Children 'deploy' to Afghanistan through Camp Desert Kids

  • Published
  • By Senior Airman Alyssa C. Wallace
  • 366th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
More than 50 of the Mountain Home Air Force Base's youngest Gunfighters received a glimpse into deployment life when Military Families United's Camp Desert Kids program was set up on base Oct. 15.

MFU members travel around the United States hosting CDK for the children of service members who are preparing for or have recently returned from a deployment. According to the CDK website, the program, "gives military children the opportunity to experience deployment with their home front parent in a unique way," and "works to reduce the unknown in our military children's lives," through games, cultural activities, regional food and drink, as well as wearing the same uniform and gear as their parents during a real-world deployment.

While the program has reached close to 1,000 dependents of all branches of the military, the CDK's remote Idaho location marked the first time the program had ever been held on an air force base.

"It is our hope to bring this program to as many children as we can," said Brynn Vollmer, MFU director of programs. "We visit Army posts, Marine Corps and Air Force bases, as well as Naval Stations, and work with active-duty, National Guard and Reserve units to bring this program to as many people as we possibly can."

When the children arrived for duty at the GSC, they completed registration, were issued a passport and moved to headquarters where they received a culture briefing before deploying to "Afghanistan." During this briefing, they learned the native language, the geography of their deployed location and exactly how long it would be en route to their military installation. Upon "arrival," they tasted local food, tried on traditional clothing and were able to ask questions to Airmen who had actually deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.

As a military spouse and mother,Vollmer says this experience is very important to the military's youngest members.

"It's hard to explain to our kids where our service members go," she said. "When my husband deploys, it's very important for me to be able to relate at a child's level because when you're little, Afghanistan is a foreign concept -- it's an idea, it's out there. This helps bring it down to their level and gives them the hands-on experience, enabling them to better understand deployments as a whole."