Françoise S. Ouzan’s new book, True to My God and Country, is for me, both highly nostalgic and very relevant today. As a Jewish chaplain during the Vietnam War in the mid-1960s, I identify with a great deal of what the author writes. Furthermore, I am acquainted with many of the chaplains of whom she speaks, even though her writings concentrate on a generation that preceded my involvement with the military. 

Ouzan, a historian who lives in Jerusalem, does not shy away from speaking about the dark side of military life during the war years. Antisemitism existed in and out of military barracks, even among high-ranking officers. I was privileged to meet Rabbi Roland Gittelsohn in my hometown of Brookline, Massachusetts. I learned from Ouzan’s book that a few Christian chaplains prevented him from delivering a memorial sermon at an interfaith religious service to dedicate the Marine cemetery of Iwo Jima on the pretext that Christian graves were in the majority. He eventually delivered his iconic eulogy to Jewish servicemen. A noted chaplain, Rabbi Judah Nadich became the adviser on Jewish affairs to General Dwight D. Eisenhower in the European theater and retired as lieutenant colonel, the same rank I was honored to attain in the USAir Force. 

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