October 9, 2011
By G. Wayne Miller
Journal Staff Writer
Sekou Toure with his son, Sean, in 2007, on the day of his second deployment to Iraq. Sean was 5 at the time.PAWTUCKET — Today is Sekou N. Toure’s turn to pick his son up at school. After stopping for a sandwich, he and 9-year-old Sean reach the apartment Toure has rented since he and his wife separated a few months ago. Their troubles are woven into the circumstances of Toure’s two deployments to Iraq as a Rhode Island Army National Guardsman.
Courtesy of Sekou Toure
“I don’t know if we need time apart or whatever,” says Toure, in his soft-spoken voice, which carries a hint of a French accent. “I mean, it is what it is. I can’t dwell on that. All I can worry about is Sean –– make sure that he knows that I’m here for him, even though I wasn’t before. That’s the promise I have made to him. He knows that I am here for him, and I’ll do everything I can.”
Sean was a toddler when his father deployed the first time, in 2004, with the 103rd Field Artillery. And he was just 5 when Toure returned to Iraq, in 2007, with the 169th Military Police Company.
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