Lou Caveliere tell us about the 4 Chaplains and the 4 Chaplains Memorial Foundation:
Four U.S. Army Chaplains gave up their life jackets and prayed
together when their transport ship, the U.S.A.T Dorchester was torpedoed
eighty miles south of Greenland on February 3, 1943. The Chaplains came
from different faiths and backgrounds.
John P. Washington was a Catholic Priest from Kearny, New Jersey,
Rabbi Alexander D. Goode was a native of York, Pennsylvania. Clark V.
Poling was a a minister in the Reformed Church in America at the First
Reformed Church in Schenectady, New York. George L. Fox, a decorated
World War One veteran, was a Methodist minister in Gilman, Vermont.
The Four Chaplains Memorial Foundation’s vision is to impart the
principles of selfless service to humanity without regard to race,
creed, ethnicity, or religious beliefs.
The Four Chaplains Memorial Foundation exists to further the cause of
“unity without uniformity” by encouraging goodwill and cooperation
among all people. The organization achieves its mission by advocating
for and honoring people whose deeds symbolize the legacy of the Four
Chaplains aboard the U.S.A.T. Dorchester in 1943.
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