U.S. Air Forces Central
BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan , June 4,
2012 – The chaplain gave the cross he brought from home to the young injured
Marine from Florida.
The Marine had been hurt in a roadside
bomb explosion and had lost the cross that was on his body armor. When the
chaplain presented the cross to the young Marine, both men cried.
This was Air Force Chaplain (Lt. Col.)
Brian Bohlman's first experience as the night shift chaplain at Craig
Joint-Theater Hospital here about six months ago.
The chaplain would experience these
types of scenarios and more throughout his time at CJTH, one of the largest and
best-equipped trauma facilities in Afghanistan.
Bohlman said his pager goes off each
time a trauma patient is admitted to the hospital.
"Our role in the trauma room is to
introduce ourselves, and we tell them we are praying for them," said
Bohlman, who deployed from the 169th Fighter Wing at McEntire Joint National
Guard Base, S.C. "We will also follow them while they are in the
hospital."
Bohlman said he and his assistant
generally see about 15 patients nightly.
"I always ask them [about] their
hometown," he added.
Bohlman, a 20-year Air Force veteran,
said caring for people is nothing new for him, noting he always had a strong
desire to serve others. He didn't initially meet the requirements to a become
chaplain so he enlisted in 1992 as a chaplain's assistant. After serving four
years on active duty and a year in the reserve, he earned a commission through
the Air Force’s Chaplain Candidate Program.
"Our mission is to care for the
warrior's soul," Bohlman said. "There are three functions we do. One,
is nurturing the living; two, is caring for the wounded; and three is honoring
the dead.”
Bohlman carries a small green book in
his left breast pocket. Though the book is not worth more than a couple of
dollars, he said, it holds a deep meaning to him. Bohlman said he records the
name, rank, service and some descriptive passages of every injured military
member he comes in contact with.
"I try and write a little bit about
everyone I meet," the chaplain said. Some service members, he said, have
heart-wrenching stories.
"In April, we had a lot of traumas.
At one point there were four patients in the trauma room, and I looked down and
realized there was a lot of blood on the floor. I still have those stains on my
boots. I thought about the sacrifice, and how our job can be a dirty one. I
just thought about how they truly left their mark on me."
After his first week at the hospital,
Bohlman told the staff that he can pray and chew gum at the same time, meaning
he could help out the staff if needed.
Soon, Bohlman said, he was "taking
temperatures, putting on the blood pressure cuff, and getting warm blankets.”
Bohlman has been a great asset, said Air
Force Maj. (Dr.) Micah Schmidt, an emergency room physician.
"He participates in all the
traumas. He is very helpful. It is not expected, but it's nice,” Schmidt said
of Bohlman. “Just the other night, he helped me change the dressing on a
gunshot wound."
The chaplain said it's not just the
patients he watches over, but also the staff at the hospital.
"We're here to listen to their
stories," Bohlman said. "A lot of times, the staff will
compartmentalize what they deal with. You can have an enemy prisoner of war and
the soldier who was injured by the enemy POW, but you have to give the same
exact care. They have to keep their feelings and emotions out of it."
The chaplain said he tries to keep
abreast of the hospital staff’s well-being.
"I usually ask if they've talked to
their family lately," Bohlman said, or if they’re keeping up on their
exercise.”
“My goal is to build resilient airmen,”
the chaplain added. “I tell them I'm here regardless of their faith or
denomination.”
A lot of times, Bohlman said, the people
he encounters just need someone to talk to.
"They have seen a lot but the way
they deal with it is knowing that many would die if they weren't here," he
said. "They see the big picture. It helps them during difficult days to pull
through."
Bohlman, who’s on his fifth overseas
deployment, said losing people is always difficult.
"At the end of the sermons I give,I
have a slideshow of the service members I've worked with who have died, and I
always tell my congregation, 'These are the faces of freedom!’”
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