Capturing Our Other Heroes | VA Hines Health Care | Veterans Affairs
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN

Play all audios:

The .gov means it’s official.Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you're on a federal government site.
The site is secure. The https:// ensures that you're connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and sent securely.
What was a hobby soon became an obsession for one employee at Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital’s Aurora Community Based Outpatient Clinic.
Kris Lohmar was never in the military but became inspired by the Veterans she interacted with daily as the clinic’s contracted security guard.
Wanting to give back, the former wedding photographer began offering to photograph Veterans’ service dogs in the clinic at no cost.
“I take the photos on my iPhone and order the prints through a professional printing company,” Lohmar explained. “After putting the photos in frames that I purchase in bulk, I give them to
the Veteran free of charge.”
U.S. Army Veteran Don Bozzi was amazed after Lohmar presented him with a framed photo of Shankle, his black labradoodle and bluetick coonhound mix service dog.
“I named him after my battle buddy, Sgt. Joshua Shankle, who I deployed with twice to Iraq,” said Bozzi. “Shankle has been my buddy ever since.”
Now, Shankle’s picture hangs alongside other family photographs in Bozzi’s Plano, Illinois, home.
“Kris really captured the essence of him, and it was a beautiful picture,” he said. “When she told me what she was doing for Veterans and their service dogs for free, I thought that was very
special.”
Samantha Schramuk, an advanced medical support assistant at the Aurora CBOC, echoes Bozzi’s sentiment.
“What Kris is doing for the Veterans is really special,” said Schramuk. “Seeing the Veterans’ faces when they receive their companion’s photo is priceless.”
Dog owners aren’t the only ones enamored with Lohmar’s photos however. In early September, she placed first at an art competition in Sandwich, Illinois, for a photo collage called ‘Our Other
Heroes.’
Lohmar has photographed nine service dogs since starting in June and hopes to continue into the new year.