Homefront Hugs Foundation

Homefront Hugs Foundation Our main focus is suicide prevention, isolation support, PTSD, and building resilience together before and after trauma. Be one of the helpers.

Support our troops,wounded warriors & veterans,families, help reduce suicides, or volunteer with us to help others in your community in countless ways giving thanks for our freedoms Homefront Hugs missions include Operation Healing Angel (helping our wounded & sick veterans and caregivers),Homefront Hero Hugs (our adoption program of deployed troops),and Homefront Hugs Kids and Teen Clubs volunte

ering for worldwide anywhere in thanks. Homefront Hugs is an all volunteer organization,founded October 11,2001. We need you and you can help from anywhere!

82 years ago today, Allied forces landed on the beaches of Normandy in the largest amphibious invasion in history during...
06/06/2026

82 years ago today, Allied forces landed on the beaches of Normandy in the largest amphibious invasion in history during WWII.
June 6, 1944 was a day of bravery which will never be forgotten and exemplifies by our nation’s heroes whom we miss every day, who paid the ultimate price for our freedoms.

06/03/2026

Not all injuries are visible.
This PTSD Awareness Month, we honor the strength and resilience of warriors living with invisible injuries. Through sport, connection, and community, Warrior Games highlights the power of recovery and reminds us that no one has to face their journey alone.


06/01/2026

USAAF SGT Charles Markowitz went Missing off of Japan on May 29, 1945, he was 19 years old…

Born on October 4, 1925 in New York City to Philip & Ida Markowitz, Charles Markowitz had a brother & sister. Their father Philip was from Russia, their mother Ida was from Poland, they immigrated separately and met & married in the USA.

Markowitz was enrolled in college when he enlisted in the USAAF in 1944 and was trained as a gunner. Sent to the Pacific, he served with the 62nd Bombardment Squadron, 39th Bombardment Group on Guam.

On May 29, 1945, Markowitz was the tail gunner on B-29 44-69889 "Slic Chic" on a bombing mission to Yokahama Japan with a crew of eleven. Over the target the B-29 was hit by flak, after loosing two engines they decided to ditch around 120 miles offshore.

The crew dumped as many loose items as possible overboard and opened all the escape hatches. According to a crewmember on a fellow B-29, they performed a beautiful open water landing with full flaps, but the B-29 broke into three sections on impact and started to sink.

Of the eleven man crew only seven survived to be rescued by a USN submarine, "Slic Chic" was one of seven B-29’s lost on that mission.

SGT Charles Markowitz was one of the four who didn’t survive, he was later declared Missing and is Memorialized at the Honolulu Memorial in Hawaii.

Thanks Tyler Godfrey for the picture restoration

05/27/2026
05/27/2026

“We are all Jews.”
This is the incredible story of U.S. Master Sergeant Roddie Edmonds during WWII. He was captured by the Germans and held at Stalag IXA camp in Germany with other prisoners of war (POWs), including Jewish POWs. Edmonds, who was put in charge of the POWs in the camp and not Jewish himself, refused to comply when the Germans ordered the Jewish prisoners to report in January 1945. He instructed every POW to come together in front of the barracks, not revealing who was Jewish. When the German commander saw all the POWs reporting, he protested, “They cannot all be Jews.” Edmonds replied: “We are all Jews.” Even under threat of death, he refused, and the German commander backed down, saving lives.

Photo from Yad Vashem – The World Holocaust Remembrance Center

05/26/2026

Efforts include better assessment of canine traumatic brain injury and even finding common medical treatments for both humans and dogs.

This Memorial Day we remember our chaplains and veterans of all faiths who represent the strength and shared humanity of...
05/25/2026

This Memorial Day we remember our chaplains and veterans of all faiths who represent the strength and shared humanity of our nation.

May their memories forever be a blessing.

05/25/2026
What does living your best life mean to you? Freedom Endures.
05/25/2026

What does living your best life mean to you? Freedom Endures.

Sacrifices never forgotten
05/25/2026

Sacrifices never forgotten

Today, we remember all the men and women who paid the ultimate sacrifice for the United States, including countless Latino service members whose courage has shaped American history, since before the Revolutionary War.

This commemorative stamp was issued on October 31, 1984, in Washington, D.C. At the time of the stamp's issuance, 37 Hispanic Americans had received the Medal of Honor, which is the highest military decoration awarded by the U.S. government. Today, there are more than 60 Hispanic/Latino Medal of Honor recipients.

Learn more about the Latino Patriots that have served in the armed forces in our Learning Lab: https://s.si.edu/LatinoPatriots.



Hoy, recordamos a todos los hombres y mujeres que han dado su vida por los Estados Unidos, incluyendo a innumerables militares latinos cuyo valor ha marcado la historia estadounidense desde antes de la Guerra de Independencia.

Este sello postal conmemorativo se emitió el 31 de octubre de 1984 en Washington, D.C. En ese momento, 37 hispano americanos habían recibido la Medalla de Honor, la máxima condecoración militar otorgada por el gobierno de los Estados Unidos. Hoy, hay más de 60 hispanos/latinos que han recibido la Medalla de Honor.

Conoce más sobre los patriotas latinos que han servido en las fuerzas armadas en nuestro Laboratorio de Aprendizaje: https://s.si.edu/LatinoPatriots.

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