Old proverb: "To speak the names of the departed is to make them live again."

Monday, February 24, 2014

IMF Official, Fieg Family Friend, Killed in Afghanistan

WWabel Abdallah, the IMF’s Resident Representative in Afghanistan, was killed in an attack in Kabul on January 17 (photo: IMF) ord has been received  from Afghanistan that Wabel Abdallah, the top representative in Afghanistan with the International Monetary Fund, and Lisa Fieg's longtime friend and former roommate, has been killed in a Taliban bombing in Kabul.
Wabel, who was a Lebanese national, was having dinner in a Lebanese ex-patriot restaurant in a supposedly safe part of the city, when a suicide bomber detonated his explosives.

Wabel was a very intelligent, kind and gentle man whose loss is devastating to Lisa and others who knew him.  He and Lisa shared an apartment in Long Island City near where Lisa continues to live today.

Lisa today discovered the Reuters news report after Wabel had not answered any of her letters for over a month.

Reuters
IMF, UN officials among 21 killed in Kabul suicide attack
Sat Jan 18 20:35:28 UTC 2014
By Jessica Donati and Mirwais Harooni

 KABUL (Reuters) - A Taliban suicide bomber and gunmen attacked a restaurant popular with foreigners in the heart of the Afghan capital Kabul, killing 21 people including three United Nations staff and the International Monetary Fund's top representative in Afghanistan.

Gunmen burst into the Lebanese restaurant spraying diners with bullets after the bomber blew himself up near the entrance around 7:30 p.m. local time on Friday, just as people had sat down for dinner.
Thirteen foreigners were among those killed, according to police, and details about the victims began to trickle through on Saturday.

The U.S. State Department said three U.S. private citizens were killed. Britain and Canada confirmed they each lost two nationals and Denmark said one of its citizens also died.

The American University of Afghanistan said two of its U.S. employees died in the attack on La Taverna du Liban, a popular dining spot whose charismatic owner, Kamal Hamade, was also killed. "We are devastated by the news," Michael Smith, president of AUAF, said in a statement.

After the initial blast, sporadic bursts of gunfire were heard over the next hour. The two gunmen inside the Lebanese restaurant, located in Kabul's diplomatic enclave, were shot dead by police, an Afghan official said.
Most foreign forces are preparing to leave Afghanistan this year after more than a decade of war. Afghanistan watchers fear the Taliban will intensify attacks in the run-up to an election in April to find a successor to President Hamid Karzai.

At odds with Washington over the terms of the bilateral security pact that governs the withdrawal, Karzai is still deliberating whether to allow some U.S. troops to stay on.

If no agreement is reached, Afghan forces could be left to fight the insurgents on their own.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for Friday's attack, calling it revenge for a U.S. air strike earlier this week that had also drawn condemnation from Karzai as eight civilians were killed.

The White House condemned the violence.

"There is no possible justification for this attack, which has killed innocent civilians, including Americans, working every day to help the Afghan people achieve a better future with higher education and economic assistance at the American University, United Nations, International Monetary Fund and other organizations," it said in a statement.

FAVOURITE HAUNT
Several kitchen staff survived by fleeing to the roof, where they hid until they were rescued by police.

"When I was in the kitchen, I heard an explosion outside. Then all the guys escaped up and I went to the roof and stayed with my back to the chimney for two or three hours," said Suleiman, a cook at the Lebanese restaurant.
By midnight, the operation to clear the area was still under way, with police nervously flashing lasers at passing cars and people on the dark, dusty streets.

The restaurant had been running for several years, and was a favourite haunt for foreigners, including diplomats, contractors, journalists and aid workers.

A couple of armed guards were usually on duty at the front entrance, which led to a courtyard in front of the main ground floor dining room. The suicide bomb attack took place at that entrance, but accounts differed over where the gunmen had entered from.

"The target of the attack was a restaurant frequented by high-ranking foreigners ... where the invaders used to dine with booze and liquor in the plenty," Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in an e-mailed statement, written in English.

Karzai issued a statement on Saturday condemning the attack, using the opportunity to swipe at the United States for not doing enough to fight "terrorism."

