Peace Activist Carlos Arredondo Hailed as Hero for Aid to Boston Marathon
Bombing Victims
Carlos & his wife Melida were on Democracy Now with Amy Goodman on April
16th. 
www.democracynow.org/2013/4/16/peace_activist_carlos_arredondo_hailed_as 

Peace <http://www.democracynow.org/topics/peace>  activist Carlos Arredondo
<http://www.democracynow.org/appearances/carlos_arredondo>  has come to be
known as "the man in the hat" and widely described as a hero for a viral
image of him in a cowboy hat pinching the severed artery of a bloodied,
wheelchair-bound victim in the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombings.
Arredondo is no stranger to tragedy: He became a prominent opponent of the
Iraq <http://www.democracynow.org/topics/iraq>  War
<http://www.democracynow.org/topics/war>  after his son, Lance Cpl.
Alexander Arredondo, was killed in Iraq in 2004. His surviving son, Brian,
committed suicide in 2011. Carlos and his wife Mélida, join us to describe
witnessing the Boston Marathon bombings and the immediate response to aid
the victims. 
I have met Carlos & Melida many times over the years. They are such very
nice people. I remember the first time I met Carlos was at an anti-war event
in San Diego. He took the time to help me carry boxes of books & DVD to my
table. I saw them at the Veterans For Peace Convention last August. And I
saw them in October of 2012 in Hollywood at the premiere screening of: 
"THE PROSECUTION OF AN AMERICAN PRESIDENT", An Explosive Documentary ON THE
TRUTH BEHIND THE IRAQ WAR - Based on THE Book by Vincent Bugliosi:  
www.prosecution2012.com . They are both in that very well done film. So are
Jane & Jim Bright.

You can read more about Carlos & Melida at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos_Arredondo 


