05/26/2026
Shoshana Johnson never set out to make history. At 25, broke in El Paso and dreaming of culinary school, she enlisted in the Army as a cook—hoping to save money and follow her father’s footsteps.
She became the first Black female prisoner of war in American history.
When her daughter Janelle was born, Shoshana transferred to Fort Bliss for what should have been safe duty: cooking for the 507th Maintenance Company. But after September 11th, everything changed.
In March 2003, she kissed her two-year-old goodbye—“Mommy has to go to work”—and deployed. The 507th was supposed to stay in Kuwait. Instead, they joined a massive convoy into Iraq.
Three days later, lost in the desert, their vehicles drove straight into an ambush in Nasiriyah. Gunfire erupted. Shoshana scrambled under her truck, weapon jammed, sand choking every part of the fight. Bullets tore through both ankles. She couldn’t run. Couldn’t stand. Couldn’t fight.
Ninety minutes of chaos left eleven Americans dead, including her best friend Lori Piestewa—the first Native American woman killed in combat. Shoshana was captured.
For 22 days, she was beaten, paraded through hostile crowds, moved from house to house. Alone, she prayed. She imagined futures—love, more children, watching Janelle grow up—just to stay alive.
On April 13th, Marines stormed House 13 in Samarra. Shoshana was eating breakfast when the door exploded open. “MARINES!” She was free.
She returned to America on shattered ankles, walking off the plane through sheer determination. But another battle began. Disability ratings left her with far less support than fellow POW Jessica Lynch. Media attention faded. Shoshana was quietly forgotten.
The invisible wounds lingered—PTSD, depression, survivor’s guilt. In 2008, she admitted herself to a psychiatric ward. Years of therapy followed. Slowly, she rebuilt.
She published a memoir in 2010. She watched Janelle graduate college. She found peace in cooking, yoga, family, and faith.
Today, at 52, she lives in El Paso. Spring is still hard—the anniversary of the ambush always brings memories—but she carries them with strength.
“I am a survivor, not a hero,” she says. “The heroes paid the ultimate price. The Marines risked everything to get us out. They had families waiting too. But they took that chance anyway.”
Shot through both ankles. Beaten in captivity. Held for 22 days. Forgotten by the media. Haunted by guilt. And still standing.
Shoshana Johnson never broke her promise to come home to her daughter. And that is her legacy.