| Full Name | Sahira Lorca |
|---|---|
| Callsign | Tommy |
| Gender | Female |
| Height | 170 cm |
| Date Of Birth | 1975-02-12 |
| Nationality | Sapinish |
| Parents | Mrs. Adivi “Maga” Lorca - Mother, Mr. Nadim “Wolf” Lorca - Father |
| Sibling(s) | Valeria “Eri” Lorca - Older Sister |
This is an old revision of the document!
| Allegiance(s) | Sapin, IUN-SPK |
|---|---|
| Rank | Alférez |
| Aircraft | F/A-18A |
Born in February 1975 to a Palentinan Sapinish mother and a Castelorran father in the town of Sal Viento – Sahira Lorca grew up near the sea with an elder sister, and surrounded by friends and peers of various backgrounds. Her mother is known in Sal Viento as being the proprietor and primary doctor of the town, earning her the moniker of “Maga”, female magician – for how she is able to treat things in the otherwise backwater port-town. Her father is an engineer who helps lead the construction firm of the town, which employed many of the men until the war two years prior and the Civil War, which spurred many military aged men to fight and die in the conflict. Sahira herself has known that loss, as many of her male friends of her cohort growing up have been declared missing or dead following their 18th birthday(s), and that was part of her impetus for enlisting with the IUN-Peacekeeping Forces At the age of 15, Sahira's birthday present was flight training through the local airfield, a town over in Gran Faro. She completed the training in time for her 17th birthday. Sahira is well-liked among those surviving within the town of Sal Viento, and has long-since been known as the honorary grandchild of many of the elders who have been in the town as long as the Lorca family has. Joining the IUN-SPF has been her first and only real 'journey' away from home, which had until that moment only been indirectly touched by the Civil War. Sahira wants to put an end to this war, in a kind of naive line of thinking that this will bring some semblance of peace to the families in her hometown that have been affected by this war. She doesn't know where many of her friends have fought and died, nor whose allegiences they died under, but Sahira hopes that an amicable end to the war for all sides will bring about a lasting peace. Whether this is the case or not, is yet to be seen.
