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A soldier's legacy: faith born on the killing fields.


Taking the long view, a religious conversion must be understood as an invisible event. The action happens off-stage, behind the scenes; spectators observe only the conclusion. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Rosencrantz and Guildenstern

Hamlet’s traitorous friends; “adders fang’d.” [Br. Lit.: Hamlet]

See : Treachery
 enter and exit Hamlet without a personal history: influential figures in the tapestry but ciphers just the same.

Many articulate converts have tried to describe their conversion experiences. About all they can agree on is that it turns one inside out and nothing in one's life ever is the same again. It's like your first time entering school. You are silenced by fright, and you wonder how you got there, what is happening, and where it all ends. Without being blinded and stunned stun  
tr.v. stunned, stun·ning, stuns
1. To daze or render senseless, by or as if by a blow.

2. To overwhelm or daze with a loud noise.

3.
 out of your wits, you are the subject of a less noisy and dramatic contemporary equivalent of Saul of Tarsus Saul of Tarsus: see Paul, Saint.  flung headlong into the dust on the Damascus road and later coming back to life as Paul: a new man.

But however elusive it may be in its origins, a conversion leaves signs along the trail. Like a love affair, once it is under way you can look back and identify some of the moments that nudged, and teased, and maneuvered you toward your lover.

That is how it was with a conversion that broke surface for me in 1948 and has never since left me alone or at peace with what I am and what I do. The following narrative describes one of a number of such trail markers along my conversion itinerary. But seeing the sign does not strip the event of its mystery.

Jim Palermino grew up in a tough, battered neighborhood on Chicago's South Side. I met him when I had crossed the English Channel English Channel, Fr. La Manche [the sleeve], arm of the Atlantic Ocean, c.350 (560 km) long, between France and Great Britain. It is 112 mi (180 km) wide at its west entrance, between Land's End, England, and Ushant, France. Its greatest width, c.  in 1944 to join the 42nd Cavalry, one of two-gun George Patton's favored outfits for scouting the location and strength of enemy forces. It was a few weeks after the Normandy landing.

Jim was gunner in my armored car. He displayed a startling star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 array of contrasts, and no matter how close combat experience brought us, he always remained an enigma to me. It was my practice in those years to turn people into types (an easy way to keep them in their place), but Jim defied the system. He rarely did the expected. He fit no pattern. He moved through our war's carnage, madness, and degradation with the kind of irrefutable irrefutable - The opposite of refutable.  serenity one sees on the features of a Fra Angelico Fra Angelico, (c. 1395 – February 18 1455) was an Early Italian Renaissance painter, referred to in Vasari's Lives of the Artists as having "a rare and perfect talent".  angel.

Then there were the contrasts. Jim was complete master of his weapons, .30- and .50-caliber machine guns and a 57mm cannon. He knew their capabilities. He fired accurately, never wasting ammunition. He had a superb eye for estimating distance to an enemy position. He rarely missed moving targets.

Jim handled his weapons with uncommon delicacy, and it still seems wondrously inexplicable to me, fifty years later. Stripping them for cleaning, he meticulously washed and oiled each piece as if it were Waterford crystal Waterford Crystal is a trademark brand of crystal glassware produced in Waterford, Ireland, by the company Waterford Wedgwood plc., previously trading as Waterford Glass Ltd. . I pondered that fact and would tell myself that they were killers and here he was treating them like babies. This was something I simply did not understand, because at the same time Jim had an awesome proficiency with those guns. A lot of Germans died of his proficiency.

That didn't fit, either. I knew soldiers - few of us at the time did not know some - who were thrilled by killing. Not Jim. It was his function to kill, he killed, that was the end of it. He never spoke about it afterwards, the way some gunmen have to keep tasting the excitement repeatedly until the next kill.

Killing was Jim's job, and he did it. The job was not his life, it was not his master. I am certain he would have been the same man delivering milk or clerking in a store. He would perform his duties, and at the end of the day leave them behind him. He had detachment, independence, and, beyond independence, freedom. Jim was his own man.

