What It Means to Serve: From Airborne Ranger to Peace Corps Volunteer
Book Details
Description
At the age of seventeen, Donayre enlists to become an airborne ranger, young and unsure of the uncertainties that surround his future. As he becomes immersed in military life, he finds himself traveling, drinking, and meeting women during short, army-allotted excursions. When his four-year contract comes to an end, Donayre spends seven years earning his master's degree and then decides to do the unthinkable: join the famously liberal Peace Corps.
Assigned to Moldova, a small country in the former Soviet Union, he becomes engrossed in a politically conflicted culture that's notoriously intertwined with corruption and poverty. Donayre's two-year stint as a teacher of English as a foreign language at the university level allows him to view, first hand, the effects of a broken nation on an emerging generation of workers. What It Means to Serve: From Airborne Ranger to Peace Corps Volunteer is a memoir that takes its readers through a range of politically charged emotions as Donayre openly engages in the dualities of war and peace.
