February 4 Compassionate Living Tip from Interfaith Paths to Peace
Learn about 4 Chaplains Sunday
http://www.immortalchaplains.org/Story/story.htm
A
convoy of three ships and three escorting Coast Guard cutters passed
through "torpedo alley" some 100 miles off the coast of Greenland at
about 1 a.m. on February 3, 1943. The submarine U-223 fired three
torpedoes, one of which hit the midsection of the
Dorchester, a U.S. Army troopship with more than 900 men on board.
Ammonia and oil were everywhere in the fast-sinking vessel and upon the
freezing sea. |
|
The four Chaplains on board, two Protestant pastors, a
Catholic priest and a Jewish rabbi, were among the first on deck,
calming the men and handing out life jackets. When they ran out, they
took off their own and placed them on
waiting soldiers without regard to faith or race.
Approximately 18 minutes from the explosion, the ship went down. They
were the last to be seen by witnesses; they were standing arm-in-arm on
the hull of the
ship, each praying in his own way for the care of the
men. Almost 700 died, making it the third largest loss at sea of its
kind for the United States during World War II. The Coast Guard Cutter Tampa was able to escort the other freighters to Greenland. Meanwhile the cutters Comanche and Escanaba, disobeying orders to continue the seach for the German U-Boat, stopped to rescue 230 men from the frigid waters that night. |
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|
A
convoy of three ships and three escorting Coast Guard cutters passed
through "torpedo alley" some 100 miles off the coast of Greenland at
about 1 a.m. on February 3, 1943. The submarine U-223 fired three
torpedoes, one of which hit the midsection of the
Dorchester, a U.S. Army troopship with more than 900 men on board.
Ammonia and oil were everywhere in the fast-sinking vessel and upon the
freezing sea. |
|
|
|
Stained glass windows
from the Chapel at West Point
|
|
The four Chaplains on board, two Protestant pastors, a
Catholic priest and a Jewish rabbi, were among the first on deck,
calming the men and handing out life jackets. When they ran out, they
took off their own and placed them on
waiting soldiers without regard to faith or race.
Approximately 18 minutes from the explosion, the ship went down. They
were the last to be seen by witnesses; they were standing arm-in-arm on
the hull of the
ship, each praying in his own way for the care of the
men. Almost 700 died, making it the third largest loss at sea of its
kind for the United States during World War II. The Coast Guard Cutter Tampa was able to escort the other freighters to Greenland. Meanwhile the cutters Comanche and Escanaba, disobeying orders to continue the seach for the German U-Boat, stopped to rescue 230 men from the frigid waters that night. |
|
|
Stained glass window
from the Chapel at
Fort Snelling, Minnesota
|
|
The four Chaplains were Father John Washington (Catholic), Reverend Clark Poling (Dutch Reformed), Rabbi Alexander Goode (Jewish) and Rev. George Fox
(Methodist). These four
Chaplains were later honored by the Congress and
Presidents. They were recognized for their selfless acts of courage,
compassion and faith. According to the First Sergeant on the ship,
"They were always together, they carried their faith
together." They demonstrated throughout the voyage and in their last
moments, interfaith compassion in their relationship with the men
and with each other. In 1960 Congress created a special
Congressional Medal of Valor, never to be repeated again, and gave it to
the next of kin of the "Immortal Chaplains." |
|
|
The four Chaplains were Father John Washington (Catholic), Reverend Clark Poling (Dutch Reformed), Rabbi Alexander Goode (Jewish) and Rev. George Fox
(Methodist). These four
Chaplains were later honored by the Congress and
Presidents. They were recognized for their selfless acts of courage,
compassion and faith. According to the First Sergeant on the ship,
"They were always together, they carried their faith
together." They demonstrated throughout the voyage and in their last
moments, interfaith compassion in their relationship with the men
and with each other. In 1960 Congress created a special
Congressional Medal of Valor, never to be repeated again, and gave it to
the next of kin of the "Immortal Chaplains." | | | | | | |
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