A slice of popular sentimental cant during World War II declared with indefensible confidence that there were no atheists in foxholes The statement "There are no atheists in foxholes" is used to imply that atheists really do believe in God deep down, and that in times of extreme stress or fear, such as when participating in warfare, the belief will surface, overwhelming the less substantial affectation of ; the slogan even became the title of a hugely successful, comforting book. (It pacified public anxiety over the morality of soldiers, I suppose.) The assumption was that fear and shock and the presence of brutal death must elevate a soldier's mind and heart to eternal verities.

The expectation is appealing, but that's not the way it was. Not in my battle experience, nor in those widely reported during the wars in Korea and Vietnam. To hold a brief for unbreachable U.S. moral superiority is another facet of American chauvinistic cant. Reminds me of my mother in the 1950s blaming immigrants for the country's rising criminality, blithely ignoring that in so doing she converted her and my father's mother and father, my grandparents grandparents nplabuelos mpl

grandparents grand nplgrands-parents mpl

grandparents grand npl
, into criminals.

Soldiers drunk on the moral pollution of modern warfare Modern warfare involves the widespread use of highly advanced technology. As a term, it is normally taken as referring to conflicts involving one or more first world powers, within the modern electronic era.  do not reverse their values. They continue to prize the interests that filled their lives. If it took a man long enough to die, he might get round, finally, to God. For most of us, however, death meant nothing more than the loss of life, an extremely precious, fragile commodity. In the ordinary course of things, God had little to do with it. God, assuming we were believers, was secondary. Our goal was to stay alive, in one piece.

Speaking for myself, if I thought about it at all, I regretted my past only because I knew that it could easily become an inescapable dead end; the time-line was continuous. I gave little thought to what I may or may not have done in my past or what I had made of it. My concern was with the existence that I now had a high probability of losing.

For Jim, however, God immovably im·mov·a·ble  
adj.
1.
a. Impossible to move.

b. Incapable of movement.

2. Impossible to alter: immovable plans.

3.
 occupied the top of his list. Scouting miles behind enemy lines or resting safely within our own, it did not matter. Jim always appeared devout, accepting, gentle, helpful. He was for me the first person, and to this day still is among the very few I know, who would say with perfect conviction and solemn patience - "God willing" or "God is good" - when the machinery of decision (somewhere) confronted him with a doubtful issue. And most issues then were extremely doubtful indeed.

I never heard Jim curse, or use profanity Irreverence towards sacred things; particularly, an irreverent or blasphemous use of the name of God. Vulgar, irreverent, or coarse language.

The use of certain profane or obscene language on the radio or television is a federal offense, but in other situations, profanity
, or blaspheme blas·pheme  
v. blas·phemed, blas·phem·ing, blas·phemes

v.tr.
1. To speak of (God or a sacred entity) in an irreverent, impious manner.

2. To revile; execrate.

v.intr.
, and I am dead certain he never tried to reform anyone (anyway, not me!) who did. He reacted to our vile speech as he did to his job, which later I appreciated must have been specially vile to him. Our gutter words were part of reality, and in Jim's philosophy, one lived with reality as given but did not necessarily join in. If our language agonized ag·o·nize  
v. ag·o·nized, ag·o·niz·ing, ag·o·niz·es

v.intr.
1. To suffer extreme pain or great anguish.

2. To make a great effort; struggle.

v.tr.
 him, he kept it hidden behind features almost always set in grave, melancholy lines.

I knew Jim was Catholic because he carried and used a rosary rosary [rose garden], prayer of Roman Catholics, in which beads are used as counters. The term, applied also to the beads, is extended to Muslim, Hindu, and Buddhist prayers that use beads.  and wore a religious medal round his neck, and several times I saw him receive Communion at a field Mass. Other than these signs, he did not speak of his faith. And I was too insensitive to connect the presence of faith with the behavior of the man.

