Page 146 - Journal of Special Operations Medicine - Fall 2016
P. 146

Special Forces

                                       Aidman’s Pledge

                                       As a Special Forces Aidman of the United States Army, I pledge
                                       my honor and my conscience to the service of my country and
                                       the art of medicine. I recognize the responsibility, which may
                                       be placed upon me for the health, and even lives, of others.
                                       I confess the limitation of my skill and knowledge in the caring
                                       for the sick and injured. I promise to follow the maxim “Primum
                                       non-nocere” (“First, thou shalt do no harm”), and to seek the
            assistance of more competent medical authority whenever it is available. These confidences,
            which come to me in my attendance on the sick, I will treat as secret. I recognize my
            responsibility to impart to others who seek the service of medicine such knowledge of its art
            and practice as I possess, and I resolve to continue to improve my capability to this purpose.
            As an American Soldier, I have determined ultimately to place above all considerations of
            self the mission of my team and the cause of my nation.


            Pararescue Creed

            I was that which others did not want to be. I went where others
            feared to go, and did what others failed to do. I asked nothing from
            those who gave nothing, And reluctantly accepted the thought of
            eternal loneliness . . .  should I fail. I have seen the face of terror;
            felt the stinging cold of fear, and enjoyed the sweet taste of a
            moment's love. I have cried, pained, and hoped . . . but most of all,
            I have lived times others would say best forgotten. Always I will be
            able to say, that I was proud of what I was: a PJ. It is my duty as a
            Pararescueman to save a life and to aid the injured. I will perform
            my assigned duties quickly and efficiently, placing these duties before personal desires and
            comforts. These things I do, “That Others May Live.”



                                       A Navy Poem

                                       I’m the one called “doc” . . . I shall not walk in your footsteps, but
                                       I will walk by your side. I shall not walk in your image, I’ve earned
                                       my own title of pride. We’ve answered the call together, on sea
                                       and foreign land. When the cry for help was given, I’ve been there
                                       right at hand. Whether I am on the ocean or in the jungle wearing
                                       greens, Giving aid to my fellow man, be it Sailors or Marines.
                                       So the next time you see a corpsman and you think of calling
                                       him “squid,” think of the job he’s doing as those before him did.
                                       And if you ever have to go out there and your life is on the block,
                                       Look at the one right next to you . . . I’m the one called “doc.”


                                                                    —Harry D. Penny, Jr. USN Copyright 1975
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