Orlando Sentinel

Relatives pursue top medal for war heroics

Family determined to see Oviedo’s Cashe receive Medal of Honor

- By Lisa Maria Garza

Fifteen years ago, Oviedo native Sgt. 1st Class Alwyn Cashe died after he pulled seven men from a burning armored vehicle after a roadside bomb detonated in Iraq.

But bureaucrat­ic red tape has kept his family from seeing Cashe become the first African American recipient of the Medal of Honor, the U.S. Military’s most prestigiou­s award for personal valor, for service in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Tuesday brought a longawaite­d breakthrou­gh as U.S. Rep. Stephanie Murphy, a Democrat from Winter Park along with Rep. Michael Waltz, a Republican who represents Volusia and Flagler counties, and Rep. Dan Crenshaw, a Republican from Texas, shepherded a bill through the House that will pave the way for Congress to waive the five-year limit on eligibilit­y and allow President Donald Trump to recognize

Cashe with the honor.

“With unanimous passage of our bill by the House today, we are one step closer to ensuring that Alwyn Cashe receives the Medal of Honor he earned,” Murphy said in a statement late Tuesday. “I am grateful that so many Americans are learning of and being inspired by SFC Cashe’s heroic actions, which are so extraordin­ary they nearly defy descriptio­n."

He was posthumous­ly awarded the Silver Star. His family has been campaignin­g since then for his recognitio­n to be upgraded to the Medal of Honor.

In October 2005, Cashe, 35, crawled out from the wreckage — his uniform soaked in diesel fuel — then went back multiple times to recover six soldiers and an interprete­r while dodging enemy gunfire.

The translator didn’t survive the fiery scene and Cashe died a few weeks later from burns that covered more than 70% of his body.

“Alwyn’s a hero in the most pure and profound sense,” Murphy said. “What he did on that Iraq battlefiel­d really takes your breath away.”

His sister, Kasinal Cashe White, said she doesn’t believe discrimina­tion played a factor in previous failed attempts to elevate her brother’s recognitio­n.

“I know it wasn’t a race thing ... ," she said. “He did what he did not because he was Black, he did what he did because he was a soldier."

Before he died at a military hospital in Texas, Stars and Stripes reported that Cashe told his family he went back to the flaming wreckage because “I had made peace with my God, but I didn’t know if my men had yet.”

The next step is for the U.S. Senate to take up the bill before Trump can officially award the honor. U.S. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper already supports the measure. There’s a tight deadline to get the bill through the Senate before the body breaks next month, Murphy acknowledg­ed.

If the Senate fails to take up the bill, she has a backup plan. Cashe’s case will be folded into the upcoming National Defense Authorizat­ion Act.

“One way or another, we are going to get this done," she said.

In 2018, Murphy sponsored legislatio­n to name a U.S. Post Office in Oviedo in Cashe’s honor, a site that White said she visits to see the plaque for her “baby brother” hanging there.

“It is my desire to see it to fruition,” she said of her family’s Medal of Honor quest. "I just can’t leave this world without it happening.”

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