LANDSTUHL, Germany April 8 —
Rescued U.S. POW Jessica Lynch is cheerful, strong-willed and
thinking about home, family members reported Tuesday, expressing
relief at the pace of her recovery from wounds suffered in Iraq.
Lynch's father, who arrived Sunday from West Virginia along with
her mother, two siblings and a cousin, said the family was happy to
discover that her condition was not as bad as they had feared.
"It really felt good once we'd seen her and seen the spirits
she's been in," Gregory Lynch told reporters during the family's
first news conference at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center. "We knew
she was going to be all right."
Deadra Lynch said her daughter was "real cheerful," emphasizing
that the family was not pushing her to discuss her harrowing
experience in Iraq.
Lynch, a 19-year-old Army supply clerk from Palestine, West
Virginia, was captured March 23 after her 507th Maintenance Company
convoy was ambushed in the southern Iraqi city of Nasiriyah. She was
rescued April 1 from a hospital in the city by U.S. commandos and
airlifted to Germany.
Lynch was aware that members of her unit were killed, the family
said, though it was unclear whether she had asked about their fate
after being rescued or already knew about it.
Her family learned that eight members of her unit had been killed
only from a reporter's question at a news conference in West
Virginia before departing for Germany.
Doctors say Lynch is in stable condition in intensive care, where
she was being treated for a head wound, an injury to her spine and
fractures to her right arm, both legs, and her right foot and ankle.
Gunshots may have caused open fractures on her upper right arm and
lower left leg, according to the hospital.
Doctors hope Lynch will be well enough by the end of the week to
endure the long flight home, Landstuhl spokeswoman Marie Shaw
said.
Lynch underwent back surgery Thursday to correct a slipped
vertebra that was putting pressure on her spinal cord. Since then,
she has undergone several more surgeries to stabilize the
fractures.
In a clear sign of progress, she got out of bed and sat in a
chair for four hours Monday and was sitting again on Tuesday,
Landstuhl hospital commander Col. David Rubenstein said.
He said she has begun physical and occupational therapy and has
eaten solid food for the first time since her ordeal turkey with
gravy, French fries and carrots for dinner Monday.
"Pfc. Lynch is doing well and is in excellent spirits,"
Rubenstein said at the news conference.
Lynch's family appeared solemn during the 15-minute news
conference outside a guest house on the hospital grounds, smiling
only at times. They wore yellow ribbons to recall the fate of U.S.
soldiers still in captivity or missing in Iraq.
Gregory Lynch Jr., 21, said his sister was "the same person" he
knew before.
"She's just a bit tired now, and trying to get better," he said.
"She's very strong, strong in the head. She's very determined."
And she wants to go home.
"That's the only thing she's been asking," her brother said.
photo credit
and caption:
Gregory Lynch, father of rescued
U.S. POW Pfc. Jessica Lynch, is framed by his wife Deadra
Lynch, left, and his son Gregory Lynch Jr., right, during a
news conference at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in
Landstuhl, southwestern Germany, Tuesday, April 8, 2003.
Jessica, who was captured in an ambush in Iraq and rescued by
U.S. commandos, is under medical treatment in this U.S.
military hospital. (AP Photo/Thomas
Kienzle)
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