EDITOR'S NOTE: The following first appeared on February 3, 2014, in my ArchaeoTexture Blog.
Did you know that that the first Sunday of February is "Four Chaplains Day" - a kind of Memorial Day - in the United States?
No? Well, you're
not alone. The 71st anniversary of that fateful night when four U.S.
Army chaplains gave their lives that others might live, caused barely a
ripple this year. It has come and gone quietly, and largely unmarked ...
including by yours truly.
And I might have
remained ignorant fo the fact were it not for a stop by Wikipedia's home
page, where I perused their "This Day in History" column. A link in
that column took me to a Wikipedia page
where I learned that, in 1988, the United States Congress established
February 3 as "Four Chaplains Day." And get this ... Congress acted
unanimously in doing so ....ah, those were the good ol' days!
The page went on
to note that some state or city officials commemorate the day with
official proclamations, sometimes including the order that flags fly at
half-mast in memory of the fallen chaplains. In some cases, official
proclamations establish observances at other times: for example, North
Dakota legislation requests that the Governor issue an annual
proclamation establishing the first Sunday in February as "Four
Chaplains Sunday."
Notice the frequent use use of some variation or another of the word "some."
The day is also observed as the "Day of the Dorchester Chaplains" in the lectionary cycle of the Episcopal Church
in the United States of America. And there are memorials to the four
chaplains - one Catholic, two Protestant, and one Jewish - in a variety
of media around the country ... stained glass windows, stone monuments,
postage stamps, building and chapel names ... and wax ... at least once
upon a time.
I was reminded of
a visit my family made to Washington, D.C. back in the sixties, while
my father was posted to nearby Quantico, Virginia. One of our stops that
day was to the National Historic Wax Museum. I don't recall the other
exhibits ... but I remember the one devoted to the four chaplains, their
commitment to their faith and their answer to their calling. It was a
large exhibit, with the movement and noise that suggested a ship at sea,
all set in a pool of water. The display - and the museum itself - is
long gone. But I did find a picture ... ya gotta love the internet!
It is reported by the Four Chaplains Memorial Foundation
that during the early morning hours of February 3, 1943, at 12:55 a.m.,
the USAT Dorchester was torpedoed by a German submarine in the North
Atlantic. The torpedo knocked out the Dorchester's electrical system,
leaving the ship dark. Panic set in among the men on board, many of them
trapped below decks.
The foundation
reports goes on to note that the chaplains sought to calm the men and
organize an orderly evacuation of the ship, and helped guide wounded men
to safety. As life jackets were passed out to the men, the supply ran
out before each man had one. The chaplains removed their own life
jackets and gave them to others. They helped as many men as they could
into lifeboats, and then linked arms and, saying prayers and singing
hymns, went down with the ship.
As I post this,
there's less than five hours left of Four Chaplains Day 2014. Yet
there's something about their story that could be/should be observed,
cherished and shared with others throughout the year. May we never find
ourselves in the desperate situation they faced ... but may we have at
least a small portion of their courage, their love and their devotion
for whatever life brings us.
No comments:
Post a Comment