211th also providing for children at orphanage
This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2005, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Humanitarian work keeps piling up for Utah National Guard soldiers in Afghanistan. The soldiers have adopted an orphanage of 500 boys and 150 girls southwest of Kabul. They already have donated personal hygiene items and Christmas presents to the children, but the orphanage now needs thousands of yards of material to make blankets. "It gets pretty dusty and dirty here," said Chief Warrant Officer Layne Pace of Orem in a telephone interview from Bagram, Afghanistan. "Blankets last much longer if they aren't washed so often." Many of the children have lost their parents to continuous warfare. Several are handicapped from land-mine explosions. "Afghanistan is the most heavily mined nation on Earth," said Maj. Thomas Greene of Orem. "When someone steps on a land mine, it's pretty likely they'll lose a leg and an arm," he said. The orphanage also needs plumbing work. A German team has been working on repairs to the two-story concrete buildings, but money is limited. The Utah soldiers have been sending clothing, blankets and other supplies to both the orphanage and the remote village of Jagdalek. Their spouses in Utah began a nonprofit organization to collect needed items and to raise money to pay shipping costs. To donate, visit Angels for Afghanistan at http://www.angelsfor afghanistan.org or call Globous Relief Fund Foundation at 801-977-0444 and ask for Sarah.

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