"If NATO forces led by the United States of America want to be united and partner with the Afghan people, they have to target terrorism," he said in a statement. Karzai believes Washington could do more to persuade the Taliban to begin direct peace talks with his government.

UN PEACE SEEKER KILLED
The IMF's representative in Afghanistan, 60-year-old Lebanese national Wabel Abdallah, was one of the diners killed. He had led the fund's office in Kabul since 2008.

"This is tragic news, and we at the fund are all devastated," Managing Director Christine Lagarde said in a statement. "Our hearts go out to Wabel's family and friends, as well as the other victims of this attack."

The United Nations initially said four staff were killed, counting the IMF's representative in the total. The other three included a Russian, an American and a Pakistani.

The Russian was a senior U.N. political officer trying to negotiate a start to peace talks with the Taliban.
"You can imagine the effect it has had on staff members here," U.N. spokesman Ari Gaitanis told Reuters.

A British Foreign Office spokeswoman said two Britons were killed in the attack. Del Singh, a British opposition Labour Party candidate for the European Parliament, was one of British victims, and the other was serving with the EU Police Mission in Afghanistan. A Dane serving with the mission also died.

Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird said two Canadians were killed, but it was unclear which organisation they worked for.

Foreign casualties were taken to a military base in Kabul. At a hospital morgue near the attack, Afghans screamed and cried as they mourned attack victims, some pressing scarves to their faces to stifle sobs. One young man, grieving for his dead father, kicked a wall and howled.

"One of the restaurant's cooks was wounded," said a doctor, Abdul Bashir. "Two dead bodies have been taken to the morgue."

While the south and southeast of Afghanistan have been the main theatres of action in a war that has dragged on for more than a decade, Kabul has suffered regular attacks.

Taliban fighters mounted several attacks in the capital during the summer months last year, but the assault on Friday inflicted far higher casualties.

(Writing by Maria Golovnina, additional reporting by Erik Kirschbaum in Berlin, Louis Charbonneau in New York, Anna Yukhananov, Lesley Wroughton and Steve Holland in Washington; editing by Simon Cameron-Moore, Sonya Hepinstall and G Crosse)

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Battle of the Births Quiz

1.  ALL THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN in the Continental United States except:

A.  Richard Fieg
B.  Richard Bookhout Jr.
C.  Jeffrey Whiteside
D.  Phyllis Fieg


2.  ALL THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN at Fox Hospital in Oneonta except:

A.  Susan Fieg Williams
B.  Anne Bookhout
C.  Bobby McGonigal
D.  Judy Fieg Kestner


3.  ALL BUT ONE OF THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN in Pennsylvania:

A.  John Roman
B.  Judy Fieg Kestner
C.  Douglas Fieg
D.  Anne Roman


4.  ONLY ONE COUSIN WAS BORN in Colorado.  That person is:

A.  Jon McGonigal
B.  Russell Fieg
C.  Don Roman
D.  Marsha Whiteside Adams


5.  JEAN DAVIE FIEG'S NIECE, LORI PRICE, resides in Leesburg, VA.  Born in Leesburg was:

A.  Stephen Davie
B.  Lori's husband John Price 
C.  Steven Fieg
D.  Joe Kestner


6.  MAXINE FIEG WHITESIDE'S GRANDMOTHER, Celestia Shields, having retired from running a boarding house, spent the rest of her days in a second floor apartment above a store.  The name of this store was:

A.  Fieg Plumbing
B.  Gregory's plumbing supply
C.  Bresee's Oneonta Department Store
D.  The Golden Rooster


7.  FIEG'S PLUMBING SUPPLY is located in:

A.  Cleveland, Ohio
B.  Oneonta, New York
C.  Milford, Pennsylvania
D.  Milford, New York


8.  BOB MORGAN WAS BORN in the vicinity of the sleepy village of Whitehall in the upper Hudson River Valley.  Whitehall is best known as:

A.  The birthplace of French's mustard
B.  The birthplace of Sail pipe tobacco
C.  The birthplace of the United States Navy
D.  The birthplace of Franklin Delano Roosevelt


Got your Thinking Cap on?  The answers are underlined:

