FORWARD OPERATING BASE SUMMERALL, Bayji, Iraq, Aug. 19, 2004 Perhaps one of the most critical members to the military task force, though he does not carry a weapon, is the chaplain. The need for spiritual support and guidance only increases when the unit is deployed on a mission like Operation Iraqi Freedom, and the Army Chaplain Corps is there to care for our soldiers. As the head of the Task Force's Unit Ministry Team, Chaplain (Capt.) Dave Bottoms ministers to the spiritual needs of the nearly 800 soldiers of Task Force 1-7 Field Artillery at Forward Operating Base Summerall, near Bayji, in north-central Iraq. As the chaplain for the First Lightning Battalion, Bottoms goes by the radio call sign Holy Lightning when conducting tactical operations. As an Orthodox Presbyterian chaplain, Bottoms presides over a weekly Holy Communion service for Protestant soldiers. I perform my own faith, but facilitate the faith of others, said Bottoms. Following an attack with a vehicle-borne improvised explosive device (VBIED, or car bomb) in June, Bottoms was even able to provide solace to Iraqi bystanders wounded in the attack. Though he cannot pray with them or lead them in a Muslim prayer, his presence and efforts provided reassurance as he encouraged seriously wounded Iraqis to pray. Another difference between the captain's role as an Army chaplain and that of his civilian counterparts is that he must deploy to forward theaters. As part of his duties, he has also learned how to serve as a minister under conditions much more austere than many other ministers ever face. From sand-blown Humvee hood-top services on the long tactical approach march up from Kuwait to leading weekly services in an improvised chapel in the battalion's conference room, Bottoms has learned to make the best of a situation to make sure soldiers' spiritual needs are met. Bottoms was inspired to enter the military chaplain corps by a Navy chaplain of his faith who ministered to Marines in Bosnia. His inspiration, however, took a slightly different path at first. He grew up as an Air Force dependent and likes to say that he became a Christian through the chaplaincy, since he first heard about the life of Christ from an Army chaplain as a teenager. Having grown up in an Air Force family, he initially served his faith and his country as an Air Force chaplain. But, after marrying an Army Judge Advocate General Corps (JAG) attorney, Bottoms transferred to the Army Chaplain's Corps to be near his wife, who is now deployed with the First Infantry Division's Staff Judge Advocate in Tikrit, Iraq. One day I literally took off my Air Force BDU shirt, put on an Army one and went off to my Army Chaplain's Basic Course, said Bottoms. |