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It took 27 bullets to bring down this Marine chaplain

Like his Master before him, Fr. Capodanno “loved his own until the end.”

The unarmed chaplain ran across the battlefield, bullets whirring around him.

Already severely wounded, he paid no attention to the blood, the pain, or the danger. Marines lay injured and dying everywhere, and they needed him. Their company had been ambushed by an overwhelming North Vietnamese force and were now in a desperate fight for survival.

The chaplain stopped to aid a Marine wounded by nearby machine gun fire. The Marine later said that the chaplain’s presence brought a peace he could never explain. He also testified that the chaplain blessed him with his left hand because his right hand was nearly gone. Hearing the screams of a corpsman who lay nearby, the chaplain rushed to assist—but the same machine gun that had hit the Marine and the corpsman riddled the chaplain with 27 fatal bullets.

It’s hard to make a Marine cry. But when news of the death of Chaplain Vincent Capodanno spread through the battalions he had served, many Marines cried.

Chaplain Capodanno at work (photo: USMC/WikiCommons)

Vincent Capodanno was born in 1929 in Staten Island, New York, the son of Italian Catholic immigrants. He joined the missionary priests known as the Maryknolls in 1949, was ordained in 1958, and served in Taiwan and other locations over the next several years.

In the mid-60s, he requested to join the Navy Chaplain Corps so that he could serve the Marines being sent to Vietnam. He took to this work immediately. As a chaplain, he was known as the “Grunt Padre” due to his particular concern for the young enlisted troops (known as “grunts”) and his insistence on sharing all the same hardships they did.

Chaplain Capodanno celebrated Mass, heard Confessions, and listened to every Marine who came to talk to him. He gave out St. Christopher medals and was a constant source of reassurance and support to the young men exhausted with the fighting. When his job got dangerous, he went fearlessly into the fray to bring Christ to the wounded and dying.

In September of 1967, two companies of his battalion were called to assist another battalion that had run into trouble during an operation. Knowing that there were injured and dying Marines, he requested and was granted permission to go with the two companies.

It was on the field of that battle that Chaplain Capodanno gave the last full measure of the devotion that had characterized his life. For his actions that day, he was awarded the Medal of Honor, and his memory lives strong in the hearts of all those Marines who knew him on the blood-soaked fields of Vietnam.

The Grunt Padre is a moving biography of Father Capodanno’s childhood, military service, and final sacrifice.  Author Fr. Daniel Mode recounts the story of Capodanno’s life growing up in America, and shows how he prepared himself so well to serve God and his fellow man with such deep love and courage. Get your copy today at The Catholic Company!

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