Under Secretary of Defense Visits ‘Village of Hope’ Vocational School

Saturday, 03 May 2008 By Sgt. David Turner
3rd Infantry Division Public Affairs

Iraqi citizens, many of them former SoI members, learn construction skills at the Village of Hope in PB Stone, May 1. Air Force and Army engineers work with citizens to teach them valuable job skills as well as help them rebuild their community.  U.S. Army photo by Sgt. David Turner.

Iraqi citizens, many of them former SoI members, learn construction skills at the Village of Hope in PB Stone, May 1. Air Force and Army engineers work with citizens to teach them valuable job skills as well as help them rebuild their community. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. David Turner.

FOB KALSU — The Under Secretary of Defense for Policy visited Patrol Base Stone in southern Baghdad May 1, to see progress in a unique program that teaches job skills to local citizens.

Eric Edelman met with members of the 6th Squadron, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team (BCT), 3rd Infantry Division, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, and Airmen of the 557th Expeditionary Red Horse Squadron (ERHS) to see developments in the Village of Hope (VoH) project.

The VoH is a program that teaches local citizens, most of them former members of the Sons of Iraq (SoI) volunteer security group, construction skills to earn better jobs and help rebuild their communities. Funding for the project comes from the U.S. Congress’ Demilitarization, Demobilization and Reconstruction (DDR) fund.

Col. James W. Adams, deputy commander for 2nd BCT, briefed Edelman on the project, showing him how DDR funds help rebuild one village at a time in Iraq.

“We’ve applied these funds to demobilize (SoI) from their security role, to phase them into this jobs-works program and to help begin reconstruction in their local neighborhoods,” said Adams, of Middleton, Tenn. “It’s a perfect fit for what Congress designed DDR funds for.”

Air Force Capt. Michael Askegren, 557th ERHS, VoH site commander, showed Edelman the training facility at PB Stone, where U.S. military engineers teach students carpentry, plumbing and electrical engineering.

“The primary point of the Village of Hope program is to provide a sustainable skill set that they can use later,” Askegren said. “They will have a sustainable skill that will lead to economic growth and a better community.”

One major reason for the project taking hold here is many homes and buildings in the area were destroyed last fall when al-Qaida fighters attacked citizens, Iraqi Army and Coalition forces.

Currently, 36 Airmen are working with members of the 2nd BCT and 20th Engineer Brigade to train the first class of approximately 50 students, which will graduate May 8. Three more VoH classes, 50 students each, will take place over the course of the year.

Adams said the future of the program looks promising.

“Our obligation is to see this program through,” he said. “It will continue even when we leave. This program will continue and Hawr Rajab will be rebuilt to its pre-war state.”

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