Ukraine’s military chaplains ‘ready to heal the wounds of war’

Ukraine’s military chaplains ‘ready to heal the wounds of war’
Ukrainian Army chaplains attend a graduation ceremony at St. Sophia Cathedral in Kyiv on June 23. Photo: OSV News/Gleb Garanich, Reuters

KYIV (OSV News): Ukrainian military chaplains are standing shoulder-to-shoulder with their troops across a long front line, while readying themselves for a post-war ministry of healing throughout their nation.

“We’re in our positions, and we’re right next to our soldiers,” said Jesuit Father Andriy Zelinskyy, chief chaplain for the Armed Forces of Ukraine. “The Ukrainian front line today is more than 1,200 kilometres long. And the chaplains are everywhere, with their units, wherever the units are.”

Father Rostyslav Vysochan, a Ukrainian Catholic priest and a second lieutenant in Ukraine’s armed forces, said his first experience in the trenches proved to be “the greatest time to be a priest.”

He was first deployed to the front line in February 2015, a year after Russia launched its attacks against Ukraine by illegally annexing the Crimean peninsula and fomenting separatist activities in the country’s Donetsk and Luhansk provinces.

One particular assault by Russian rockets marked “the best hours of my priesthood,” said Father Vysochan, who drew on both his pastoral and medical skills while in the field. “I helped wounded people. I was praying so hard.”

We have to talk about that … in order to explain that you are not killers, you are defenders. And you defend your families, you defend your brothers, you defend your land, you defend your country.

Father Vysochan

Father Vysochan said he was moved by the chance to “[close] the eyes of a soldier who was passing away.”

He said, “I gave him anointing, I also helped another soldier with some different psychological and moral problems. I recognised I was put by God in the right place, at the right time.”

Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022 made for a “huge battlefield” that requires its chaplains to be “flexible,” Father Vysochan said. 

Working on the “second line,” where soldiers rest from battle, “you can celebrate Mass, you speak, you can pray, you can motivate and listen,” he said. During those moments, Father Vysochan helps soldiers grapple with the burden of having to kill in order to preserve lives.

“This is our Church tradition of just war,” he said. “We have to talk about that … in order to explain that you are not killers, you are defenders. And you defend your families, you defend your brothers, you defend your land, you defend your country. That is the main point of the Catholic Church’s just war theory, that you are the defender.”

The chaplains take part in the rehabilitation. They’re present to go through this process of coming back to life, coming back to yourself

Father Zelinskyy

Through the sacrament of confession, soldiers “receive peace in their hearts,” he said. “You can always come to holy confession, [and seek] the special prayers of your priest, of your chaplains. This is our role.”

Father Zelinskyy said, “The chaplains take part in the rehabilitation. They’re present to go through this process of coming back to life, coming back to yourself.” That process will become even more critical following the war’s end, he said.

“After the victory, we’re going to have approximately 15 to 20 per cent of the Ukrainian population as veterans and their families,” he said. “We are already thinking of how to provide support, how to provide help. … We’re going to be faced with the challenge that other contemporary states haven’t faced since World War II.”

Chaplains will be ready for their next “main task, to heal the wounds of war,” said Father Vysochan.

“I think this is a moment for transformation of the Ukrainian society, and the church has definitely its role in this process,” said Father Zelinskyy.

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