1. ALL THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN in the Continental United States except:


A. Richard Fieg
B. Richard Bookhout Jr.
C. Jeffrey Whiteside
D. Phyllis Fieg


2. ALL THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN at Fox Hospital in Oneonta except:

A. Susan Fieg Williams
B. Anne Bookhout
C. Bobby McGonigal
D. Judy Fieg Kestner


3. ALL BUT ONE OF THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN in Pennsylvania:

A. John Roman
B. Judy Fieg Kestner
C. Douglas Fieg
D. Anne Roman


4. ONLY ONE COUSIN WAS BORN in Colorado. That person is:

A. Jon McGonigal
B. Russell Fieg
C. Don Roman
D. Marsha Whiteside Adams


5. JEAN DAVIE FIEG'S NIECE, LORI PRICE, resides in Leesburg, VA. Born in Leesburg was:

A. Stephen Davie
B. Lori's husband John Price
C. Steven Fieg
D. Joe Kestner


6. MAXINE FIEG WHITESIDE'S GRANDMOTHER, Celestia Shields, having retired from running a boarding house, spent the rest of her days in a second floor apartment above a store. The name of this store was:

A. Fieg Plumbing
B. Gregory's Plumbing Supply
C. Bresee's Oneonta Department Store
D. The Golden Rooster


7. FIEG'S PLUMBING SUPPLY is located in:

A. Cleveland, Ohio
B. Oneonta, New York
C. Milford, Pennsylvania
D. Milford, New York


8. BOB MORGAN WAS BORN in the vicinity of the sleepy village of Whitehall in the upper Hudson River Valley. Whitehall is best known as:

A. The birthplace of French's mustard
B. The birthplace of Sail pipe tobacco
C. The birthplace of the United States Navy
D. The birthplace of Franklin Delano Roosevelt

Editor Emeritus Lothar "Bud" Fieg Cited in War Remembrance

The late Capt. Lothar Fieg, a World War II fighter pilot and Fieg Family News editor emeritus, is cited in a newly-published book titled Fighter Group: The 352nd "Blue Nosed Bastards" in World War II.  

Author Lt. Col. (Ret.) Jay A. Stout mentions Bud once regarding the strafing of a German air base and again, more colorfully, with a description of the parties thrown at the 352nd's base in Bodney, England.  The passages appear below, sent to your editor by Sue Fieg Williams:

Page 135: 
Very little of value was destroyed or even damaged. The poor weather simply made it too difficult to see, and if something worthwhile was spotted it was often too late to fly into a good position to attack it. What was hit reads like an assorted list of scraps: The 352nd's commander, Joe Mason, blasted away at a flak tower and a gun emplacement on the beach; John Thornell shot up a radio tower, some troops and a B-17 that had belly-landed in a field sometime before; Jack Donalson worked over a number of gun emplacements and shot up a rifle range where German solders were practicing their marksmanship. Lothar Fieg fired at a flak tower; after shooting at another tower of some sort, William Halton fired his guns "purely at random," John Coleman shot his guns at "some suspicious looking buildings," and John Meyer "observed strikes on the rear portion of an army truck."
Page 154:
Many of the 352nd's fliers fit the stereotype of the hard-drinking, hard-partying, hard-flying fighter pilot, but some of them didn't. Robert Powell remembered that Lothar Fieg was not a riotous reveler. "His bed was next to mine in the Nissen hut. He was a non-typical fighter pilot--quiet and shy and conservative. He never came to the parties.
"At one point while we were still flying P-47's Lothar was getting a little flak happy," Powell recalled. "I finally persuaded him go to one of our parties. He was curious and I told him that our flight surgeons mixed up a vat of grain alcohol with fruit juices that we called Thunderbolt Joy Juice. The idea was to have a couple of slugs of that before the trucks arrived with the girls. If you did that, then the girls looked more beautiful. After they showed up you picked one out and gave her a slug or two, took her over to the food and then......well, the rest was up to you. Ultimately, Fieg returned to the states and married his longtime sweetheart."
Sue also mentioned that she was happy and pleased to see that the book is dedicated to Betty Powell, wife of Robert "Punchy" Powell.  It reads, " Especially for Betty Powell because she deserves it."
P-51 Bluenoser "E Pluribus Unum"