July 31, 2024/ The Philippine STAR/ 16 Korean War vets, including 97-year-old Pinoy, honored
- Writeradmin
- Date2024-07-31 00:00:00
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- URL https://qa.philstar.com/headlines/2024/07/31/2374254/16-korean-war-vets-including-97-year-old-pinoy-honored
16 Korean War vets,
including 97-year-old Pinoy, honored
Michael Punongbayan - The Philippine
Star
July 31, 2024
Benjamin Quiros
offers flowers at the UN Cemetery in Busan, South Korea. Pointing to the emblem
of his unit, the 20th Infantry Battalion with the slogan ‘We Lead,’ he said,
‘That’s us, we lead.’
STAR / File
SEOUL – Staying
true to its vow to never forget who came to its aid at a time of deep turmoil,
the South Korean government is honoring over a dozen foreign Korean War
veterans here this week with a vacation fit for heroes who courageously fought
with them more than seven decades ago.
Korean War
veterans from 16 countries arrived in Seoul last week for a vacation and a
chance to revisit a land they once helped defend and experience the gratitude
of a government and its people for the sacrifices they made to attain peace.
Retired Staff
Sergeant Benjamin Quiros, 97, was among those invited to this year’s third
batch of invitees for the Revisit Korea Program of the Ministry of Patriots and
Veterans Affairs (MPVA).
The STAR met
with the Filipino Korean War veteran who happily narrated his life as a soldier
and how times have changed since the Korean War that started in 1950 and
“ended” three years later with the signing of the Armistice Agreement in July
1953.
“They say I’m a
hero!” he joked in Filipino in an interview at the War Memorial of Korea, where
he posed for a photo with his fellow veterans from 15 other nations who came to
aid South Korea more than 70 years ago.
Quiros,
accompanied by his daughter Maria, is being treated to an all-expense-paid
vacation in South Korea to enjoy the fruits of the peace that he helped achieve
as a platoon leader of the Reconnaissance Company of the 20th Infantry
Battalion of the Philippine Army.
He was only 22
years old when he was sent to Korea in 1950, along with soldiers of 22 other
countries who sent troops under the United Nations Forces.
“Ever since I
became a veteran, it’s been good that I’ve lived, there is privilege,” Quiros
said, noting that most of his fellow veterans are now in wheelchairs.
He thought
there are two to three other Filipino veterans who are still alive, “but can no
longer get up.”
For his age,
Quiros is very strong and only needs some assistance in walking around the War
Memorial in Seoul that features actual tanks, aircraft, vehicles and even a
ship that was used during the Korean War.
At a huge plaza
outside the entrance, the memorial features the towering flags of all the
nations who helped defend South Korea during the war, and in words etched at
the base of the pole of the Philippine flag, the Philippines is hailed for
being the first Asian country to send its troops.
“We have not
forgotten them,” a huge banner reads at the vast museum that Quiros visited for
the very first time.
After the war,
he said the Philippines gave them educational benefits, which he did not
actually avail of since he was already studying engineering in Mapua back then
and eventually graduated in 1965, before he worked in patents and later worked
as a civilian in Vietnam where he was able to save enough money because of good
pay.
Quiros and his
immediate family now spend most of their time in the United States, but come
home to the Philippines once in a while to stay in their home in Quezon City as
he continues to enjoy pension benefits from the Philippine Veterans Affairs
Office.
Quiros and his
daughter also visited the United Nations Memorial Cemetery in Busan where he
paid his respects to those who fought and died during the Korean War, including
unnamed Filipino soldiers who are nevertheless honored for their courage and
heroism.