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A Selfless Act
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Will Honor
Class of 2003 Alumnus Lt. Miroslav “Steven” Zilberman for His
Final Act of Bravery That Saved the Lives of His
Crewmates
Two years ago, Class of 2003 graduate Lt. Miroslav “Steven”
Zilberman, who was serving as a Naval pilot aboard the USS
Dwight D. Eisenhower, made a decision that saved the lives of
three of his crewmates. For his selfless act of bravery,
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute will host a special plaque
dedication ceremony in honor of Lt. Zilberman on Saturday,
March 31.
While returning from a 2010 mission in Afghanistan,
Zilberman’s twin-engine aircraft lost one engine over the
Arabian Sea. The starboard propeller had shut down, causing the
plane to become unstable and plunge. According to Navy
officials, Zilberman ordered his crewmates, including the
co-pilot, to bail out, and held the plane level for them to do
so, despite uncontrollable forces. Zilberman went down with the
aircraft on March 31, and was declared dead three days later,
his body lost at sea. For his final act, Zilberman was
posthumously awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, one of the
highest military awards.
“It is a difficult, but honorable, occasion that brings us
together,” said Rensselaer President Shirley Ann Jackson.
“Difficult still, after two years, to accept the loss of Lt.
Miroslav Zilberman, Class of 2003. Honorable because a life
lived as his was deserves to be remembered, to be treasured. So
today we remember, and honor a hero—a son, a friend, a
student—and a cherished husband and father.”
Zilberman followed an unlikely path to becoming a Naval
pilot. Born in Kiev, Ukraine, he was in the sixth grade when
his parents, Anna Sokolov and Boris Zilberman, emigrated to the
United States. His mother, a biochemist, worked for the Kiev
Institute of Hygiene after earning a master’s degree and Ph.D.
in the field. His father is an accomplished construction
engineer. Zilberman enlisted in the Navy out of high school,
and was commissioned in 2003 after graduating from Rensselaer
with a degree in computer science in just three years. He had
plans to go on to study medicine. His leisure reading while in
action was organic chemistry texts.
President Jackson noted that Zilberman was “a young man who
embraced challenge, met the world with faith in his heart, and
laughter on his lips. A man who treasured his family, his
friends, and his country. A man whose final, selfless act in
this world ensured that three other families would welcome
their sons home.”
“The Rensselaer Alumni Association is honored to be a part
of recognizing a true American hero,” said Jeff Schanz,
assistant vice president for alumni relations. “His
selfless act of bravery is a reminder of the thousands of men
and women who serve every day to protect our freedom all around
the world.”
The ceremony—beginning at 11 a.m.—will be held on the
Rensselaer campus in the Alumni Sports and Recreation Center
(Armory), room 209. Lt. Aaron T. Roth ’05, assistant professor
of Naval Science at Rensselaer will open the program. The
keynote address will be delivered by President Jackson; Navy
Commander Joseph Finn; Marilyn Rofsky, a friend, mentor, and
teacher; and Valery Bazarov, director of family history and
location at the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society. Members of the
Rensselaer campus community, along with Zilberman’s family
members, close friends, Navy officials and members of the
Rensselaer Navy Reserve Officer’s Training Corps (ROTC), and
family members of Jeremy Arnott, Rensselaer Class of 2005, one
of the surviving crewmen and a good friend of Zilberman’s, will
be present. The program is not open to the general public.
Although two years have passed, it is still difficult for
Anna Sokolov to talk about her son. “I still cry more than
talk,” she said. “He was my only child.”
In a letter that she devoted to Steven on his 32nd birthday,
she wrote, “I would like to grow to your unreachable heights of
devotion and love that saved the life of a lot of people.
I want to have strength and courage to grow to your level my
son, my pride. You always put everyone’s interest ahead of
yourself.”
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Published
March 30,
2012 |
Contact: Jessica Otitigbe
Phone: (518) 276-6050
E-mail: otitij@rpi.edu |
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