Thursday, May 30, 2013
Vietnam POW Reunion 2013
Please see the link below for the coverage of the Reunion held 40 years after the first one in 1973.
Featured POW's Lee Ellis (Lance's roommate at DaNang AFB Vietnam) and Guy Gruters (fellow POW who cared for Lance in his final days) reflect on their time of incarceration. The friend Guy refers to in the first part of his interview is Lance.
Remember them and keep them all in your prayers.
http://nixonfoundation.org/2013/05/abc-news-nixon-library-hosts-reunion-for-pows/
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Congratulations to the Sijan Leadership 2012 Award Recipients!
Named in honor of the first U.S. Air Force Academy graduate to receive the Medal of Honor, the award annually recognizes officer and enlisted honorees in senior and junior categories who best exemplify the service's core values of integrity, service and excellence.
The Sijan Award was created in 1981 to recognize individuals who demonstrate the highest qualities of leadership both in and out of uniform. Sijan, was an Air Force Academy graduate. At the time of his death he was an Air Force Captain and fighter pilot. He was shot down during a mission in Vietnam and later died while being held in a prisoner of war camp. He was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor posthumously.
Friday, May 3, 2013
Lee Ellis Reflects Upon his Friend Lance Sijan
"Courage is character, character is the foundation. Lance had that. If you don't have courage, your character will fall apart. Lance had the courage of conviction, to live and to live up to what he professed to live out what he stood for." That is how Lee Ellis described Lance. Lee was a fellow pilot, POW, but most importantly, Lance's friend. They first met in S.E.R.E. (survival, evade, resistance, escape) school. Lee was immediately impressed with Lance and the dedication he showed during the class. He noticed right away that Lance was a "tough guy, a big guy, and mentally unbreakable. He had a better understanding of who he was, and a little more comfortable with himself than me. He was a man's man." From that moment on, Lee and Lance became great friends. They were practically inseparable~playing golf, going out and meeting girls, both being self described "party bachelors".
When the call to duty came, both Lee and Lance went to Vietnam. While flying a mission, Lee got shot down and captured by the VK, but what he didn't know was that his friend Lance was shot down the very same day. As Lee tried his best to adjust to the Hanoi Hilton prison camp, he slowly started hearing about Lance and his story. As the story spread, Lee felt that "even that [Lance's story] was an influence. His example lifted us to be strong & courageous. After nearly 6 grueling years spent in prison camps, Lee was released and returned home.
The experience had left Lee changed. He noticed he had "a level of confidence" when he came home. "I had matured a lot, more confident about who I was and how I operated. It gave me courage for the things I could do. The things I believed about leadership, I learned from the senior ranking officers in our camp. I could feel their influence~I knew they were getting it harder than the rest of us. They had to go first [for interrogation[ and set the example, as they were getting physically beaten. Always leading and helping us get through." But Lee never forgot Lance, and the service and dedication he showed. Lee honored Lance by naming his son after him. What does it take to be a great leader like Lance? Lee believes "Good leadership is influenced by authenticity, being real, being a person of character, and someone you can trust. Someone who has a vision, and someone who wants to achieve that vision. They own it, and see the value of it. Nobody displayed that better than Lance."
For more information on Lee Ellis, please visit
freedomstarmedia.com/lee-ellis
When the call to duty came, both Lee and Lance went to Vietnam. While flying a mission, Lee got shot down and captured by the VK, but what he didn't know was that his friend Lance was shot down the very same day. As Lee tried his best to adjust to the Hanoi Hilton prison camp, he slowly started hearing about Lance and his story. As the story spread, Lee felt that "even that [Lance's story] was an influence. His example lifted us to be strong & courageous. After nearly 6 grueling years spent in prison camps, Lee was released and returned home.
The experience had left Lee changed. He noticed he had "a level of confidence" when he came home. "I had matured a lot, more confident about who I was and how I operated. It gave me courage for the things I could do. The things I believed about leadership, I learned from the senior ranking officers in our camp. I could feel their influence~I knew they were getting it harder than the rest of us. They had to go first [for interrogation[ and set the example, as they were getting physically beaten. Always leading and helping us get through." But Lee never forgot Lance, and the service and dedication he showed. Lee honored Lance by naming his son after him. What does it take to be a great leader like Lance? Lee believes "Good leadership is influenced by authenticity, being real, being a person of character, and someone you can trust. Someone who has a vision, and someone who wants to achieve that vision. They own it, and see the value of it. Nobody displayed that better than Lance."
For more information on Lee Ellis, please visit
freedomstarmedia.com/lee-ellis
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
A Little Sister's Dream Come True
When Lance asked his sister Janine if she had a dress for the ball at the Air Force Academy his first year, the look of shock on her face told him "no". He immediately took her downtown Colorado Springs and bought her a suitable dress for the event. Needless to say, she was the proudest date at the dance. Her hero Lance made it so!
