For the first time in the history of the United States Navy,
a Filipino-American service member is in command the helm of a carrier.
Captain Ronald Ravelo, a son of a retired US Navy Chief from
the Philippines, became the commander of the USS Abraham Lincoln a United
States Navy’s largest aircraft carriers is now doing a major systems overhaul
under the watchful eye of a history-making Filipino-American captain.
It has been a year since US Navy Captain Ronald Ravelo
relieved his brother-in-law, Capt. Karl Thomas, as commander of the USS Abraham
Lincoln – a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier named after the former US President.
The wife of Capt. Karl Thomas, Jennifer, is the sister of
Ravelo.
Ravelo also became the first Filipino-American to take
command of a carrier.
Thomas, the outgoing commander of the Lincoln, will lead the
USS Carl Vinson.
Commissioned in 1989, USS Lincoln will be remembered for its
role in the largest peacetime evacuation in history.
When Mount Pinatubo erupted in 1991, Lincoln carried 45,000
active military personnel and their families from Zambales to Cebu.
This massive undertaking is all under Ravelo’s command.
Last March, on the second anniversary of its overhaul
process, Ravelo addressed more than 2,500 members/crews.
A son of a retired US Navy Officer Ben Ravelo, Ben was with
the Philippine Navy, left the Philippines to serve in a country whose language
he did not even know.
Ronald was born in Okinawa, Japan and raised in San Diego,
California.
He lived with his grandmother in Makati, Philippines, while
his father Ben was stationed in Saigon.
“Family is very important, critical part of the Filipino
culture and that was probably the one thing that I remembered most dearly about
that time in the Philippines,” he said.
In 2006, Ravelo was selected to the Navy Nuclear Propulsion
Program and completed his tour as Executive Officer of USS Ronald Reagan.
In 2013, he commanded USS Comstock before he got promoted to
Commanding Officer of USS Lincoln in 2014.
“The Navy is probably one of those few organizations where
any sailors, we all come in with the understanding that with a lot of hard
work, dedication you can get as far as the sky is the limit,” he said.
“Just remaining hungry, remain dedicated and working really
hard that’s really what it takes to get to my level and any level,” he said.
Source: Manila Livewire
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