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A REDWOOD SANCTUARY -- An anonymous millionaire
donated
a building near the Russian River so Nadia
McCaffrey can
create a retreat for troubled veterans who return
from Iraq.

Nadia McCaffrey with photo of her
son, Sgt. Patrick McCaffrey, who died in action. (Tracy Press file
photo) |
For more about Nadia McCaffrey, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
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Story here...
http://tracypress
.com/content/view/11560/2242/
Story below:
-------------------------
A redwood sanctuary
by Jennifer Wadsworth
An anonymous millionaire donated a building near the Russian River so
Nadia McCaffrey can create a retreat for troubled veterans who return from
Iraq.
Nestled in the Redwoods, overlooking a vineyard on one side and the
Russian River on the other, the four-story veterans retreat looks exactly
like the restful getaway Tracy activist Nadia McCaffrey envisioned.
For three years since her son Sgt. Patrick McCaffrey died on a special
mission in Iraq, McCaffrey has traveled cross-country to raise awareness
and money to help veterans re-enter civilian life. Her mission is to help
soldiers returning from combat with injuries – whether physical or mental,
like post traumatic stress disorder — recover peacefully, instead of
relying on limited treatment from government clinics.
McCaffrey was unaware that behind her back, a wealthy philanthropist, a
veteran himself, had been constructing a retreat specifically to house her
first veteran village.
She nearly cried when she found out last week that the property just
outside of the small town of Guerneville was all hers. She pledged last
January that she’d have at least one center open before the end of the
year — so the news came at a perfect time, she said.
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The anonymous millionaire who had attended a few
of McCaffrey’s speaking engagements gave her the building, saying he
wanted to help translate her vision into reality.
“It’s the first step, and it’s only the beginning,” McCaffrey said. “I
think that once I have the center up and running, it’ll really show people
what this is all about, instead of always explaining it to them.”
The entire staff of therapists, counselors and other workers will be paid
through grants and donations from the building’s owner. Others will
volunteer.
McCaffrey plans to have it open and occupied by 14 veterans by the end of
November.
“I’m really rushing to get everything together,” she said. “I’ve waited
and waited for this, and to have it thrust on me so suddenly is truly
amazing.”
In addition to living quarters, the retreat will have a conference center,
a therapy center, a recreation and art center, an art gallery, a
restaurant, and a common dining area, McCaffrey said.
“I want it to feel like family,” she said, adding that she plans to live
with them during the week and spend her weekends in Tracy, where she’d
eventually like to open something similar.
“I’m just a mother, after all, and they’re like my children. They call me
right now at 3 in the morning — I’m always there for them.”
Already, McCaffrey has a waiting list of veterans ready to begin their
stay.
The treatment will typically last two weeks to a month. Veterans who exit
the weeks-long therapy will qualify for scholarships McCaffrey plans to
supply through grant money.
She said she wants the retreat to be both therapeutic and practical, with
both meditative, art- or nature-centered therapy and job training.
But the center will not be equipped to treat soldiers with severe
disabilities or conditions that require constant care. In fact,
McCaffrey’s focus is more psychological than physiological.
“I plan for this to be one of many like it,” she said.
Already a few exist.
Navy veteran Stephen Ledwell founded his New Hampshire farm retreat in
2004, and said he couldn’t be happier with the success of it.
He treats veterans who struggle with substance abuse and mental disorders,
helping them learn to live independently once they graduate.
Ledwell will fly out to California soon to help McCaffrey get her own
retreat started.
“Hopefully this won’t be like wars in the past, where we let our veterans
fall between the cracks,” Ledwell said. “Hopefully (veterans) can come
straight from their duty stations and right to us, and not fall in the
gap. We won’t let that happen.”
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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