November 22, 2009
Posted by Brat
Every Day Hero: Ft Hood Chaplains
Every week over at my site, I have a column called Every Day Hero. In that I highlight those heroes who we often never hear about. Today, I felt the need to share here on KDIH some very important heroes, whose major contribution to the well-being of our troops is so often overlooked:
Every Day Hero: Chaplains at Ft. Hood
By Jessica Rinaldi for USA TODAY Lt. Col. Houck and Army Warrant Officer Carlton Royster, 30, of Philadelphia, pray together during a farewell event for the III Corps Special Troops Battalion on the verge of deploying to Iraq. Chaplains: We are traumatized, too
By Rick Jervis, USA TODAYFORT HOOD, Texas — They were supposed to be spending a day leading Mass, talking to soldiers about love and marriage, readying for their own deployment. Instead, the military chaplains of Fort Hood found themselves on the afternoon of Nov. 5 scrambling to the front lines of the worst shooting massacre on a military base in U.S. history.Thirteen people were killed and more than 30 wounded. Authorities charged Maj. Nidal Hasan with murder.
As some of the first to arrive on the chaotic scene that day, the chaplains counseled dazed, injured soldiers, comforted witnesses and prayed over the bullet-ridden bodies of the slain.
Now they are being asked to lead the healing process. The pace and success at which they counsel the wounded and their families will determine how quickly the post returns to normalcy, said Ralph Gauer, past president of the local chapter of the Association of the United States Army, a group that counsels military families through tragedy.
“Chaplains right now represent the glue that holds an awful lot of units together,” Gauer said. “But they have to come to grip(s) with it themselves. They have to try to understand what they saw themselves as they explain it others.”
There are 75 chaplains at Fort Hood, most of them assigned to units, said Lt. Col. Keith Goode, deputy 3rd Corps chaplain. Ten more chaplains have been flown into Fort Hood, including an imam and a rabbi, to help with the counseling.Untangling their pain will be challenging, said Lt. Col. Ira Houck, 56, an Episcopal priest and chaplain for the III Corps who was one of the first on the scene. “We’ve been traumatized, too,” he said.
There is more, and you can find that here.
Our Chaplains are heroes, every one of them, every single day. Pray for THEM, too.
H/T My friend, another Janet
Feel free to check out my other Sunday regular columns over here.

2 Comments
November 23, 2009
Claire and Brat, thanks for posting this. I know a Chaplin and another counselor here at Hood and they are feeling the effects still. They worked for about 72 hours straight with little to now sleep and need our prayers more than ever. They are an awesome bunch and will hold our Army family together.
November 25, 2009
I have absolute faith, Reasa. Please let them know that prayers are being said from even as far away as Bratville (aka a northern part of the continent…lol)
Keeping you all in my heart and my prayers. ^j^
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