Veterans are most likely known to be male, not until lately are our Female Veteran's have come to the forefront
We would like to a salute female veterans that also serve as Chief Operating Executives (CEO) and Founder of non-profit organizations that helps others withing the military and their families.
She is a Wife, Mom, U.S. Marine, Poet, Writer/Blogger and Child Advocate.
Founder of Operation Heroes Connect
Tee Marie was recently featured in Newsweek Magazine
In Iraq, A Mom Marine’s Urge to Serve Nov 5, 2012 1:00 AM EST
During the run up to the Iraq War, Tee Hanible, a young Marine working a desk job, asked to be deployed. It meant leaving her child behind. What makes a mother of a 3-year-old girl feel such a powerful need to sacrifice for her country?
That was Tawanda Hanible’s brother, Lindell, running down the sister who had always shown him up in school. Lindell was two years older and already a Marine. He told “Tee,” as she was called, “you’re too girly.” He forgot that she was also stubborn as a fence post.
The odds had been against Tee from birth. Her biological father was shot and killed when she was an infant. She was raised in a strict foster home on Chicago’s deep South Side. Minnie Hudson, who later adopted her and her brother, had four children of her own. Anywhere from two to 20 foster children rotated through Hudson’s three-bedroom apartment, sleeping three in a room or on a couch or floor.
At 15, Tee turned rebellious. Drugs had saturated the South Side like a plague. Crime went rampant. Drive-by shootings picked off some of her friends. Tee lost her way. “Poor grades, wrong crowd,” was the rap on this once-star student.
When word surfaced that her best friend was going to be jumped, Tee’s teenage rebellion found a cause. She smashed the glass on a fire alarm. “Run, take the side exit!” she shouted. The girl escaped a beating. For this tiny act of personal heroism, Tee was thrown out of school.
Hudson, the only mom she knew, and dearly loved, was now in her 70's and sapped by a stroke. Too weak to reverse the backsliding of the brightest and most talented of all her children, Hudson sent the girl off to a paramilitary reform school in rural Illinois. Lincoln’s Challenge, run by the National Guard, gave Tee the structure and discipline she craved. She graduated with a scholarship for college.
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