Joshua Casteel
Joshua Casteel | |
---|---|
Birth name | Joshua Eric Casteel |
Born |
Sioux Falls, South Dakota | 27 December 1979
Died |
25 August 2012 New York, New York | (aged 32)
Place of burial | Cedar Rapids, Iowa |
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/branch | United States Army |
Years of service | 2002–2005 |
Battles/wars | Iraq War |
Joshua Casteel (27 December 1979 – 25 August 2012) was a United States Army soldier, conscientious objector, playwright, and divinity student.[1][2][3] He was born in Sioux Falls, South Dakota and raised in Cedar Rapids, Iowa in a Christian Evangelical family.[1][2][4]
Casteel won an appointment to the US Military Academy at West Point but dropped out in his first term there.[1] He enlisted in the Army in May 2002 and was trained as an interrogator at Fort Huachuca and in the Arabic language at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, CA.[1] Casteel served with the Army's 202nd Military Intelligence Battalion as an interrogator at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq and claimed to have conducted over 130 prisoner interrogations.[1][5] His unit arrived in Iraq in 2004, six weeks after revelation of prisoner abuses by US personnel at the prison.[1] The Army approved his application for conscientious objector and granted him an honorable discharge in 2005.[1]
Casteel graduated from the University of Iowa in 2008 with a dual Master of Fine Arts degree in playwriting and non-fiction writing.[4] He was an active member of Iraq Veterans Against the War and the author of several plays performed in the US and abroad, including Returns and The Interrogation Room.[1][2] As a public speaker on religious and political matters, Casteel addressed audiences in the US, Ireland, Sweden, Italy and the UK.[1] He was featured in the documentary films Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers and Soldiers of Conscience.[2][6] In 2008, excerpts of Casteel's emails from Iraq were published in Harper's Magazine and in book form by Essay Press.[1][7]
He died of lung cancer in New York City in New York-Presbyterian Hospital on August 25, 2012.[2][8] An oncologist told Casteel's mother that "Joshua died of lung cancer without having any of the conventional risk factors such as smoking, asbestos exposure or radiation ... I am quite sure we did not have anyone younger with lung cancer those five years I worked at the VA."[9] Casteel's family believes his cancer was the result of exposure to toxins released by a burn pit he slept near for six months in Iraq.[9] He was a University of Chicago Divinity School graduate student at the time of his death.[2]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Casteel, Joshua. Letters from Abu Ghraib. (Ithaca, NY: Essay Pr., 2008). ISBN 978-0-9791189-3-7
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Allen, Susie. "Divinity School student Joshua Casteel, 1979-2012". UChicagoNews. 18 September 2012. Accessed 21 June 2013.
- ↑ Latchis, Rebekah. "The Big 3-2!". Joshuacasteel.com. 16 December 2011. Accessed 14 August 2013.
- 1 2 "Obituaries: Casteel, Joshua Eric". The Gazette. 02 September 2012. Accessed 14 August 2013.
- ↑ Lindsey, T. M. "A conscientious objector's journey". The Iowa Independent. 03 September 2008. Accessed 14 August 2013.
- ↑ http://lunaproductions.com/soldiers-of-conscience-the-movie/
- ↑ Casteel, Joshua. "The Monk of Abu Ghraib". Harper's Magazine. Vol. 317, No. 1901. 01 October 2008. p. 22.
- ↑ Erin Jordan. "Cedar Rapids family blames burn pit in Iraq for son's cancer death". The Gazette. 26 October 2012. Accessed 14 August 2013.
- 1 2 Erin Jordan. "Cedar Rapids family links ex-soldier’s death to burn pit". The Gazette. 28 October 2012. Accessed 14 August 2013.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Joshua Casteel |
- "Joshua Casteel: 'To Love One's Enemies' ", a video clip from Soldiers of Conscience. Accessed 21 June 2013.
- "Call of Duty", an essay by Casteel on military-themed first-person shooter video games. Accessed 14 August 2013.
- joshuacasteel.com, a site about Joshua maintained by his family. Accessed 22 June 2013.
- "Authors - Joshua Casteel (archived)," a short biography on the Essay Press web site. Accessed 18 December 2014.