http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080323/NEWS10/803230399/1175/LOCAL0102#gslPageReturn A faith not shared
Although they face danger, few troops go to services, and one finds that 'dumbfounding'
By Will Higgins
Posted: March 23, 2008
Q-WEST, Iraq -- There is no escaping Easter at this military base in northern Iraq, yet many soldiers here are escaping it.
At the chow hall, banners proclaiming "Happy Easter" are everywhere, and the tablecloths are of an unlikely pink and purple Easter-egg/bunny-ear pattern.
There will be three services in the chapel today, and on Good Friday, there was a screening of "The Passion of the Christ" in the recreation hall.
There are 150 chairs in the chapel, and that's expected to be more than enough, even though there are about 4,000 soldiers on the base. Four soldiers sat in on "Passion," two of them sound asleep.
Many soldiers are deeply religious, but many more are not -- even though danger lies just outside the gate. Earlier this past week, a convoy hit an improvised explosive device planted by insurgents (the bomb exploded under a heavily armored vehicle, a tanklike ASV; no one was hurt).
"There are atheists in foxholes," says Kirtis Christensen, a software engineer from Fort Wayne and one of six chaplains deployed with the Indiana National Guard's 76th Infantry Brigade Combat Team.
It isn't only Christianity that lies low here. The chapel hosts weekly services for Muslims and Jews, too; fewer than a handful attend.
More at link
-Cindy in Fort Lauderdale