Collegeville Woman Finds Closure 75 Years After Her Brother Was Killed in World War II

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Private First Class Joseph Boschetti with his father and brother. Boshetti’s sister, Mary Stranieri, a Collegeville resident, has found closure 75 years after her brother was killed in World War II after his remains finally made their way home.

Mary Stranieri, a Collegeville resident, has found closure 75 years after her brother was killed in World War II after his remains finally made their way home, writes Kimberly Davis for the CBS Philly.

“He was just the best brother there ever was,” said 97-year-old Stranieri.

Private First Class Joseph Boschetti was a Marine. He decided to protect his country in April 1942, which broke his family’s heart.

“My father was very disappointed,” Stranieri said. “He said, ‘You’re too young, wait a while.’ But Joseph replied, ‘No, Dad, I want to go now.’”

A year and a half later, Boschetti died in the Battle of Tarawa. However, his body was not identified until this year, when his younger brother sent his DNA for comparison.

His DNA was immediately linked with his brother’s remains in Hawaii.

“I always thought and my family always thought that we would never see anything or hear anything,”  said Stranieri. “I feel it’s closure now after he’s buried and everything. I feel it’s all completed.”

The funeral will be held at John the Baptist in Manayunk on November 30.

Read more about Joseph Boschetti at the CBS Philly by clicking here.

 

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