Vets for Common Sense and Religious Freedom Org Slam Christian Proselytizing in U.S. Military, Going to God Won’t Make It for PTSD Victims
- Attempts to reverse the Dr. Sally Satel-Dallas Theological Seminary School of Treatment for PTSD—stressing belief in a Christian God over disability benefits and professional medical care—have met resistance from the institutionalized practice of ‘Battlefield Christian Proselytizing’ and its religious right allies.
Two veteran advocacy organizations are challenging this treatment of traumatized servicemen and servicewomen and the underlying entanglement of fundamentalist religion and the U.S. military. Fundamentalist chaplains are not certified, professional mental health experts, and the shortage of available mental healthcare professionals and lack of treatment exacerbates the service members’ psychological trauma as record suicide rates soar. -
August 9, 2010Paul Sullivan
Executive Director
Veterans For Common SenseMichael L. “Mikey Weinstein
Founder & President
Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF)Dear Secretary Gates:
The Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF) has learned on numerous occasions over the past several years about blatantly sectarian Christian religious programs and Christian proselytizing in the military. The proselytizing is unconstitutional and we demand you issue an order to stop it now.
Our letter addresses a particularly pernicious subcategory of proselytizing that must also cease immediately. The military often substitutes evangelical chaplains in the place of professional mental health care for service members suffering from mental health conditions, especially post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). These reports have recently become increasingly frequent and alarming.
Among the many types of shocking incidents and illicit and dehumanizing practices reported to MRFF have been the military’s teaching of creationism as an actual bona fide means of suicide prevention; the use of a parachurch military ministry’s evangelical Christian program to treat PTSD; service members seeking help being sent to and proselytized by chaplains instead of being sent to mental health professionals; articles in official military publications stating that finding Jesus is the only solution to the mental health problems faced by members of our armed forces; mandatory mental health training inside chapels, plus countless “Spiritual Fitness” events and programs being promoted as mental health solutions.
Perhaps the most alarmingly repugnant stories are those coming in from our recent war veterans regarding the widespread practice of “battlefield Christian proselytizing.” When, on active duty, our service members sought urgently needed mental health counseling while on the battleield and with the gun smoke practically still in their faces, they were instead sent to evangelizing chaplains, who are apparently being used with increasing frequency to provide mental health care due to the acute shortage of mental health professionals. Chaplains are not certified, professional mental health experts.
According to the reports of these veterans, the chaplains they were sent to for evaluation and treatment had the unmitigated temerity to urge, as a medicinal cure, a conversion to evangelical Christianity, and sometimes even went as far as disgustingly lacing their “counseling” with the soldiers’ need to stay on the battlefield to” kill Muslims for Christ.” Even in the best cases, while the chaplains’ words of proselytizing may have provided a temporary placebo, allowing these soldiers to return temporarily to combat for the remainder of their deployment, within months of returning home from war, their “temporary religious faith” wore off as their profound mental health symptoms, quite predictably, returned in all their fury. And, again, the shortage of available mental healthcare professionals and lack of treatment exacerbated the service members’ psychological trauma.
For many of our veterans, the severe adverse consequences of being subjected to battlefield Christian proselytizing rather than receiving genuine mental health care have been, to just name a few, broken families, crime, drug and alcohol abuse, homelessness, and particularly, even suicide. While religious counseling may be helpful to some service members, and should certainly be available to those who specifically seek religious counseling, the widespread use of evangelizing Christian chaplains as a substitute for qualified mental health professionals is preventing many service members from getting the serious medical treatment that they desperately need and deserve, and is most likely exacerbating the unprecedented, unbridled suicide epidemic. It’s just as specious and heinous as having these proselytizing military chaplains substitute for military combat trauma surgeons.
Another alarming matter is that, due to the heavy promotion by the military of sectarian Christian religious “solutions” to mental health problems, non-religious, even moderately religious, service members struggling with mental health issues or contemplating suicide may not seek the help they need because they think they will just get evangelical, fundamentalist Christianity rammed down their throats if they do.
The improper use of Chaplains to proselytize our psychologically traumatized service members seeking mental healthcare is an unconstitutional, unconscionable disgrace and is a clear matter of national security because it fatally undermines unit effectiveness for battle. Thus, this issue must be aggressively addressed immediately by you and top military leaders. No more suffering and no more suicides will be tolerated. Suicide can and should be prevented, but not at the price of unconstitutional battlefield proselytizing by officers or enlisted personnel – which is of no value. We are not requesting, we are now demanding a direct, responsive reply from you within the next 10 business days about your plans to stop unconstitutional proselytizing of traumatized service members.
Given the shamefully rampant suicide rates in the United States Army, it is likely that at least another dozen or so United States active duty service members, not counting veterans, will commit suicide during the aforementioned period in which we have just demanded to be contacted by you.
Sincerely,
CC:
John M. McHugh – Secretary of the Army
Ray Mabus – Secretary of the Navy
Michael B. Donley – Secretary of the Air Force
Admiral Michael Mullen – Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Sta
General James E. Cartwright – Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Sta
General George W. Casey, Jr. – Chief of Staff of the United States Army
Admiral Gary Roughead – Chief of Naval Operations
General Norton A. Schwartz – Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force
General James T. Conway – Commandant of the Marine Corps
Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=44218
Posted by Yanira Farray on Aug 10 2010, With 0 Reads, Filed under Corruption, Politics. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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I have been attacked on blogs telling me I was exaggerating how pervasively arrogant Christian evangelizing of other military folks. Much of this Christian Proselytizing in my opinion was given GW Bush’s blessing so to speak when he was president. In fact I am sure this war in Afghanistan and Iraq to many Christians was a holy war and American soldiers were and are holy warriors.
I even saw bumper stickers in PX parking lots of GI’s cars with a christian cross and Star of David said, “Israel right or Wrong”.
Somehow I find this unAmerican and those Americans that minimize this sort of thing should stop and think about separation of church and state, and how well it served us since 1776.
Well, Bill, now you’re really going to hell.
See you there, bring beer!
Obviously, all this Christian proselytizing is part of the legacy left by the administration of dubya. What else could we expect from someone arrogant enough to say that he was “selected by God” to be President?
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