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<span class=prefix>SPC</span> Seferino Jose Reyna

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SPC Seferino Jose Reyna Veteran

Birth
USA
Death
7 Aug 2005 (aged 20)
Iraq
Burial
Phoenix, Maricopa County, Arizona, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec 54 Site 56
Memorial ID
View Source
Spc. Seferino J. Reyna of Phoenix, Arizona was remembered as a quiet, hardworking family man who loved his kids and always tried to lift up his fellow soldiers. He would do anything for anybody. He enlisted in the Army in August 2002. That fall, he and his wife enrolled in Pass Alternative High School in Kingman where they both worked very hard. Both were top students. They were motivated to be together and make a good life for themselves. Seferino graduated within a couple of months and cared for their daughter, 4-year-old Savannah, while his wife earned her diploma. He was a very kind and loving person. Seferino was a member of the Tohono O'odham Nation, which occupies 2.8 million acres south and west of Tucson with an enrollment of nearly 26,000 members. He really liked the military and was thinking about a career in drug enforcement. He also is survived by his 1-year-old son Aquilino. He died in Taji when an explosive detonated near his vehicle.

Army
Company A
70th Engineer Battalion
3rd Brigade
1st Armored Division
Fort Riley, Kansas
Spc. Seferino J. Reyna of Phoenix, Arizona was remembered as a quiet, hardworking family man who loved his kids and always tried to lift up his fellow soldiers. He would do anything for anybody. He enlisted in the Army in August 2002. That fall, he and his wife enrolled in Pass Alternative High School in Kingman where they both worked very hard. Both were top students. They were motivated to be together and make a good life for themselves. Seferino graduated within a couple of months and cared for their daughter, 4-year-old Savannah, while his wife earned her diploma. He was a very kind and loving person. Seferino was a member of the Tohono O'odham Nation, which occupies 2.8 million acres south and west of Tucson with an enrollment of nearly 26,000 members. He really liked the military and was thinking about a career in drug enforcement. He also is survived by his 1-year-old son Aquilino. He died in Taji when an explosive detonated near his vehicle.

Army
Company A
70th Engineer Battalion
3rd Brigade
1st Armored Division
Fort Riley, Kansas

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