Deployed Soldier donates money, R&R time to the needy

By Spc. Evan D. Marcy, 44th Expeditionary Signal Battalion Public AffairsAugust 27, 2008

Deployed 5th Signal Soldier donates money, R&R time to the needy
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – During his two-week rest and recuperation from serving a 15-month deployment in Iraq, Spc. Timothy Roy, C Company, 44th Expeditionary Signal Battalion, and his parents James and Lynn Roy, assist at a soup kitchen/shelter in New Hampshire. Roy gives m... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Deployed 5th Signal Soldier donates money, R&R time to the needy
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Spc. Timothy Roy, C Company, 44th Expeditionary Signal Battalion, performs maintenance on computer servers and routers at Camp Echo near Diwaniyah, Iraq. Roy, who is on a 15-month deployment, recently spent his two-week rest and recuperation time to ... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

CAMP VICTORY, Iraq - Volunteer Soldiers knowingly make a sacrifice for their country.

Whether it is sacrificing time with their family, personal comforts - or even their life - the duty of a Soldier eventually requires sacrifice in some way or another. Certain Soldiers, though, go beyond that to give more.

Spc. Timothy Roy, of 5th Signal Command's C Company, 44th Expeditionary Signal Battalion, has made it his personal endeavor to provide his time and money for those in need.

During his two-week rest and recuperation leave while currently serving a 15-month deployment in Iraq, Roy and his parents volunteered their time preparing and serving meals at a soup kitchen/shelter near their home in New Hampshire. He also donated $1,000 to the soup kitchen and convinced a large corporation to match his contribution as well.

"My parents always taught me to put others before myself," said Roy.

He also became involved with the Make-A-Wish Foundation by donating $3,000 to grant a wish that was tied to his own interests in computers. His donation was matched with a 17-year-old girl afflicted with the life-threatening inflammatory disease Lupus. She used the money to buy much-needed computer equipment, allowing her to continue her education from home.

"What Spc. Roy did was really remarkable, and shows how much of a good guy he really is," said 1st Sgt. John Willis, C Company, 44th ESB. "Soldiers usually take deployment money and spend it on themselves. I was surprised by how much money came out of his pocket (that was donated)."

"I figured if people saw me giving back, it would encourage them to do the same," said Roy. "When they see a Soldier trying to give back, when they are already selflessly serving their country, they want to be a part of it as well."

"To know that you can make a profound difference in someone's life is a wonderful feeling," said Roy. "I got a letter of thanks from the first child and her mother that I sponsored (through Make-A-Wish) and she said she was moved to tears by my kindness. There's no feeling like that; it's hard to put in words how that made me feel."

This year, Roy is sponsoring another wish through the foundation and persuaded Macy's to also contribute. Together, they are providing a small haven for a girl who needs weekly medical treatments.

"We're giving her the room makeover of her dreams," said Roy. "She's always shared a bedroom and her older sister just moved out, so were making her a place she can call her own."

Roy found another way to give back to the community through a classmate from high school who now teaches at an elementary school in Connecticut. During his deployment, the 5th Signal specialist and students are sharing letters, which provides "an educational experience for them; they are learning about Iraq and what the Soldiers are doing here to make things better," said Roy. "They ask the most innocent questions."

Because the children had never met a Soldier, Roy made a three-hour drive to visit them while on R&R leave from Iraq.

"I spent the day with them, answering questions and playing at recesses," he recalls. "It was a great experience. It only takes a few minutes every couple of weeks to write a small letter ... to let them know how things are going. They looked at me with such awe. I was really touched to be a part of their lives."

Roy's first deployment was in 1999 while assigned to the 110th Military Intelligence Battalion, which went into Bosnia as part of a NATO peace-keeping force.

"There were bullet holes everywhere, and I saw a lot of burned-down houses," Roy remembers. "The kids would come up and ask for money. I talked a lot to our translator about the country.

"[E]veryone liked us being there; it felt good. We were down there for a good cause. I've spoken to Bosnian forces serving with us here; they said it's gotten a lot better."

While deployed to Iraq, Roy, an information technology specialist, is assigned to the Technical Control Facility helpdesk on Camp Echo, located near Diwaniyah. His role is to manage and troubleshoot internet, phones and switches, while also providing configuration changes throughout the camp.

Also located at his installation is a Provincial Reconstruction Team, which he said "does a great job of helping poverty in Iraq. They go out, meet people personally and give back in a real way to these local communities. The PRT at Camp Echo has a program to rebuild schools, the local infrastructure, while also giving school children brand new laptops."

To the many folks that he has touched, Roy could be considered a one-man PRT. For him, it's simply a personal duty to help out the needy.