Local News : Valley mourns loss of veterans advocate - Frontiersman

Valley mourns loss of veterans advocate

BY GREG JOHNSON
Frontiersman
Published on Thursday, July 15, 2010 11:47 PM AKDT

WASILLA — Maurice Bailey never quit on life or on Alaska veterans.

From the time he forged his father’s signature on the consent form to join the Army at age 17 until his death on Tuesday, Bailey was a passionate patriot and advocate for veterans of all eras.

For the last two years of his life, Bailey lived every day like it could be his last following a devastating diagnosis. He had acute myeloid leukemia (AML), and his survival was estimated at 12 months on the outside. In an interview with the Frontiersman last November, he had already outlived that prognosis by four months.

ROBERT DeBERRY/Frontiersman Maurice Bailey was the founder and driving force behind the non-profit Veterans Aviation Outreach program. He died Tuesday at 71.

“I feel as though I’m probably on somebody else’s time, but that’s OK,” he said. “I’ll just borrow somebody else’s next. There is no quit. No way, no how. I’m never going to prepare myself to die. Never. I’m going to die when I’m supposed to.”

The 71-year-old Army pilot and mechanic spent the last part of his life working for veterans as co-founder of Veterans Aviation Outreach, an organization that identifies veterans in Bush areas of the state and connects them with benefits they’ve earned. He was also president of the Mat-Su chapter of Vietnam Veterans of America. His efforts were recognized in 2007 when he was presented the Alaska Governor’s Veterans Advocacy Award.

News of his passing drew comments from his admirers, including Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, whose written statement urges others to continue Bailey’s work.

“I am profoundly saddened by the loss of my dear friend, Maurice ‘Mo’ Bailey, who will long be remembered as one of the Alaska’s most significant veterans’ leaders,” she says in the statement. “Mo reminded us through his daily life how one person can truly make a difference in the lives of others. His was a life of service, humility and grace.”

Murkowski also spoke from the Senate floor on Thursday to pay tribute to Bailey.

Dave Glenn shared a bond with Bailey only another veteran would understand, he said. Glenn is owner of Grasshopper Aviation in Wasilla, and with Bailey founded Veterans Aviation Outreach. When his friend died Tuesday, Glenn said he wasn’t surprised, but is sad.

“I remember him mostly as a fellow veteran sharing a common cause and helping the new veterans,” he said. “He was a compassionate person who was always interested in helping veterans. That was his sole mission.”

Like Senator Murkowski, U.S. Sen. Mark Begich, D-Alaska, expressed sorrow to learn of Bailey’s death.

“I am deeply saddened by the loss of Mo Bailey,” Begich says in his statement. “Mo has been a strong voice for Alaska’s veterans. ... Mo’s tireless efforts on behalf of rural veterans were instrumental in connecting them with much-needed services and support from the VA and other providers.”

Bailey was born April 20, 1939, in Memphis, Tenn., and said he knew early in life a career in the military was his destiny.

“There was a Naval base near my house when I was a kid and B-17s would fly over the house. I said, ‘You know what? I’m going to be flying one of those things someday,’” he said. “Black people there said they didn’t think that would ever happen. They said, ‘This guys is nuts.’ But at 7 years old I knew that this is the United States of America and you can do anything you want to do. That was my heart’s desire.”

Bailey recalled one close call he had on a night mission in Vietnam as a gunner on an aircraft.

“I had passed out,” he said. “It was what they called an emergency mission. I was sleepy, plus I’d been at the beer garden. I was full of Pabst Blue Ribbon. In my little cubby hole in the helicopter, I passed out in the middle of a firefight. When I got back the next day, I looked and there were bullet holes all around where my head would’ve been.”

With the accolades and attention he generated for his work for veterans over the last years of his life, Bailey maintained he was never comfortable being in the spotlight.

“That’s not what I’m motivated by,” he said. “I see too much of that. It’s something that’s hard to explain what motivates me. Helping people is just what seems natural for me to do.”

Bailey never gave up, Glenn said. He was at Providence Hospital for the last several weeks, but insisted he wanted to see his step-daughter again before he passed. The step-daughter lives in Tazmania and arrived on Monday.

At the end of his interview last November, Bailey said he was a realist and knew that eventually the leukemia would take his life. He offered advice for others in dire straights.

“Don’t take anything as a death sentence. Don’t do it,” he said. “I was in the Army for 20 years. There’s no such word in my vocabulary as ‘quit.’ No surrender here, and leave no veteran behind.”

Contact Greg Johnson at greg.johnson@frontiersman.com or 352-2269.

Comments

6 comment(s)

    Ron Leonard wrote on Jul 17, 2010 5:47 PM:

    " Mo, what can I say. He was a very special guy. I spent time with him over the past several years, and our paths crossed in Nam while I was there.

    Mo has left this world a better place for having been in it. I would just hate to see all the good that he has done with VAO cease just because Mo has passed on, he wouldn't want that either.

    May you rest in peace Mo, I will catch you on the other side. "

    Speer Family wrote on Jul 16, 2010 8:13 PM:

    " Maurice Bailey was a wonderful man who reached out in this community and changed many lives...I am a better person for having known him. Thanks Mo, your life was a shining example of service before self. "

    LisaJ wrote on Jul 16, 2010 10:46 AM:

    " My deepest sympathies to the friends and family of Mr. Bailey. I didnt know him, have only read about him in the paper, but it seems like he was quite a guy. "

    RM wrote on Jul 16, 2010 10:37 AM:

    " I was fortunate to meet Mo when he came into a Wasilla store that I was managing. The service he purchased should have only taken a couple minutes to do, but Mo sat down with me and we talked for over an hour about life. Two strangers just shooting the breeze. What an interesting, caring man, and intelligent man. In that short amount of time I felt that i knew him my whole life and left the encounter hoping our paths would cross again. Mo definitely made an impact on my life. God Bless you MO! "

    athletic supply wrote on Jul 16, 2010 7:48 AM:

    " our hearts and thoughts go out to Maurice and his family. he was a GREAT man i knew Maurice from doing business with him, i knew from the first time we met that this man was special. we will miss you Maurice you made an impact on my life Thank You "

    RIP wrote on Jul 16, 2010 12:17 AM:

    " Maurice I did not know you but I miss you already. Go with god and go in peace. "

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