Friday, April 26, 2013
Fellow POW still spreading word of Sijan's heroism
http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/fellow-pow-still-spreading-word-of-sijans-heroism-7m9n92s-204782491.html
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Sijan Leadership Award Winner 2012 Davide Keaton
Senior
Master Sergeant Davide Keaton distinguished himself as Superintendent
of Operations, 720th Operations
Support Squadron, 720th Special Tactics Group, 24th Special
Operations Wing, Air Force Special Operations Command, Hurlburt
Field, Florida, from 1 July 2011 to 30 June 2012. While on his tenth
combat deployment, Sergeant Keaton established a critical Personnel
Recovery Coordination Cell for the Commander International Security
Assistance Force directed Task Force, assuring comprehensive rescue
coverage for 5 commands, 160 aircraft and 12,000 warriors.
Additionally, he managed a four-hundred million dollar portfolio and
directed the combat readiness of a nine-hundred man force, driving
fourteen deployments spanning four theaters resulting in
three-thousand combat operations and five-hundred enemy killed in
action. Finally, Sergeant Keaton epitomized service before self
when he saved an elderly woman trapped inside a submerged vehicle.
The distinctive accomplishments of Sergeant Keaton reflect great
credit upon himself and the United States Air Force.
Capt Lance Sijan Leadership Award Winners 2012
The Lance P. Sijan USAF Leadership Award was created in 1981 to recognize individuals who have demonstrated the highest qualities of leadership in their jobs and in their lives. It has become one of the U.S. Air Force's most prestigious awards.
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Happy Birthday Lance!
Lucky 13! Lance's parents met on the 13th, married on March 13th, and had their first baby 13 months later on April 13th. We celebrate your life today dearest Lance!
Monday, April 8, 2013
Team Sijan Supports the 128th Air National Guard
The 128th Air National Guard at Milwaukee's own Mitchell International Field has a building named Sijan Hall after Lance. There is a leadership award given out every year in his name.
Check out some of the selfless acts these men and women serving their country give to us without any bravado.
Thank you 128th!
Please visit their FB site and give them a like!
128th Air Refueling Wing
http://www.128arw.ang.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123343265
Check out some of the selfless acts these men and women serving their country give to us without any bravado.
Thank you 128th!
Please visit their FB site and give them a like!
128th Air Refueling Wing
http://www.128arw.ang.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123343265
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
USAFA 21st Squadron~Remembers their fallen hero
Members of Lance's 21st Squadron at the Air Force
Academy remembered him as they proudly displayed
the emblem of the Black Jacks.
Double Down 21!
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Academy Grads Leave Legacy of Diversity
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For the entire story please visit
http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123334929
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Let us not forget those who lay down their lives for freedom
45 years ago today, Lance sighed his last breath before his final journey home. It can never be said that he he didn't fight for his beliefs with complete balance of body, mind, and spirit. Let us bring those ideals of courage, honor, integrity, and truth back to the forefront. And when we fold those principles back into our daily lives, those who went before us that did the same, shall never be forgotten.
We thank each of you who choose the wellness of all before the gratitude to self.
March on seekers of truth~
We thank each of you who choose the wellness of all before the gratitude to self.
March on seekers of truth~
Sunday, January 6, 2013
Health & Wellness
Check out
http://www.wellnessfor.me/
A Veteran owned company with a focus on our troops and their families. Empahazing the overall wellness of body, mind and spirit~the perfect trio! Vist them on FB as well!
http://www.wellnessfor.me/
A Veteran owned company with a focus on our troops and their families. Empahazing the overall wellness of body, mind and spirit~the perfect trio! Vist them on FB as well!
Friday, January 4, 2013
New Sijan Gear!
Join the team with NEW Sijan Apparel! Options for text or logo that can be silk screened or embroidered. Enjoy!
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
An Earned Privilege
Lance's room in Vandenberg Hall at the Air Force Academy is honored as cadets are tested with the same challenges that Lance faced. The 21st Squadron known as the Blackjacks still echoes his name. A display case of some of Lance's personal items reminds the cadets that he too was a young man with a dream that was multi faceted....just as he was.
Lance's Farewell Party, July 1967
As Lance prepared to serve his country in Vietnam, family and friends gathered in his back yard to surround him with love and gratitude for the sacrifice he was about to make. A traditional Serbian pig roast was served up by his proud parents. Lance would not leave without all those that loved him pouring love and light into him as he was about to walk the next leg of his life's journey. Little did we all know how powerfully his life would touch so many.
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