Who says war is not criminal, one of the supreme atrocities of our criminal century, speaks an inexcusable lie. And let no one (politicians, for sure, theologians, too) dare defend, or rationalize, war or any other form of "permissible" killing until he or she has fixed another human being in their sights and squeezed the trigger, or has felt they are fixed in another gunner's cross-hairs. Long-distance death-making is not enough.

It is easy to rejoice in righteous slaughter when you are a comfortable 5,000 miles away from it and it is not your doing. It is easy to issue patriotic platitudes and salute a tattered flag when you have not seen a fountain of blood erupting from the chest you have perforated or watched a face squashed flat and smeared like scarlet paste. It is painless to be a warmonger.

Looking back across the fifty-plus years, I submit that Jim Palermino subdued sub·due  
tr.v. sub·dued, sub·du·ing, sub·dues
1. To conquer and subjugate; vanquish. See Synonyms at defeat.

2. To quiet or bring under control by physical force or persuasion; make tractable.

3.
 war's criminality. He proved to me that you could be in it but not of it, could go through it without taking it with you. He would not, and never did, become war's accomplice. Jim provided me, when I knew enough to appreciate it, a ready-made answer to the Manichaeans and other advocates of a witless wit·less  
adj.
Lacking intelligence or wit; foolish.



witless·ly adv.

wit
 universe. Acceptance, yes; complicity, no. Join these two and the syllogism syllogism, a mode of argument that forms the core of the body of Western logical thought. Aristotle defined syllogistic logic, and his formulations were thought to be the final word in logic; they underwent only minor revisions in the subsequent 2,200 years.  concludes in implacable im·plac·a·ble  
adj.
Impossible to placate or appease: implacable foes; implacable suspicion.



[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin
 defiance.

I also learned during those days of war that you could not count on being frightened into believing in God - not a belief, anyway, that was more than a shot in the arm, a toxin immunizing one against fear. During our sweep across Europe, it wasn't the facts of war and their uncertain outcome that inspired the attributes of faith in Jim Palermino, not to mention prayerful prayer·ful  
adj.
1. Inclined or given to praying frequently; devout.

2. Typical or indicative of prayer, as a mannerism, gesture, or facial expression.
 dignity, grace, courage, and gentleness under fire. It was his love of God in the person of Jesus Christ Jesus Christ: see Jesus.

Jesus Christ

40 days after Resurrection, ascended into heaven. [N.T.: Acts 1:1–11]

See : Ascension


Jesus Christ

kind to the poor, forgiving to the sinful. [N.T.
 that sustained him - bore him up, as earlier scriptural language has it. It was his trust that the prayers he offered through the Mother of God were not indifferently received.

Ten years passed before I could read Jim's lessons. They are as present to me today as my damaged spine and arthritic joints.

Jim and I never again met, although I later heard that he had survived the war, thank God. He can not know it, but he remains imperishably in my small pantheon of people precious for having permanently altered my life. My memories of him are unquenchable.

This soldier-comrade was both portent and witness of my future, and I am saddened that he shall never see how great is my debt to him. Without his knowing, or mine for that matter, he helped reset my moral compass. At a certain moment in my life, which I, of course, cannot fix with a date and hour, I started to change direction. The hand on the switch for the track that I chose, however, was Jim Palermino's.

I can not return Jim to history without mentioning one more gift he made me, merely by being who he was, where he was. He illustrated and modeled in his behavior an ancient truth, a truth that rarely is honored because it so rarely is comfortable to make it one's own. It is the truth that says: There are human beings. There is choice. And that choice how you make it, how you implement it, how you accept its consequences - has the final word.

Robert Ostermann has written for a variety of journals, including U.S. Catholic, America, and The Critic. He lives in Tempe, Arizona Tempe (pronounced /tɛm.'piː/) is a city in Maricopa County, Arizona, USA, with a population of 169,712 according to 2006 Census Bureau estimates. .
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Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Ostermann, Robert
Publication:Commonweal
Date:Dec 5, 1997
Words:1793
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