Amen
This candle is for ALL POW/MIA's and
will remain lit
until every single one is back home with
their loved
ones.
They gave their lives, their homes and
their loved ones to fight for a Country
they loved.
Please love
them enough to bring them Home.
"POW's Prayer"
Your own Son was a prisoner.
Condemned, he died for us.
Victorious, He returned to bring us the
gift of life
everlasting.
Comfort us now in our longing for the
return of the
Prisoners Of War and those Missing In
Action.
Help Us Father;
Inspire us to remove the obstacles.
Give courage to those who know the truth
to speak
out.
Grant wisdom to the negotiators, and
compassion to
the jailors.
Inspire the media to speak out as loudly
as they have
in the past.
Protect those who seek in secret and
help them to
succeed.
Show us the tools to do Your will.
Guard and bless those in captivity,
their families,
and those who work for their
release.
Let them come home soon.
Thank you Father.
J. Ray and L. Vancil
BIFOLCHI, CHARLES LAWRENCE
Name: Charles Lawrence Bifolchi
Rank/Branch: O2/US Air Force
Unit: 16th Tactical Reconnaissance
Squadron, Tan Son
Nhut Airbase
Date of Birth: 27 October 1943
Home City of Record: Quincy MA
Date of Loss: 08 January 1968
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 145500N 1075400E
(ZB125515) Status
(in 1973): Missing in Action
Category: 2
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: RF4C
Other Personnel in Incident: Hallie W.
Smith
(missing)
SMITH, HALLIE WILLIAM
Name: Hallie William Smith
Rank/Branch: O3/US Air Force
Unit: 16th Tactical Reconnaissance
Squadron, Tan Son
Nhut Airbase Date of Birth: 16 october
1941
Home City of Record: Portland OR
Date of Loss: 08 January 1968
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 145500N 1075400E
(ZB125515)
Status (in 1973): Missing in Action
Category: 2
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: RF4C
Other Personnel in Incident: Charles L.
Bifolchi (missing)
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS: Capt. Hallie W. Smith was the
pilot and
1Lt. Charles L. Bifolchi the
navigator aboard an RF4C Phantom
reconnaissance jet
from the 16th Tactical Recon Squadron at
Than Son
Nhut Airbase, South Vietnam.
On January 8, 1968,
Smith and Bifolchi were assigned a
reconnaissance
mission and were en route to the target
when radar
and radio contact was lost in Kontum
Province, South
Vietnam, about 15 miles north of the
city of Dak To.
Neither the aircraft nor the crew was
ever located,
despite search efforts. Because of
circumstances
surrounding the incident, both men were
classified
Missing in Action, and there is a strong
probability
that the enemy knows their fates - dead
or alive.
When the last American troops left
Southeast Asia in
1975, some 2500 Americans were
unaccounted for.
Reports received by the U.S. Government
since that
time build a strong case for belief that
hundreds of
these "unaccounted for" Americans are
still alive and
in captivity.
Henry Kissinger has said that the
problem of
unrecoverable Prisoners is an
"unfortunate" byproduct
of limited political engagements. This
does not seem
to be consistent with the high value we,
as a nation,
place on individual human lives. Men
like Smith and
Bifolchi, who went to Vietnam because
their country
asked it of them are too precious to the
future of
this nation to write them off as
expendable.
Whether Smith and Bifolchi survived the
downing of
their aircraft to be captured is
unknown. Whether
they are among those said to be alive is
uncertain.
What seems clear, however, is that as
long as even
one man remains alive, held against his
will, we owe
him our very best efforts to bring him
home.
These images have been placed here to
honor 1st Lt. Bifolchi and Capt. Smith's
lives not their deaths...
Please help bring them home..
MIA Since January 8, 1968
MIA Since January 8, 1968
One More Roll
We toast our hearty comrades who
have
Fallen from the skies, and were gently
caught
By God's own hand to be with Him on
high.
To dwell among the soaring clouds.
They've known so well before, from
victory
Roll to tail chase, at Heaven's very
door.
As we fly among them there we're sure
to
Hear their plea, to take care my
friend,
Watch your six, and do one more roll for
me.
Commander Jerry Coffee, Hanoi, 1968
Message from Gunny:
I cannot emphasize enough how important
it is to keep
pushing this issue inside the Beltway...
The need to
get specific answers is more important
now than ever
before. If still alive, some MIAs are
now in their
70s...They don't have much time left. We
have to
demand the answers from the bureaucrats
and keep
standing on their necks (figuratively
speaking) until
they get the message that THEY work for
US and that
we are serious about getting these long
overdue
responses.
Diplomatic considerations aside... We
can
no longer allow questionable protocols
established by pseudo-aristocratic
armchair strategists, to
determine or influence the fate of the
men who were
in the trenches while the diplomats were
sharing sherry and canapes and talking about
"Their Plans"
for the future of SE Asia.