Any breakdown by denomination would be interesting as well (although I can see drift on that topic, as to proportion of “faithful” in the troops, determinations of need, etc.).
A great-(great?-) uncle was the chaplain on USS Arizona. Presumably, had BB-39 gone to war, he would have been on the ‘front lines’ of naval battles. However, chaplains are non-combatants and may not fight.
Under the Geneva Convention, chaplains are non-combatants. Chaplains may not participate directly in combat, though the Geneva Convention doesn’t prohibit them from carrying a weapon. That said, most chaplains don’t carry weapons.
If a chaplain is captured, he is not considered to be a prisoner of war and must be returned to his home nation unless he chooses to stay and minister to POWs.
A relative was an Army chaplain in WWII. He was with the unit (division?) from basic training until deployment. He went through the Battle of the Bulge. During fighting he helped the medics. They heard the incoming artillery shell that destroyed the house they were using - all except the room they were using. He had some medals which he never talked about.
According to the Geneva Convention, yes. Intentionally shooting at a medic is a war crime. Unlike chaplains, medics that are captured are considered to be prisoners of war. However, medics who are captured must be allowed to tend to wounded prisoners.
Many recent wars (of sorts) have been fought against insurgencies instead of regular armies, and these insurgencies often do not respect the Geneva Convention. Under these conditions, it is common for medics to not wear their traditional red cross (as it just makes them easy targets for snipers and such), and they do often participate in combat.
Honorary Captain John Weir Foote was a chaplain with the Canadian Army during WWII.
He landed at Dieppe for the Dieppe Raid of 1942. For eight hours, while under heavy fire on the beach, he ministered to the wounded, including carrying several of them to landing crafts for evacuation.
Towards the end of the raid, as the landing craft were preparing to leave for the final time, he was offered a place but declined. He returned to the beach and surrendered to the Germans, so that he could continue to minister to the Canadian troops who were taken captive.
He remained in POW camps until liberation on May 5, 1945, almost three years of captivity.
On February 14, 1946, the King awarded Foote the Victoria Cross for his gallantry in action and devotion to the troops under his care. He is the only Canadian chaplain to date to receive the VC.
From longish article today in Times of Israel on the retiring chief Marine Rabbi: chaplains are unarmed, but each (only in the Navy/Marines?) is shadowed by a Religous Program Specialist, who most definitely fights.
Plus I learned kipas (yarmulkes) for enlisted look like they are regulation, in camo.
You scared me there for a moment. He is not touching the scroll. Nor is it even clear he is reading it :).
ETA: In that photo, the officer in uniform is wearing wings and reads NAVY. As usual, I’m confused about Navy/Marine representations. Is he a Marine? They look like standard Naby camo, but I’m obviously clueless.