Transcript -
www.democracynow.org/2013/4/16/peace_activist_carlos_arredondo_hailed_as 
AMY GOODMAN: We begin today's show with Carlos Arredondo
<http://www.democracynow.org/appearances/carlos_arredondo>  and his wife
Mélida. They're joining us now on the phone from Boston. They were both at
the scene of the bombing yesterday.
We welcome you to Democracy Now! Carlos, let's begin with you. Tell us what
you experienced, what you saw, where you were.
CARLOS ARREDONDO: I was across the street from where the bombs explode with
Mélida. And what I saw in the beginning was a big fire coming out across the
street from where we are at the time. And then the loud noise occur, and
then the big smoke. And people running. And a second explosion just right
after that.
My reaction was to just jump the fence, where the-to the street and cross to
jump the second fence and landing in this area where was pretty much the
serious injuries. You know, everybody was on the ground. There was broken
limbs, people with no limbs, people totally passed out, so many injuries
today. I never see in my life like this. You know, it was a very, very
horrible moment in that particular moment there. People was running. And a
lot of people was really doing a great job in handling the best we could at
the time.
AARON MATÉ: And, Carlos, you're being cited in the media as a hero for what
you did for the victims. Tell us how you reacted to the bombing.
CARLOS ARREDONDO: Well, it took really few minutes to understand that this
was a IED explosion. And my first reaction, being a volunteer for the Red
Cross <http://www.democracynow.org/topics/red_cross> , and my first reaction
was to just go, you know, and do my duty. So many people was doing the same
thing-police officers, National Guards, people from the stands, veterans
<http://www.democracynow.org/topics/veterans> . You know, everybody just got
together into the side. You know, we didn't know if it was a third bomb
waiting for anybody there, you know, but everybody removed the fence by
their hands and pushed everything around. And in a matter of time, everybody
was wheeled out to the next 150 yards, you know, emergency area, which was
piled with emergency medical service and units. That was a lot of help.
AMY GOODMAN: Carlos-
AARON MATÉ: And tell-I'm sorry.
AMY GOODMAN: Carlos, you helped a man. You tied a tourniquet around his leg.
You were there because one of the runners was honoring your dead son in Iraq
<http://www.democracynow.org/topics/iraq> ?
CARLOS ARREDONDO: One of the runners was doing it to remember Alexander, and
two of the National Guard members start 4:00 a.m. that morning walking. They
went-they start going by a little bit around 2:00 in the afternoon. I was
right in the street waiting for the one who was running for my son, because
they was passing by at around between 2:00 and 3:00. And the explosion
happened before 3:00. And fortunately, none of them got hurt.
AMY GOODMAN: But you were helping wounded people.
CARLOS ARREDONDO: I just concentrate in removing the fence to help everybody
coming to the scene. And then I concentrate on a young man who lost both of
the limbs. I ripped up a T-shirt, and another gentleman helped me out, and
we put this tourniquet on the legs. And then the first wheelchair that
arrived, you know, I picked him up and put him in the wheelchair, and I
dragged him out of there, because only I can do at the time.
AARON MATÉ: And Carlos, what were you telling the victims that you were
helping?
CARLOS ARREDONDO: Well, at this moment, I asked him, this young man, his
name. I asked him to stay awake, you know, to talk to me. And he was fine,
you know. The ambulance down here, you know? And he was-the whole time he
was conscious, and the whole time he understand. He gave me his name. And I
was only, you know, trying to do what I could. And everybody else in that
moment did the same thing, you know?
AMY GOODMAN: Carlos, you have been through so much in your life. You lost
your older son, Alexander, in Iraq. You lost your next son, Brian, who
committed suicide a few years later. You've been traveling around the
country speaking out against violence, and now you witness this and try to
save people who were injured.
Mélida, maybe you would like to weigh in here. You have been right at
Carlos's side in your peace <http://www.democracynow.org/topics/peace>
activism, in your activism against violence in the world.
MÉLIDA ARREDONDO: Oh, Amy-
AMY GOODMAN: Could you speak right in the phone but not into the speaker
phone? Come off speaker phone, because we could hardly hear you. Mélida?
Mélida, are you there? Carlos?
MÉLIDA ARREDONDO: OK, I'm here.
AMY GOODMAN: Ah, excellent.
MÉLIDA ARREDONDO: OK, I apologize. Good morning.
AMY GOODMAN: Morning.
MÉLIDA ARREDONDO: To be quite honest, since we lost Brian in December of
2011, Carlos and I have been trying to just stay sane and have been working
real hard to promote awareness about suicide, both in the military
<http://www.democracynow.org/topics/military>  and among military families.
But Carlos was heroic yesterday. I was in the stands right across the street
and saw both bombings head on. But the debris did not reach us-thank you,
Jesus. And the scene was very, very scary. I was in the top of the stands. I
couldn't walk, and somebody had to help me down the sort of like the
football stands. And we've been trying to nurture each other, and we've been
seeing a few more doctors than usual. And it's taken a toll on us. But I
knew when that bomb went off, after the second bomb went off, I knew that
Carlos was there, because his training as a first responder-he's in the
disaster relief for the American Red Cross-that's his instinct, and to go
and help. And he's helped other people who have been injured over the years
in fires and things like that through his work.
And so, today it's been very overwhelming with the calls. I immediately got
cold all day. I could not stop shaking from the cold until 2:00 a.m. this
morning. And Carlos has been very-crying and traumatized a little bit
and-but we're going on. At the same time, we're full of adrenaline. So,
we'll be getting in touch with counseling services shortly for ourselves,
because-and I recommend anybody who was there to do that. The city of Boston
is going to put together counseling services for people who were at the
event, and the American Red Cross is going to, or just reach out to local
community health centers, which we have several in the area. And-but I am
very upset to hear this morning that the little boy-because that's
immediately what I thought of, the children, because this is a
family-friendly event. And there were children to elders to every
nationality. It's a very beautiful event. And it was very upsetting to hear
that the young child of the Martin family-Martin, I think his first name
is-and was killed, eight years old, from the part of Boston that I work in,
in Dorchester. And both his mother and sister are severely injured and in
the hospitals. So-
AMY GOODMAN: Well, Carlos and Mélida, we want to thank you for being with
us, and I'm so sorry we're speaking to you on such a painful day. Thank you
for being there, and, Carlos, as usual, for your heroism. When Carlos
learned he lost his son when the Marines came to his door, he set his van on
fire, and then he started his journey around the country for peace. And as
you heard, Carlos and Mélida lost their son Brian, their second son, last
year to suicide.



 


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