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  • 18
    Feb
    2013
    5:48pm, EST

    Long-missing WWII medals awarded in Los Angeles

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    By Robert Jablon, The Associated Press

    A Southern California woman who grew up knowing little of her father — a heroic casualty of World War II — is now the proud owner of his long-lost battle medals, including a Silver Star and Purple Heart.

    Hyla Merin's mother never spoke about the Army officer who died before she was born. The scraps of information she gathered from other relatives were hazy: 2nd Lt. Hyman Markel was a rabbi's son, brilliant at mathematics, the brave winner of battlefield honors who died sometime in 1945.

    Aside from wedding photos of Markel in uniform, Merin never glimpsed him.

    About four months ago, the manager of a West Hollywood apartment building where Merin's mother lived in the 1960s found a box containing papers and the Purple Heart while cleaning out some lockers in the laundry room, Merin said.

    The manager contacted Purple Hearts Reunited, a nonprofit organization that returns lost or stolen medals to vets or their families.

    A search led to Merin.


    On Sunday, she received the Purple Heart, along with a Silver Star she never knew her father had won and a half-dozen other medals.

    Mark J. Terrill / AP

    Army Capt. Zachariah L. Fike presents Hyla Merin with a plaque Sunday that contains medals presented posthumously to her father after they were recently discovered in an apartment where Merin's mother and aunts had once lived.

    Merin wiped away tears as the Silver Star was pinned to her lapel during a short ceremony attended by friends and family at her home in Westlake Village, a community straddling the Ventura and Los Angeles county lines. The other medals were presented on a plaque.

    "It just confirms what a great man he was," Merin said tearfully. "He gave up his life for our country and our freedom. I'll put it up in my house as a memorial to him and to those who served."

    Merin's mother, Celia, married Markel in 1941 when he already was in the military. They met at a Jewish temple in Buffalo, N.Y.

    Markel was killed in the last days of World War II in May 1945 in Italy's Po Valley while fighting German troops as an officer with an infantry unit, said Zachariah Fike, the Vermont Army National Guard captain who founded Purple Hearts Reunited.

    AP / Provided by Hyla Merin

    This undated image provided by Hyla Merin shows 2nd Lt. Hyman Markel with his bride, Celia Markel.

    "The accounts suggest that he was out on patrol and he got ambushed and he charged ahead and basically took out a machine gun position to save the rest of his guys," said Fike, whose organization has returned some two dozen medals. "For that, he paid the ultimate sacrifice."

    He was awarded the Purple Heart and Silver Star posthumously, but for some reason the family never was told about the Silver Star and it was never sent to them, Fike said.

    Merin's mother never talked in detail to her daughter about Markel.

    "It was a very difficult topic for her. When my father died, she was seven months pregnant with me," Merin said.

    Her mother briefly remarried when Merin was 10, but her stepfather died three years later, Merin said.

    Her mother moved into the apartment in 1960 and may have placed the Purple Heart in the locker then, Merin said. Her mother lived there until 1975 before moving away, and Merin's aunt lived there until 2005. Another aunt lived there until 2009.

    They never spoke about what was in the locker, and the family must have missed the box when they took away the aunts' possessions in 2005 and 2009, Merin said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Merin said that in addition to the Purple Heart, which Pike kept for framing, the box contained letters and other papers, and her father's Jewish prayer book.

    "I found it very hard to look at. A lot of them were condolence letters," she said.

    Merin's mother was told about the discovery of the Purple Heart but didn't live to see it — she died Feb. 1 at age 94.

    Associated Press writer Christopher Weber contributed to this story.

    8 comments

    Well done.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: military, world-war-ii, southern-california, wwii, purple-heart, silver-star
  • 10
    Aug
    2012
    11:48am, EDT

    Vietnam veteran receives Silver Star 44 years after service

    Sgt. John Crosby / Indiana Joint Forces Headquarter

    Vietnam veteran Frank Spink (center) receives the Silver Star from Indiana National Guard Adjutant General, Maj. Gen. R. Martin Umbarger (left), and Indiana Congressman Todd Rokita (right), at Indiana Joint Force Headquarters in Indianapolis on Wednesday, Aug. 8, 2012.

    By Rebecca Ruiz, NBC News

    Forty-four years ago, Frank Spink, a 22-year-old Army sergeant who had been drafted into the Vietnam War, spotted enemy forces approaching in the middle of the night and warned his sleeping platoon leader. Their company was quickly receiving rocket and grenade fire; Spink lost his right arm in the attack and attempted to shoot with his left hand until he passed out.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    That was in June 1968, and Spink eventually returned home to Indiana following a stay at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where he received a Purple Heart.

    "It was a mission," Spink, 66, told NBC News. "I never thought a whole lot more about it."


    But that night stayed with his platoon leader and second lieutenant John McHenry, who said Spink saved soldiers' lives with his warning.

    "Those few seconds that we had made all the difference," he said. "If they had gotten much closer with their firepower, we would have been toast."

    McHenry hadn't really spoken about the attack that night, during which he sustained a concussion, until a few years ago. Then he began wondering if his soldiers had ever received recognition for their heroic acts.

    "That’s one of the things that haunted me over the years, that the guys didn’t get recognition," McHenry said.

    He decided to investigate the records at the National Archives in College Park, Md., four years ago and found an order to award Spink a Silver Star that had nearly been lost to history. McHenry believes the mistake may have been the result of an error in the number that identified Spink.

    McHenry called Spink with the good news. "I couldn’t believe it," said Spink, who didn't realize his actions were worthy of the military's third highest honor. "I thought I was supposed to do that."

    Earlier this year, Rep. Todd Rokita, R-Ind., who counts Spink as a constituent, lobbied military officials to award the medal quickly. 

    "Sgt. Spink did his duty bravely and heroically, and to our shame as a country, we never gave him the honor he deserved. I'm glad we were able to right this wrong and show our appreciation to him and to all of his fellow veterans," said Rokita.

    Spink received the medal on Wednesday in Indianapolis at the Indiana National Guard headquarters. In a ceremony attended by many local veterans, Spink asked those who served in Vietnam to stand up and be applauded.

    "This is their day also," he said. "We were there to watch out for each other."

    Rebecca Ruiz is a reporter at NBC News. Follow her on Twitter here.

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    157 comments

    Sgt Spink, as a Vietnam era vet and a retired old sailor, I give my sincere and heartfelt thanks to you and so many others, who like you "Went above and beyond the call of duty"! This award is way overdue and most definitely well deserved.

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    Explore related topics: military, vietnam, veterans, featured, silver-star, military-medals, rebecca-ruiz

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