NJ RUN FOR THE FALLEN, 2023.
  • Home
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
  • Wall Of Honor
    • Wall Of Honor (Text)
    • Wall Of Honor (Pictures) (A to L)
    • Wall Of Honor (Pictures) (M to Z)
  • Run 2023
    • Timeline
    • Videos
    • Run Teams
  • Hero Markers
    • Route Day 1
    • Route Day 2
    • Route Day 3
    • Route Day 4
  • Shirts 2023
    • GS Family Shirts
  • Sponsors
    • Donors

SSG Matthew D. Joskowitz​

Picture
Picture

Hometown: Cliffside Park, NJ.
Age: 24.
Date of Death: October 31, 2019.
Unit: 2nd Battalion, 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division.
Picture
Matthew Joskowitz, of Cliffside Park, white head gear, competing for Cliffside Park in 2011. (Photo: Chris Monroe/Special to NorthJersey.com)
By Rebecca Everett | For NJ.com
Like any military mother, Rachel Joskowitz was worried sick when her son was deployed to Afghanistan in 2017. It was especially unnerving when the Army ordered “blackouts” and he couldn’t call home, and she could only wonder what danger he was facing in the desert.

“I thought if anything happened to him it’d be in Afghanistan,” she said, but Sgt. Matthew Joskowitz made it back safe.
That’s what makes it even harder to process that her 24-year-old son lost his life not in war but in a tragic accident Oct. 31 at his base at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, she said. The U.S. Army said the accident was not training-related and remains under investigation.

On Wednesday while driving back from Fort Bragg to their home in Fairview, Rachel Joskowitz and her daughter, Alyssa Joskowitz, said they heard nothing but the highest praise from Joskowitz’ commanders and fellow soldiers.
“I was always so proud of him and everything he did,” she said. “Hearing all that, my heart is just overflowing.”

Matthew Joskowitz — “Matty J” to his hometown friends in Bergen County and “Josko” to his platoon — was in the 2nd Battalion, 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, officials said.
In interviews Wednesday, his family, best friend and former wrestling coaches said Joskowitz was a driven and honorable young man who loved to help his friends and keep everyone laughing. He may have joked around a lot, but his coaches said he was always 100% focused and competitive when it came time to hit the mat.

“He was not always the biggest kid, but he had the heart of the biggest guy,” said Tommy Piccinich, who has been friends with Joskowitz since they were 3 years old.

Now a Fairview police officer, Piccinich said that if Joskowitz would want to be remembered for something, it would be his “fighting spirit.”
“He never backed down, no matter what he was dealing with. He’d never give up,” he said.

Joskowitz learned the day before he died that he was being promoted to staff sergeant, and talked to family members and former coaches about the good news. “His command said it’s rare for someone just 24 years old to be in that position but he just moved up the ranks so quickly,” his mother said.
His sister, Alyssa, said her big brother was protective and caring, giving her life advice in between rough-housing and prank-pulling. “He made me the tough person I am,” she said.

He always wanted to be in the military, even though he was offered a college wrestling scholarship. He loved the Army, his work and the camaraderie he found at Fort Bragg. His uncle, David Joskowitz, said his nephew’s small unit did reconnaissance work and was extremely close.
“He found his home down there,” he said.

David Joskowitz and his wife, Brie, also went to Fort Bragg and mourned alongside the soldiers Joskowitz considered his brothers.
“From what we heard from them, it wasn’t just his unit, he was well-known throughout the brigade,” David Joskowitz said. “People came from out of state to have a drink with us and tell us stories about him.”
They said “Josko” was a leader and always helping out his fellow soldiers if they were struggling with a training or needed guidance. He lived his life with integrity and strong morals, Piccinich said, and he wanted to help everyone around him to do the same and reach their full potential.
“He was always there to talk to you,” Piccinich said, if you needed to “get your head right” or a reminder of what was important.
He recalled Joskowitz’ commitment to wrestling, even as a kid. It set him up for another competitive career in the Army, where he competed in an MMA-style sport the Army called Combatives. He won his combative division tournament the last two years, his uncle said.

At Cliffside Park High School, Joskowitz was a star wrestler and the first in the school’s history to win 100 matches, according to Mark Cabrera, his coach there. He said Joskowitz was an honorable young man who was always respectful. As team captain he was a “consummate leader” among his peers, Cabrera said.
“I’d never call him a kid. He was always a young adult,” Cabrera said. “He was motivated. He rose through the ranks. Nothing he did ever surprised me.”

Detective Sgt. Michael Miller of the Cliffside Park Police Department, who coached him from second grade to eighth grade, said Joskowitz was a natural wrestler. But Miller said it was Joskowitz’ character and determination that made it an honor to be his coach.

“He was the highlight of my coaching career,” Miller said.

Charlie O’Hanlon, head wrestling coach at Cliffside Park High School, said he was assistant coach when “Matty” was in school.

