Campaign seeks to raise monument in Arlington to Jewish chaplains
Ten who died in two wars
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The monument planned for Arlington National Cemetery will honor 10 Jewish chaplains, eight who died in service during World War II and two from the Vietnam War.
World War II:
Chaplain Rabbi Alexander Goode, Feb. 3, 1943
Chaplain Rabbi Louis Werfel, Feb. 24, 1943
Chaplain Rabbi Herman L. Rosen, June 8, 1943
Chaplain Rabbi Henry Goody, Oct. 19, 1943
Chaplain Rabbi Samuel D. Hurowitz, Dec. 9, 1943
Chaplain Rabbi Irving Tepper, Aug. 13, 1944
Chaplain Rabbi Frank Goldenberg, May 22, 1945
Chaplain Rabbi Nachman S. Arnoff, May 9, 1946
Vietnam:
Chaplain Rabbi Meir Engel, Dec. 16, 1964
Chaplain Rabbi Morton H. Singer, Dec. 17, 1968
More on: Campaign seeks to raise monument in Arlington to Jewish chaplains
After the Nazis torpedoed the U.S. transport ship Dorchester in February 1943, Rabbi Alexander Goode and the three Christian chaplains on board gave up their own life preservers to help other servicemen to escape.
As a result of their heroic acts, Goode, Methodist Rev. George L. Fox, the Roman Catholic Priest John P. Washington, and the Reformed Church in America Rev. Clark V. Poling drowned as the ship sank.
All four chaplains were posthumously awarded the Purple Heart and the Distinguished Service Cross, and Congress created The Four Chaplains’ Medal in 1960. At Arlington National Cemetery, however, where three memorials stand in honor of military chaplains, Goode’s name is not to be found, nor has any memorial been erected for this country’s Jewish chaplains.
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