Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Military’s chaplains join service ranks

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KYIV, Ukraine — To the chants of a church choir in Kyiv’s 11th-century Saint Sophia Cathedral, the first group of chaplains to join the Ukrainian military’s command structure graduated in a ceremony Saturday.

Although chaplains have ministered to Ukraine’s armed forces for years, they worked as embedded civilians rather than as officers.

Now, they will sign contracts to serve in those armed forces, undergo a six-week training program and get inducted.

The first group of military chaplains to fall under this new system began training Feb. 20. In their new assignment­s, they won’t use weapons but are expected to know military concepts and tactical medicine, Ukrainian authoritie­s said.

“We had intense psychologi­cal training, military training,” Gennadiy Rohmanenko, who was among the graduates who received the rank of junior lieutenant, said. “It means that we can put together church duty and military duty. The motto of chaplains is ‘Being there,’ God’s presence in the army. This is the mission of the chaplain.”

Creating the Ukrainian Chaplaincy Service came in response to legislatio­n passed at the end of 2021. With Ukraine entering its second year of war against Russia’s invasion, the need for chaplains to support its soldiers is greater than ever.

The 30 chaplains who went through the first training came from five religious organizati­ons: the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, the Ukrainian Greek-catholic Church, the Ukrainian Evangelica­l Church, the All-ukrainian Union of Evangelica­l Christian-baptist Churches and the interdenom­inational Council of Christian Churches and Religious Organizati­ons.

The job entails “guardiansh­ip and spiritual shepherdin­g or spiritual consoling,” Rohmanenko said, noting the importance of showing a service member direction.

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