The road to becoming a Marine has been long for U.S. Marine Corps Pfc. Bienvenue Niyonkuru, as he steps on the Peatross Parade Deck to graduate from training at MCRD Parris Island, Jan. 23, 2026. Niyonkuru is a Marine in the Hotel Company, 2nd Recruit Training Battalion; however, it is not his first time in training.On January 28th, 2025, Niyonkuru began training in Golf Company, 2nd Recruit Training Battalion, where he trained as a recruit for two weeks. During the second week of training, Niyonkuru was called into medical, where a problem on his record led to him being dropped from training. Although he couldn’t continue training, Niyonkuru was encouraged to return and become a Marine.“During my six months when I was at home, all I could
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Over a year ago, Lance Cpl. Brandon Avila promised his mother that he would become a Marine and give her and their family a better life. Avila never let go of that promise, even when he was injured last June and spent the next eight months in recovery.“I had a goal when I came on the island, I made a promise to my mom,” said Avila. “I wanted to be different from my brothers, prove my family wrong, and give my mother a better life.”
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At 32, Isaac Ago Zutah stood at the threshold of a dream. With a suitcase in hand and hope in his heart, he left Ghana — the first in his family ever to do so — bound for the United States."You could see the joy from the house," Zutah recalled. "The first person to leave [Ghana] was from the house."His family gathered, beaming with pride, watching him take the first steps toward a future none of them had seen but all believed in. It was a moment of triumph wrapped in uncertainty.But the journey would soon demand more than courage. It would ask for sacrifice.When Zutah arrived in America, the U.S. Marine Corps was not part of his plan. The idea hadn’t even crossed his mind — until, as he describes it, a door opened unexpectedly.“The graces
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With one year left in her enlistment contract in the U.S. Army, Sgt. Alexis Banks had to decide what to do with the rest of her career. She could change jobs or move to a new duty station. But in the back of her mind was a third option— joining the U.S. Marine Corps.Growing up, Alexis always admired service members and the stories they told, the places they had been, and the uniforms they wore. After researching the branches, she enlisted in the U.S. Army where she served as an intel analyst and paratrooper for the 82nd Airborne Division on Fort Liberty, N.C.But Alexis felt like she was at a crossroad and needed a new challenge in her life, and she believed she would find it in the Marine Corps.“Whether you know anything about the military
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When one recruit took his place on the parade deck to receive his Eagle Globe and Anchor, it was a moment filled with pride and loss—a hard-won tribute to the mother who inspired him to join the Corps and stood by him in spirit as he became a Marine October 19, 2024.
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Pvt. Zachery Thurber, a Marine with India Company, 3rd Recruit Training Battalion, stood before the Iwo Jima monument on the Peatross Parade Deck, ready to receive his Eagle, Globe, and Anchor from his senior drill instructor. The last person Zachery expected to see was his father, Sgt. Maj. William Thurber (USMC, Ret.), and was shocked beyond belief when he stepped in front of him.
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For one Marine, boot camp graduation was more than just a ceremony, it was the realization of a lifelong dream.“Seeing my father serve and his graduation pictures from over 30 years ago, that’s what I wanted. That was my dream,” said Lance Cpl. Sean Fang.
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