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McClatchy Washington Bureau
McClatchy Washington Bureau
National
Hannah Allam

Army makes history by putting Muslim in charge of 14,000 US soldiers' spiritual needs

WASHINGTON _ In January, Lt. Col. Khallid Shabazz received the call every Army chaplain dreams of, the call that validates years of intense study and hard work toward keeping the U.S. military in good spiritual health.

He was offered the job of chaplain for an entire division, an honor for anyone in his field but a milestone in his case. After a ceremony this summer, Shabazz will become the first Muslim division-level chaplain in the history of the U.S. military _ a Muslim spiritual leader for more than 14,000 mostly Christian soldiers.

Shabazz, who's dedicated his life to working across religious lines, found it hard to keep calm as he received the news at his desk on Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, Wash.

"I'm on the phone saying, 'Thank you, I appreciate it. I'll serve honorably,' and then I hang up the phone and I'm jumping all around like a little kid," Shabazz, 48, recalled in interviews in February. "I was running around the office saying, al hamdulillah, al hamdulillah, praise be to God!"

To get a sense of what a long shot this might've seemed like to Shabazz, consider the numbers: He's one of only 10 Muslim chaplains in the entire U.S. military; of the Army's 1,400 or so chaplains, just five are Muslim.

"When you get the call saying you have been bestowed a division, the news is kind of like, unearthly," Shabazz said. "The list is so small and it's such a tough cut."

With four months until the ceremony that will make him chaplain of the Army's 7th Infantry Division at Lewis-McChord, Shabazz has plenty of time to think about taking on such a visible role in an age of open anti-Muslim hostility. He'd like to think his transition will be as smooth as those of his Christian peers, but he knows that not everyone will welcome him as warmly as the senior officers who gave him a standing ovation when the news was announced at a meeting on base.

"For me, a regular old guy from Louisiana, I look to the heavens and say, 'Why me?' " Shabazz said. "As the day gets closer, I'm sure I'll have more anxiety and think about it more. I'm extremely proud to have been on this journey for 20 years and never would've imagined that I'd be chosen to be the first."

"Islamic guy in a leadership position?" he said. "If I think about it too much, it'll get overwhelming."

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