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Farewell, comrade: 200 mourn Pfc. Steven Freund, killed in Iraq
Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Martha Rial, Post-Gazette
Marines salute after loading the casket of Pfc. Steven Freund, 20, into a hearse following a funeral Mass at Nativity Church in South Park Township. Pfc. Freund was killed in Iraq by a roadside bomb outside of Fallujah on May 23.
Click photo for larger image.
Inside Nativity Catholic Church in South Park, Marine Corps Pfc. Steven Freund was described as a dutiful young man willing to sacrifice for his country.

After his burial at Jefferson Memorial Park, former classmates from Thomas Jefferson High School recalled a friend who sounded far different when younger: fun-loving but lacking purpose or stability until joining the military.

Pfc. Freund's path from troubled teenager to solid adult soldier ended May 23 with the explosion of a roadside bomb in Iraq. The 20-year-old Pleasant Hills native and another Marine riding in a Humvee died in the incident outside of Fallujah.

His funeral and burial yesterday, attended by some 200 mourners, were accompanied by a Marine honor guard, rifle salute, bagpipes.

Also on hand were dozens of motorcyclists representing the Patriot Guard Riders, a group that attends soldiers' funerals around the nation to shield families from members of Westboro Baptist Church in Kansas, a congregation that has disrupted services and called the deaths in Iraq revenge for America's tolerance of homosexuality.

A Purple Heart and U.S. flags were presented to his family at graveside, along with a medal Pfc. Freund received for courage for providing medical help to comrades wounded by Iraqi insurgents April 13.

The Rev. John Hissrich said in his homily that Pfc. Freund knew that standing up for democracy and freedom was a difficult challenge, one he didn't shy away from.

"He chose to do what is difficult," Father Hissrich said. "He received a sense of understanding that to build a world of peace and justice, we need to make a sacrifice, and go forth and do what's important."

Pfc. Freund grew up in a broken family and lived as a teenager in the homes of various friends as well as his aunt, Donna Eiben. He failed to graduate from Thomas Jefferson but obtained his General Educational Development certificate afterward and had ambition to go to college after completing his Marine Corps service.

Pausing beside his grave yesterday after most relatives and other mourners departed, a group of about 10 South Hills friends said he often described them as his family because of the troubles he had growing up. He was entertaining in a group, a generous soul with a knack for making others laugh with his storytelling. No one was certain early on, however, what he would make of himself.

That all changed in the past year, after he survived boot camp at Parris Island, S.C. On his trips home, Pfc. Freund showed a steady confidence his peers hadn't seen before. He treated friends to meals, letting them know he was doing fine. He became more religious. And when he told pals he was beginning a tour of duty in Iraq in January, it was without complaint or hint of fear.

"He was glad about it -- he knew what he had to do," said Austin Hatfield of Jefferson Hills.

His friends heard from the Marine that the only things he didn't like in Iraq were the heat and the lack of a good shower. He was patriotic and supported the war effort. His loss was a hard one to take, but no one was ruing the day he enlisted, as he had no regrets about his service himself.

"I don't think he'd have had it any other way," said Jon Peters of Bethel Park.


Correction/Clarification: (Published June 14, 2006) Motorcyclists in the Patriot Guard Riders began attending soldiers' funerals around the nation to shield families from members of Westboro Baptist Church in Kansas, a congregation that disrupted services and called the deaths in Iraq revenge for America's tolerance of homosexuality. The Patriot Guard Riders' purpose was misstated in this article as originally published on June 13, 2006 about their presence at the funeral of Marine Corps Pfc. Steven Freund.

First published on June 13, 2006 at 12:00 am
Gary Rotstein can be reached at grotstein@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1255.