ISRAEL DEL TORO-A PATRIOTS PROMISE - podcast episode cover

ISRAEL DEL TORO-A PATRIOTS PROMISE

Jul 19, 20239 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

The podcaster did not provide a description for this episode.

Transcript

This is Later with Lee Matthews the Lee Matthews Podcast. More of what you here weekday afternoons on the Drive. Israel del Torro Junior was a senior Master Sergeant in the Air Force served in Afghanistan as a Special Ops paratrooper. Injured in action in two thousand and five, and his long recover recovery included a lot. He has now written all about it and his advocacy for his fellow

warriors in his newest creation, It is called a Patriots Promise. Israel del Toro Junior, Welcome, I mean, thank you for having me on. It's a pleasure. Well, let's us start at the beginning of your military career. What made you join the Air Force? Honestly, I was twenty two years old. I was at home and I just I just felt like I was a deep challenge, like I wasn't fulfilly what I should be doing,

and and I was at home. I committed a confirmed than I I might have had a whiskey and coke on my in my hand, but much so. And I was like, you know, why not? I was like I grew up in the age of Rambo, who didn't want to be Rambo? And you know when I grew up, you wanted to have the long hair, tip of body. Well now I don't have the long hair, and I sort of like to say, you have more of a dad bob. But that's what really got me in. I just I just felt

like I wasn't fulfilling what I should be doing. And I enjoyed every moment of it when I joined it. The book of the memoir that he's written, a Patriots promise, protecting my brother's fighting for my life and keeping my word. What was the word that you kept? So my dad January twenty says he had called at home. He was in Mexico receiving to a medical treatment, and I was the last time to speak to him. And the last thing he asked me was promise that you always take care of brothers,

sister, saying your family. And of course, the twelve year old kid at the time like, okay, yeah, whatever that and it makes me repeat it again. Then I don't know if he knew that he wasn't going to be here the next day, but unfortunately the next day Dad was done. And that promise, it has shaped me who I am and how I get through. And then yes, that promise has evolved to now being you know, fighting for people to feel that they don't have a voice or they

need someone to help them overcome some adversity. And you speak of some of your brothers in the faith who were wounded as well as you. Let's go back to that story about how you were initially wounded in a humby. Yeah. So I got hurt December fourth on a mission. We're on our way.

I think about our teammates when an ID exploded under underneath me, and you know, when I got out of the truck, out on fire from head to toe, but there's a creep behind me, so I ran to it, but I collapsed and I'm thinking, well, there's there for me, and then one of my teammates took me out. We jumped into the creek, but it was a plant ambush because as soon as they hit,

I got hit my team and they were gonna pretty go. They got class fire out there needing help, and I remember the medic saying, hey, you're trying to take care here. I'm like, oh no, I'm okay. I got to take care of my brothers, honoring that promised my dad. As I take care of Bailey, who I got blown out of the truck and the humby had rolled over his legs. So you know remember that promise. Yes, my teammates were army. I was air forced out.

But we're down the range. We're all brothers and sisters. Man, we all have each other's back and like brothers sisters be bus chops. But when needed, we are there for each other. And I had to be there for my teammates. And luckily one of my other teammate had a radio because mine were destroyed. It's like, hey, repeat everything I say so we can get some aircraft in here to help our teammates. By that time, I was I started getting scared and I was whining asleep at the medic news.

He let me fall asleep. I wasn't a wake up and he kept me up until the METABA came and I remember to fly to landing at our Ford Operating Base, going in our field hospital. The doctor cut him off my watch and be telling me I'll be okay. That was seven fourth or five. I wake up much full six. Wow. Yeah, you were out for a long time and almost died three times. Died three times given a fifteen percent chance to survive and received eighty percent thirty three burns on eighty

percent of my body. Israel Dotorro Junior is with us. He's a senior Master Sergeant in the Air Force and his new memoir is out. It's called a Patriots Promise and it's available everywhere you get books. My Protecting my Brothers, fighting for my life and keeping my word. I don't know that everybody realizes the Air Force had its paratroopers were We'd like to say we're the quiet

professionals. My official title for my currus is a tag tea attached square control party where the guys on the radios calling an air strikes man, and not many people know about us. We were embedded with the Army, were embedded with the Moraines or fagged, embedded with the Seals and all special operations out there. Uh so, you know, most people don't realize that we Air Force when we're out there, because we just blend in it. In your

memoir, you advocate for better care for the wounded. How so, so when I was in the hospital, the burned patients out numbered people with missing limbs empties easily to one. But yet we had very crappy therapy room. It was tiny, small compared to the Amphi tee therapy room. And when the hospital was building the state of the arts center for the Intrepid, they wanted all the burn patients show up, but yet they weren't gonna have any

of us in there for therapy. So, you know, I told my yes, I was wounded, but I was still an NCO in the Air Force and at the role and NCO and it's like, you take care of your teams. They think better for them, even if you may never see the benefits. So I told it was like, we're not going to go, and the leadership found out and they came down to talk to it.

And I probably should have used better tack the leadership, but I felt it was like you just wanted us as prompts to show that we're there, but yet you ain't gonna allow us to be in at that state of the art therapy. You wanted to keep us in this the size of the living room, and and they changed their mind, and you know, I ended up being one of the first ones. And my attention was never to be one of the first ones. I was trying to make it better for my guys.

But again. That's you know, I'm going back to that promise of my dad take care of family, and those wounded guys weren't my family, and I have to take care of them. Israel del Toro Patriots promised protecting my brothers, fighting for my life and keeping my word. For those who are reading the book, is there any call to action or anything you would

like the reader to do? Uh? No, you know, I just I just wanted them to read it then and maybe you realize, you know, you can overcome what's in front of you, that bad day you're having, or you know you're just feeling like you want to give up. You know, there's there's always hope out there. Uh, you just got to find it because we all have that spark that drives us. And that's what

I hope the book does. Because I'm a realist. I know I'm not gonna touch everybody, but maybe those one or two that really need it, or someone knows something that need to need read of the book and they hand it so and it helps them and all that pain and stuff and I ever went through is worth it. And that's what I hope the readers get out of it. And I laugh about it because there's also some some some funny part. Today Patriots promises the memoir protecting my brothers, fighting for my life

and keeping my word Israel del Total. Thank you for your service to our country and for joining us today. Thank you to thank for having me on a pleasure. Thanks for listening to Later with Lee Matthews, the Lee Matthews Podcast, and remember to listen to The Drive Live weekday afternoons from five to seven and I Hearts Media Presentation

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android