The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio pays respects to Corpsman Soviak

- Craig Webb

Life in a small Ohio town stopped Wednesday to honor the 13 soldiers killed in the attack last month during the evacuation of Americans and others from an airport in Afghanista­n.

This was personal, as they were welcoming one of their own back home who perished in the attack. Shopkeeper­s temporaril­y closed. Mechanics left their garages. And office workers skipped lunch and gathered outside of the courthouse.

American flags covered the landscape of an already picturesqu­e town.

People lined the streets as a long procession of motorcycle­s, police cars and other emergency vehicles made its way closer to Berlin Heights after a long, somber drive from Cleveland’s Hopkins Airport to bring Navy Corpsman Maxton Soviak home.

Many shed a tear as the hearse passed carrying the young man they had watched grow up who went off to serve his country in the Navy and eventually served next to Marines as a medic.

The procession made its way through

Milan and then past Edison High School, where he graduated in 2017, and eventually to his hometown in nearby Berlin Heights.

His funeral will be Monday at the high school football stadium.

Across from the town square in Milan, not far from a statue of famous inventor Thomas Edison (who was born there), stood Bob Doerner.

He’s a retired farmer who served in the Navy back in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

This loss hit close to home – and close to his heart.

Doerner said he didn’t know Soviak personally, but he knew of his family.

It’s like that in small towns like Milan and Berlin Heights.

“If you don’t know someone, you know someone who does,” he said.

Doerner said he did watch Soviak play sports, and shares in the loss of a young man as if he was one of his own. “This area is a big family,” he said. He knows the danger of serving in the military and knows first hand the worry of a parent of someone in uniform.

His own son served as a Navy rescue swimmer in the Persian Gulf War, and he has a grandson who is now a pilot in the Air Force.

“It could have been anyone of us,” he said.

Soviak, 22, was a Navy corpsman assigned to 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, Camp Pendleton, Calif., as a medic.

He was killed Aug. 26 along with the other U.S. service members and some 90 Afghans during an attack by a pair of suicide bombers at the Abbey Gates of Hamid Karzai Internatio­nal Airport in Kabul during the frantic rush to evacuate Americans and Afghans after the country fell to the Taliban.

The Navy has already honored Soviak and posthumous­ly advanced him to the rank of Hospital Corpsman Third Class.

But on this day, it was time for others in his hometown to honor the fallen soldier.

Hundreds of motorcycle­s, police cars, firetrucks and military organizati­ons were part of a motorcade that stretched for miles as it made its way from the Ohio Turnpike to the funeral home.

Police and fire department­s from throughout Northwest and Northeast

Ohio made the trek. Even police motorcycle officers from the Columbus Police Department made the 110-mile drive.

It took almost 20 minutes for the procession to pass.

And when the last vehicle did drive off in the distance, most of the those gathered lingered for a moment of two longer.

Then they clapped to honor one of their own.

Among them was Jymmie Wetherbee, who stood out in the crowd in his old active duty Navy uniform.

The Wellington resident served five years in the Navy and now works with the Disabled American Veterans Department of Ohio.

He’s no stranger to military funerals and serves on the honor guard at many rites.

But usually they aren’t as young as Soviak.

He usually wears his veteran darker uniform to such gatherings, but on this day it just seemed right to wear his crisp white active duty uniform.

“He’s one of us,” he said. “This is never easy – especially for someone as young as he was.”

Craig Webb can be reached at cwebb@thebeaconj­ournal.com.

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