Charlie Liteky, Army chaplain in Vietnam who gave back Medal of Honor, dies
January 22, 2017, 1:06 AM
SAN FRANCISCO -- Charlie Liteky, an Army chaplain in Vietnam who won the Medal of Honor for rescuing more than 20 wounded men but later gave it back in protest and became a peace activist, has died.
Longtime friend Richard Olive said Liteky died Friday night at the Veterans Administration Hospital in San Francisco. He was 85.
The Army awarded Liteky the highest military decoration for his actions on Dec. 6, 1967, when his company came under intense fire from an enemy battalion in Bien Hoa province. Despite painful wounds in the neck and foot, Liteky carried more than 20 men to the landing zone to be evacuated during the fierce firefight.
Noticing another trapped and seriously wounded man, Chaplain Liteky crawled to his aid, the Armys official citation reads. Realizing that the wounded man was too heavy to carry, he rolled on his back, placed the man on his chest and through sheer determination and fortitude crawled back to the landing zone using his elbows and heels to push himself along.
He left the priesthood and in 1983, married former Catholic nun and peace activist Judy Balch in San Francisco. His wife introduced him to refugees from El Salvador, teenagers, whose fathers had been killed and tortured. I didnt believe it, but I kept going to more and more of these meetings and it became clear these people werent blowing in the wind, Liteky told the San Francisco Chronicle in a March, 2000 interview.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/charlie-liteky-dead-vietnam-medal-of-honor/
His wife preceded him five months ago.
http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Judith-Liteky-SF-organizer-for-Latino-war-9185398.php
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Liteky