DCS
Chaplains
What is
a chaplain? 
Chaplains
were originally priests or ministers
attached to a chapel, military unit, ship,
prison, hospital, college or other
institution in order to provide a specific
population with spiritual support. Today, a
chaplain is an ordained member of the clergy
who is assigned to a special ministry within
their community. Although Christianity was
one of the first to embrace chaplain
ministry, other traditions such as Judaism,
Islam, and Buddhism recognize and encourage
the particular gifts of chaplains.
According to
a recent American Red Cross survey, people
in crisis situations look to their faith
leaders for help in understanding and coming
to terms with what they are experiencing.
This is especially true when a major
disaster or emergency occurs. DCS responds
to the need for spiritual first aid by
immediately deploying chaplains trained in
both crisis intervention and spiritual
response.
Our volunteer
corps is made up of 170 disaster-relief
chaplains who represent 28 faith traditions.
As one chaplain described it, they are a
‘web of spirituality’ that covers the entire
tri-state area, offering support and
compassion to help people in the midst of
deep loss.
Who are
DCS chaplains?
In addition
to their vocation as disaster-relief
chaplains, many DCS chaplains work in
related fields such as psychiatry,
counseling, emergency management, and
congregation based ministry. As chaplains,
they are members of a broad spectrum of
faith communities and traditions, including
American Baptist, American Methodist
Episcopal (AME) Zion, Church of God,
Episcopal, Evangelical Lutheran, Interfaith,
Jewish Conservative, Jewish Orthodox, Jewish
Reform, Muslim, Pentecostal, Presbyterian
Church, Roman Catholic, United Church of
Christ, United Methodist, Yoruba, Zen
Buddhist, and others.
DCS chaplains
also come from a diversity of ethnic
backgrounds and are fluent in multiple
languages, including American Sign Language,
Bengali, French, German, Haitian Creole,
Hebrew, Hindi, Italian, Korean, Norwegian,
Portuguese, Spanish, Swahili, T wi
and Yiddish.
To meet the
needs of the diversity within the New York
metropolitan area, we believe that spiritual
care must be wide-ranging and inclusive.
Thus, DCS continuously and proactively seeks
out new partnerships with faith traditions
and communities, traditional
first-responding and other disaster-relief
organizations and professional, skilled
volunteers. |