He recalled Joskowitz as “light-hearted, funny, and positive” — but not when he was wrestling. “On the wrestling mat you could always count on him to bring toughness and be a fierce competitor. He was really fearless,” O’Hanlon said in an email.
He said they spoke in September, when Joskowitz reached out saying there was a chance he might be stationed back in New Jersey and if that happened, he wanted to volunteer as a coach for the team.

“The first thing on his mind once he heard that he may be coming back home was that he wanted to give back to the kids of Cliffside Park," Joskowitz said. "That is the kind of person he was.”

Cabrera said Joskowitz’ body will be flown to Newark International Airport Friday and then escorted by his entire platoon and New Jersey State Police to A.K. Macagna Funeral Home in Cliffside Park. Viewing will be at the funeral home from noon to 6 p.m. Sunday, and the service will be private.

A Hackensack man who was a wrestling standout at Cliffside Park High School and a paratrooper in the Army died Thursday, officials said.
Matthew Joskowitz, 24, died in his barracks at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, said Lt. Col. Mike Burns, a spokesman for the 82nd Airborne Division, where Joskowitz was stationed. The cause of death is unclear, as officials declined to comment on the circumstances. The death was not training-related, Burns said.
By most accounts, from former coaches, friends and military officials, Joskowitz was the consummate standout, excelling at whatever athletics and the military threw at him. 
"He represented what is exceptional in our division, our Army, and our nation," Maj. Gen. James Mingus, commander of Joskowitz's division, said in a statement. "He was a three-time volunteer who excelled at everything. He will be mourned but never forgotten."

Before he rose through the ranks in the military after joining the Army in 2014, Joskowitz, an infantryman, began to excel at sports when he was at Cliffside Park High School. As a wrestler in the 126-pound division, Joskowitz is one of only a few Red Raiders in school history to reach 100 wins.
Even as an infantryman, Joskowitz continued his athletic success, winning a combative tournament two years in a row, according to a Facebook post from a paratrooper page.
“We are deeply saddened by the loss of Sgt. Joskowitz, and our thoughts and prayers are with his fellow troopers and their families,” said Maj. Gen. James Mingus, commander of the 82nd Airborne Division. “He represented what is exceptional in our Division, our Army, and our nation. He was a three-time volunteer who excelled at everything. He will be mourned but never forgotten.”

Lt. Col. Christopher Brawley, commander of the 2nd Battalion, 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment, said Joskowitz was “revered by his fellow paratroopers,” and was a “superb non-commissioned officer.”

“We are focusing on caring for his friends and family as they mourn this tragic loss,” Brawley said.
Officials said Joskowitz joined the Army in May of 2014 and spent his five-year career at Fort Bragg, to include serving in various positions with Bravo, Delta and Headquarters Companies of the 2nd Battalion 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment.

Capt. Christopher Cioffoletti, the Delta Company commander, expressed condolences to Joskowitz’s family.
“A rising star in our battalion, Sgt. Joskowitz was motivated by a deep love for both his country and his fellow paratroopers,” Cioffoletti said. “Joskowitz was an exemplary noncommissioned officer and paratrooper in every sense. His loss will be deeply felt by the entire Geronimo family.”
​
Joskowitz’s awards include: the Combat Infantryman Badge, Expert Infantryman Badge, Parachutist Badge, Army Commendation Medal (with two oak leaf clusters), Army Achievement Medal (with combat device), Army Achievement Medal (with three oak leaf cluster), Army Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Afghanistan Campaign Medal (with one campaign star), Global War on Terror Service Medal, Non-commissioned Officer Professional Development Ribbon, Army Service Ribbon and the NATO Medal.
Picture
Picture
|  Timeline  |  Contact Us  |  Sponsor  |  Privacy Policy  |  About Us  |  Honor Wall  |

NJ Run For The Fallen, Inc. has been granted 501(c)(3) status by the IRS - EIN 27-3718089.  Copyright © 2023 by NJ Run For The Fallen.   Text, graphics, and HTML code are protected by US and International Copyright Laws, and may not be copied, reprinted, published,  translated, hosted, or otherwise distributed by any means without explicit permission.
The NJ Gold Star Family Monument is an apolitical organization and the use of the name and the logo are protected by Federal Statute. The name "New Jersey Gold Star Family Monument" and/or "NJ Gold Star Family Monument" and/or the logo may not be used alongside any commercial endorsement or by any other group/organization without the express written consent of the Trustees of the NJ Run For The Fallen.
Any use of the names "New Jersey Gold Star Family Monument" and/or "NJ Gold Star Family Monument" and/or the logo for any fund rising purpose is strictly forbidden without the express written consent of the Trustees of the NJ Run For The Fallen.
​Web Design and Update - Mike Simpson 
  • Home
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
  • Wall Of Honor
    • Wall Of Honor (Text)
    • Wall Of Honor (Pictures) (A to L)
    • Wall Of Honor (Pictures) (M to Z)
  • Run 2023
    • Timeline
    • Videos
    • Run Teams
  • Hero Markers
    • Route Day 1
    • Route Day 2
    • Route Day 3
    • Route Day 4
  • Shirts 2023
    • GS Family Shirts
  • Sponsors
    • Donors