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Army vet from Woodbridge donates flag that protected him to Middlesex County College

PHOTO COURTESY OF THOMAS PETERSON
Army veteran Michael Barany of Woodbridge, left, donated the flag he carried overseas to Middlesex County College during a ceremony marking the 17th anniversary of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Also pictured is Mark McCormick, interim president of the college.

WOODBRIDGE – When Michael Barany graduated from U. S. Army basic training in 2006, he received an American flag.

It never left his side.

Not when he was in training.

Not when he was deployed twice to Iraq.

And not since he was discharged from the Army, came to Middlesex County College (MCC) graduated and then earned a Bachelor’s Degree at New Jersey City University. He is now going for his doctorate.

“That flag went everywhere with me,” the Woodbridge resident said in a statement provided by MCC. “When I was deployed, the flag served as a shield during a sandstorm, and a poncho during the rain.”

He did reconnaissance and surveillance and would be out two or three weeks at a time.

“We’d nail the flag onto the roof so helicopters flying overhead would know we were friendly,” Barany said in the statement.

Since leaving the military, the flag stayed with him always.

Until now.

At the MCC program commemorating the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Barany donated the flag to the college.

“When I left the Army in 2011, I was lost,” he said in the statement. “If it hadn’t been for this school and its Veterans Services Center, I don’t know where I would be. I owe all my success to them.”

Barany is currently the assistant in the Veterans Services Center, helping student veterans every day.

“It’s my way of giving back,” he said.

Mark McCormick, MCC’s interim president, said the flag will be prominently displayed at the college.

“I was really touched and honored that Michael donated something that means so much to him,” McCormick said in the statement. “It is so gratifying to see those who served come back and continue to serve others as civilians.”

The annual Sept. 11 program at MCC included a keynote speech from Ronald G. Rios, freeholder director, who thanked the veterans for their service and urged those in the audience to help their fellow citizens by performing acts of service on this anniversary day.

It also included a flag raising by student veterans Natalia Thomas, Cristina Reyes and Samantha Cruz; the honor guard of VFW Post 2319 from Milltown; the President’s Proclamation read by Eun Lee, president of the MCC Veterans and Servicemembers Association; and a Sept. 11 poem, read by student veteran Marcel Butts.

 

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