Local

Vietnam veteran uses ‘second chance’ to help others

In this 1969 Polaroid, Francisco Barrientes serves as an extraordinary minister of holy Communion and an altar server while on the front lines with the U.S. Army in Vietnam. (CNS photo/courtesy of Francisco Barrientes)

by Rose Ybarra

EDINBURG, Texas (CNS) — Throughout his life, in times of triumph and happiness and in times of suffering, pain and fear, decorated war hero Francisco Barrientes has given witness to his faith.

After graduating from Edinburg High School, Barrientes was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1968 and deployed to Vietnam.

“When I first arrived in Vietnam, I saw all these people dying, I saw killings,” said Barrientes, who celebrated his 69th birthday Dec. 5.

He turned to prayer in those difficult days. Prayer, especially praying the rosary, was ingrained in him as a student at Sacred Heart Catholic School in Edinburg and reinforced at home by his father. The family often prayed the rosary together and during the months of May, which is the month of Mary, and October, the month of the rosary, they prayed it “every day without fail.”

“When I got to Vietnam, I started praying the rosary by myself every day,” Barrientes told The Valley Catholic, newspaper of the Diocese of Brownsville. “I didn’t want to invite the men in the company to pray with me personally, because they were all different religions. I sat down in front of everybody and started praying the Rosary by myself and before I knew it, I had 20-25 soldiers praying with me.”

Barrientes, who was an altar server throughout his childhood and teenage years, also assisted the chaplains who trudged out into the jungle to celebrate Mass for the soldiers.

“I have always said that my faith really helped me,” he said.

Barrientes was injured May 5, 1969, when an enemy hand grenade struck his leg. He spent two weeks in the hospital before he was sent back to the jungle.

A few weeks later, on June 20, 1969, he sustained a gunshot wound to the face, which left him fighting for his life.

“When I got shot, I remember going blank, but during that time I was able to see all my family gathered around a river, a stream with water so clear that you could see all the way to the bottom,” Barrientes recalled. “There were birds, all kinds of birds singing. . . . And then all of a sudden I remember jumping up again and then going to the landing zone where we went to get some help.

“I don’t know, but for one moment, I thought — and that’s what people tell me — maybe I saw my life flash before me and that I had gone beyond to another place. … I don’t know how to explain it, and then I just came back and survived and continued living.”

The injuries he sustained changed his life forever.

“The bullet went down my throat and my esophagus,” Barrientes said. “It ruined by esophagus and vocal cords. Since 1969, I’ve been eating through a tube in the stomach. Nothing will go down my throat, not even water.”

He was in and out of the hospital for more than seven years and has undergone more than 40 surgeries since he was injured.

“I’ve been through a lot, but it never really bothered me because I accepted it right away,” said Barrientes, who awarded two Purple Hearts and a Bronze Star for his service in Vietnam. “I just wanted to continue living.”

Barrientes was given a medical leave of absence June 1, 1971, and began volunteering at Holy Family Church in Edinburg.

“That first weekend in June, I started working on the yards here,” he said. “My father used to do the work, but he retired and I took over. I have been here with every priest who has served this parish. The first priest of the parish, Father Clemente [Grzenia] always called me, ‘El Heroe’ (the hero).”

Barrientes volunteered as a groundskeeper for decades before a maintenance man was hired. He also volunteers as a sacristan, an usher, helps with religious education and wherever else he is needed.

He assists the priests at most funerals since most of the altar servers are in school during the day. On most Sundays, he is at the parish church from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. to help out at all the Masses and to open and close the buildings.

In 1981, he also began volunteering at Lyndon B. Johnson Elementary in Edinburg where his children attended school. He also volunteered with several civic organizations. In 2002, he was named a Hero for Children by the Texas State Board of Education for providing outstanding service and dedication to public schools and students. Only one person per region is selected.

In 2006, the Edinburg school district named a middle school in Barrientes’ honor, which recently celebrated its 10-year anniversary. Barrientes also volunteers there two to four hours a day and is a familiar face at sporting events and other school activities. He also regularly visits other schools, often in uniform, to talk with students about his experience as a soldier in Vietnam and to encourage them to study hard.

“I’ve met a lot of people who have told me, ‘I don’t think I would have been able to live like that,’ but I tell them, ‘Life is beautiful and you want to enjoy every moment,” Barrientes said. “I can’t complain. I’ve been blessed. I was given a second chance and I believe it was so that could give of myself to others and that’s why I try to help where I can.”

Barrientes and his wife, Martha, have been married for more than 44 years and have three children and a granddaughter.

Copyright ©2016 Catholic News Service / U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

About the author

CNS

Catholic News Service is a leader in the world of Catholic and religious media.

Leave a Comment