Pray! Invite! Encourage! Affirm! Vocations
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National Vocation

Awareness Week
January 10-16, 2010
Now…
Serra Donates Stations of the Cross for Philmont Scout Ranch Chapel
Serra Bishop's Crew Serves at Phoenix Seminarian Picnic
Novena to Blessed Junipero Serra
Novena to Blessed Junipero Serra (print version)
Dates to Remember
September - December 2009
District Governor Visits
December 15, 2009
District Governor Visit Reports Due
January 10-16, 2010
National Vocation Awareness Week
January 14, 2010
District Governor/Regional Director Planning Conference
January 15-17, 2010
serraUSA Super Weekend
February 7, 2010
World Day of Prayer for Consecrated Life
April 25, 2010
World Day of Prayer for Vocations
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Chaplain Emil J. Kapaun
On June 3, 2001, in Pilsen, Kan., a bronze sculpture of a military chaplain
comforting a wounded soldier was unveiled in honor of Chaplain Emil J. Kapaun.
This Wichita, Kan., diocesan priest died as a prisoner of war in Pyotkong, North
Korea, on May 23, 1951.
Father Kapaun was one of the most highly decorated military chaplains in the
Korean conflict. An inspiration to all around him, Fr. Kapaun ministered to the
sick, buried the dead and cared for those who had succumbed to despair; he cared
for the soldiers’ physical ailments as well as their desperate need for
spiritual guidance. Fr. Kapaun was captured after refusing to abandon the 8th
Cavalry when it was overwhelmed on Nov. 2, 1950.
"Fr. Kapaun stole food from the potato fields and when burying the deceased
he’d say a prayer for the repose of their souls, followed by a prayer of
thanksgiving for favors granted by God," said fellow prisoner Lt. Mike Dowe.
"Somehow his presence could turn a louse-ridden stinking mud hole into a
cathedral." His compassionate ministry so inspired a Jewish POW that he carved a
cross from scraps during his captivity as a memorial to Chaplain Kapaun.
Fort Riley, Kan., commanding Maj. Gen. Robert St. Onge, Archbishop for the Military Services Edwin O’Brien, and Chaplain Lt. Col. Lawrence Berry (1st Cavalry Fort Hood, Texas) spoke at the presentation. Most Reverend Eugene J. Gerber was the main celebrant at the mass. Chaplain Kapaun’s brother, Eugene Kapaun, and 20 veterans of the Korean War were in attendance.
Pray! Invite! Encourage! Affirm! Vocations
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