestyle and
stayed with each of us when we moved out of it. Now, however, some of our
collective memories are packed in a footlocker on the move instead of a
box on a shelf, and we're discovering our larger "family"....and "home"
is where family is.
Can you pack millions of histories and mementos into a
single trunk? We're trying! Although we brats are very good packers, we
know someday we'll run out of room ... even if we have several footlockers.
Items donated to Operation Footlocker will
have a permanent home at the American Overseas Schools Archives (AOSA).
Although originally established to archive the records of American children
schooled overseas, the AOSA has expanded its vision to include ALL U.S.
military dependent children.
While Operation Footlocker will continue to roam, gathering
written memories and memorabilia from brats of any branch or era of U.S.
military service, its archived contents will be held as a special collection
at the Society's Historical Park, to be built on land generously donated
by the City of Wichita, Kansas.
To schedule Operation Footlocker for military brat related
events contact Gene Moser, Operations Officer, Operation Footlocker STEAMGENE@aol.com
You can send e-mail to Reta Jones Nicholson
dream@computerland.net
For more information visit the Operation Footlocker homepage
at: www.tckworld.com/opfoot/
Article Copyright 1999-2000 Reta Jones Nicholson All
Rights Reserved
Website Copyright 2000 AOSHS All Rights Reserved
GGordon1@aol.com
Researched & Compiled by:
Glenn Greenwood, Director of Communications American Overseas Schools Historical Society
American Overseas Schools Archive & Museum/Wichita,
Kansas aoshscom@wichita.edu |