American troops have a strong presence around the globe, serving in
75 percent of the world's countries, yet "one soldier told me they are
starving for spiritual support," said Cheri Lomonte, founder of
Frontline Faith.
The Catholic nonprofit organization gives MP3 players loaded with the
Mass, stories and prayers to active-duty members of the military.
In the two years since its founding, Frontline Faith has distributed
30,000 MP3 players.
The organization started with Lomonte, a Catholic
radio host from Austin, Texas, creating a Catholic MP3 player with
recordings of Mass, prayers, Scripture readings and words of
encouragement to members of the military.
Although the first two years of the organization brought in enough
donations to cover the orders, they are left with a shortage of donation
money and 1,500 requests for players they can't fill.
"Americans think the war is over because they see pictures of troops
coming home," Lomonte told Catholic News Service in a telephone
interview. "What people don't realize is there are still 60,000 troops
in Afghanistan and there are more troops going out in December."
Lomonte came up with the MP3 idea after learning that soldiers can go
months without access to a military chaplain. The aim of the player was
to be a supplement to scripture readings in response to a lack of
Catholic chaplains.
Last February, at the request of a Methodist pastor, a Protestant version of the MP3 player were recorded and distributed.
The players cost $24 each and are specifically for active-duty
military, those preparing to deploy and those in military hospitals.
The project's website
lists ways to help with the project, including how to follow it on
Facebook, how to connect a parish to the effort and how to donate money
to support it.
Fr. Phil Mahalic, an Army chaplain with the rank of colonel,
distributes the Frontline players to troops before they deploy and
overseas when they attend Mass. He told CNS in a recent telephone
interview that there are 326 slots for Catholic priests to serve as
military chaplains, but only 89 of those are filled.
Because of an overall shortage of priests and dioceses being
reluctant to release priests they need to serve in the military as
chaplains, soldiers are left with infrequent visits from chaplains.
Lomonte said some soldiers go months without seeing a chaplain, let
alone a Catholic chaplain.
"The MP3 players are an educational tool and a spiritual motivator,"
Mahalic said. One new tool is a series of videos called "Faith in the
Crosshairs," written and hosted by Mahalic, which can be accessed online
for free.
Mahalic, a priest of the Diocese of Lafayette, Ind., said the players
are an important evangelization tool. "They are one more step in the
right direction, it gives them moral and spiritual support they need,"
he added.
Priests released by dioceses to be chaplains serve the U.S.
Archdiocese for the Military Services, which provides pastoral care to
Catholics in all branches of the military, their families and those at
Veterans Affairs hospitals nationwide.
Deacon Paul Rodriguez, a chaplain's assistant in the Texas National
Guard with the 36th Infantry Division and in ministry at St. Margaret
Mary Parish in Cedar Park, Texas, received a player in Seattle as he
prepared for deployment to Iraq in December 2010.
"I looked for information about it online and saw that it was part of
'Mary's Touch,' a program I had listened to," Rodriguez, who holds the
rank of sergeant first class, told Catholic Spirit, the
newspaper of the Diocese of Austin, Texas. "I contacted her and asked
her for 50. She sent 150. They went so fast, I asked her for another
400."
He said the players were helpful, given the lack of chaplains to meet
spiritual needs. "I was a division senior assistant chaplain in charge
of South Iraq," he said. "There are only 20 (chaplains), which is about
one per brigade."
When priests are not available, chaplain assistants such as Rodriguez pick up the slack.
"It felt good giving the soldiers something with some 'meat' on it,"
he said of the MP3 players. "I didn't have to improvise because I knew
it came from good Catholic sources. It made my job a lot easier being
able to give them that along with pamphlets and rosaries."
This year for the first time, Frontline produced something for the
friends and family of military members at home: a CD which has stories
of "hope and inspiration" of the friends and family of members of the
military.
"It's not only the people who serve that make the sacrifice, but also
the people who stay home," Lomonte said. "Think of how many people are
affected by a deployment. The people at the home front need
encouragement, too."
Lomonte attributes everything from the idea to the logistics and
funding to the Holy Spirit. "I got a calling which I can't explain," she
said, "except for the fact that I wake up every morning and I say 'Here
I am. Lord, your servant, what do you want me to do?'"