Operation Iraqi Freedom, Fallen Heroes, Iraq War 03/19/03

Ryan C Job

Issaquah, Washington

September 24, 2009

Age Military Rank Unit/Location
28 Navy SO2

Navy Seal

 

Died from surgery complications from injury sustained in 2006 in Iraq.

For Memorial Service Snapshots, Click photo below

November 7, 2009

From KATU TV katu.com 09/25/09: 
Wash. native injured in Iraq dies after surgery
by KOMO Staff

Originally printed at http://www.katu.com/news/local/61479967.html

SEATTLE -- A Washington native and Navy veteran has died after undergoing surgery to treat an injury he sustained while serving in Iraq, his friends and family said Friday.

Ryan Job, 28, died early Thursday after a 12-hour surgery to repair his eye socket.

Job was blinded on August 2, 2006 in Ramadi, Iraq when a sniper's bullet shattered the rifle he was holding.

It was not immediately clear exactly what caused his death, as friends said he seemed fine after the surgery at Maricopa Medical Center in Phoenix.

"I talked to him Tuesday -- he was in great spirits," said Mike Conklin, chairman of the Sentinels of Freedom Scholarship Foundation. "He was in a little bit of pain, but... he wanted to get out of the hospital."

Conklin knew Job well and said the Navy SEAL was a recipient of a scholarship from the foundation, which provides assistance to injured soldiers.

Conklin said Job graduated from Jones International University with a 4.0 after he was wounded and was working for General Dynamics in Arizona.

"He was a smart kid and he had to learn all this from scratch, being blind," Conklin said. "Just a tremendously driven young man."

Job's family lives in Issaquah, and he was back in the area in July, 2008 to climb Mount Rainier with other injured servicemen.

Conklin said the surgery was the second in a series of three that had been scheduled, Conklin said.

"It just brings to light the fact that these war wounds never leave them," he said.

Job is survived by his wife, Kelly, who is pregnant with their first child and due in May.
From The Seattle Times seattletimes.com 09/26/09:


Obituary: Ryan Job was a spokesman for wounded veterans

By Lynn Thompson

Seattle Times staff reporter

Blinded by a sniper's bullet in Iraq, Ryan Job retained his characteristic determination and persistence. He climbed Mount Rainier, trained for a triathlon and became a spokesman for an organization that helps wounded veterans transition to civilian life.

"He didn't back down from any challenge," said a friend, Tyler Lein, of Scottsdale, Ariz.

Mr. Job, who grew up in Issaquah, died Thursday morning after major reconstructive surgery at Maricopa Medical Center in Phoenix. He was 28.

Mr. Job's younger brother, Aaron, served three tours of duty in Iraq with the Marines. The Seattle Times profiled the Job family during Aaron Job's deployments in 2003 and 2004.

A story on Ryan Job, a former Navy SEAL, reaching the summit of Mount Rainier appeared in July 2008.

The men's mother, Debbie Job, of Issaquah, said her son had taken on the challenge of blindness with the same strength with which he confronted other challenges in his life.

"He was determined not to be a disabled guy," his mother said Friday by phone from Arizona.

Ryan Job underwent an eight-hour surgery Monday to rebuild his face. The recovery seemed to be proceeding smoothly, his mother said, though her son reported some discomfort Wednesday night. A nurse checked on him at 3:30 a.m. Thursday. He was found unresponsive at 5 a.m. She said the hospital had not determined the cause of death.

"It wasn't supposed to happen like this," said Debbie Job. "It's a total shock."

Neighbors of the Job family on the Sammamish Plateau recalled Ryan Job as a strong, physically active young man who had been determined to join the elite Navy special-operations force, despite the grueling training regimen. Mr. Job regularly swam across Beaver Lake a few miles from his home and ran for hours before dawn, said Neil Iovino, a neighbor who watched the Job boys grow up.

"His goal was to be a Navy SEAL and it didn't matter how hard it was," Iovino said.

Ryan Job was born in 1981, the eldest of three children. He graduated from Issaquah High School in 1999 and joined the Navy in 2002. Mutual friends in San Diego, where he trained for the SEALS, introduced him to his future wife, Kelly. The couple married in 2007.

Mr. Job was on patrol in Ramadi, Iraq, in 2006 when a sniper's bullet struck his rifle. Pieces of the shattered weapon tore through his face, destroying one eye and severing the optic nerves of the other.

After his injury, Mr. Job spent time in military hospitals in Maryland, Florida and finally Palo Alto, Calif.

He and Kelly moved to Arizona in 2007 with the help of the Sentinels of Freedom Scholarship Foundation. The California-based organization assists armed-forces veterans severely injured in the line of duty on or after Sept. 11, 2001.

The foundation found a condo for the couple to live in, arranged for furniture and helped Mr. Job enroll in an online college program to complete the business degree he'd begun at the University of Washington.

"He was a great spokesman for the organization," said Lein, whose father, Howard Lein, founded the Arizona chapter of the Sentinels.

A 2007 story in The Arizona Republic quoted Mr. Job as saying he and his wife wanted to return the generosity others had shown them.

"Once I'm back on my feet, we'd like to help the next group of guys make the same transition."

Debbie Job said her daughter-in-law is pregnant with the couple's first child.

Aaron Job works with the Orange County Sheriff's Department and hopes to find a job in the Seattle area, his mother said.

In addition to his mother, wife and brother, Mr. Job is survived by his father, Eric Job, his sister, Kelsie, and his grandmother Barbara McCormick of Sammamish.

Services are planned for Thursday at the Scottsdale, Ariz., Bible Church.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorials be sent to either Camp Patriot, www.camppatriot.org; Sentinels of Freedom, www.sentinelsoffreedom.org; or the Naval Special Warfare Foundation, www.nswfoundation.org.

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