
U.S. military members of the Warriors to Lourdes program in an undated photo pose on the steps of the Rosary Basilica at the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Lourdes in France with Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio of the U.S. Archdiocese for the Military Services, center, and Bishop Scott McCaig, head of the Military Ordinariate of Canada (with beard). (OSV News Photo)
LOURDES, France (OSV News) — Surrounded by almost 15,000 military personnel worldwide, Airman 1st Class Quenton Cooper felt a deep sense of fraternity during a May 24 to 26 pilgrimage to Lourdes, France.
Cooper was one of 183 American pilgrims who journeyed to Lourdes for the annual International Military Pilgrimage.
Every year since 1958, the French army has invited soldiers from across the world to come together for three days of festivities, prayer and fraternity in Lourdes, the frequented pilgrimage site where Mary is believed to have appeared to St. Bernadette in 1858.
“This trip has bolstered my spiritual life because it has reminded me that I’m not alone in my prayer life and that the Church is not just located in one country, but it’s a community that extends all over the world,” Cooper told OSV News. “It is this reminder that no matter who we are, we need to thrive, and God will put us in. He will always put us where He needs us to help others grow in their faith.”
Known for its healing miracles, Lourdes is often frequented by pilgrims seeking either physical, spiritual or mental healing. Thus, the weekend pilgrimage places a special emphasis on healing, military chaplain Father Philip O’Neill told OSV News.
“The message of Our Lady of Lourdes is to come for the sake of healing, which is a message that resonated in the assembly,” said Father O’Neill, a U.S. Air Force chaplain with the rank of captain who is currently based in Germany. “We have so many of our veterans who bear the historical scars of war, and to have them all brought together at the foot of the altar to have them brought to the healing waters of Lourdes really was profound.”
For over 20 years, the Knights of Columbus and the U.S. Archdiocese for the Military Services have co-sponsored the Warriors to Lourdes pilgrimage, bringing both active-duty service members and veterans worldwide to seek healing through the pilgrimage.
Retired U.S. Col. Paul Zeternick made his first Warriors to Lourdes pilgrimage in 2013. Moved by the experience, he has returned year after year and now serves as a team leader, helping to organize the trip.
“Lourdes is a great place of peace, and this pilgrimage is a time to reflect on who you are, what you’re doing, and where you need to grow,” Zeternick said. “Every time I have attended the pilgrimage, I have experienced growth both as a pilgrim and now as a team leader.”
Now, as a team leader, the most impactful moments of each pilgrimage are witnessing the participants encounter the Lord’s healing touch and experience his merciful love.
“We’ve been offering a special program addressing moral injury, where we talk about post-traumatic stress disorder and how there are different techniques and methods towards healing,” Zeternick said. “We also emphasize how the Catholic faith, through the Sacrament of Reconciliation, is so important in moving forward with the healing process.”
But the pilgrimage offers more than healing and a spiritual encounter; it provides the opportunity for participants to experience fraternity with the global Church.
“In my experience, when military personnel come together with soldiers from other nations, which we do frequently, it is when we are training for war. We engage in the shared practice of warfare, shared strategies and growth in our abilities,” Father O’Neill said.
He said, “As far as I know, this is the only event of its kind where members from so many different countries come together in the name of peace, prayer and healing.”
These fraternal moments were daily occurrences as service members from different countries would sit at cafes and drink coffee or have a meal together, sharing their military and faith experiences.
“What you see on the streets of Lourdes over the course of this week is an incredible fraternity,” Father O’Neill said. “We not only gather to pray and go through the Liturgies and the rituals, but we are also there to be together. You’ll see service members from every country having coffee or dinner together, sharing a beer or wine. It is a wonderful, incredibly uplifting sight.”
Perhaps the greatest sign of fraternity and unity was the reaction toward Ukrainian troops present at the pilgrimage. Throughout the week, the pilgrims encountered soldiers who traveled from the front lines in Ukraine to seek healing and pray for peace at Lourdes.
“We had many Ukrainian troops at the pilgrimage as well,” said Father O’Neill, who is also a priest of the Archdiocese of Hartford, Connecticut. “They received special sympathy and support and became something like minor celebrities. I think everybody was greeting and saluting the Ukrainians throughout the three days and during the opening and closing ceremonies. When all the flags were marched through the basilica, everybody was clapping and cheering as the Ukrainian flag was processed in.”
Witnessing the Ukrainian soldiers’ faith and devotion left an impression on the other pilgrims, such as Cooper, reminding them that God triumphs over evil.
“I wasn’t expecting to see Ukrainian troops, but their presence at the pilgrimage reminded me that no matter what you’re experiencing, God is the ultimate defender and peacekeeper, and without Him, we cannot triumph over evil,” Cooper said.
To pursue "ideological, nationalistic or economic ambitions" at the cost of peace "is a grave fault before humanity and history, a sin before God," he wrote in a message to Bishop Jacques Habert of Bayeux and Lisieux, whose diocese includes the beaches where Allied troops landed June 6, 1944.
The pope's message was read June 5 during an ecumenical prayer service at the cathedral of Bayeux. Princess Anne of Great Britain attended the service with the ambassadors to France from Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.
In his message, the pope said it would be "pointless and hypocritical" to remember the Normandy landings without definitively condemning the "disaster" that was the Second World War with its widespread suffering and ruin.
While the memory of the war previously bolstered people's determination to avoid provoking another global conflict, "I note with sadness that this is no longer the case today and that humankind has a short memory," the pope wrote. "May this commemoration help us to recover it!"
The prospect of a wide-reaching conflict and the notion that "people are gradually becoming familiar with this unacceptable eventuality" is "worrying," the pope said.
"People want peace!" he wrote. "They want conditions of stability, security and prosperity in which everyone can fulfill their duties and destinies serenely."
The pope asked for prayers "for people who want war" and those who unnecessarily prolong wars or "cynically profit" from them. "May God enlighten their hearts and set before their eyes the trail of misfortune the provoke!" he wrote.
"Wanting peace is not cowardice," the pope wrote. "On the contrary it requires the greatest courage: the courage to know how to give up something."
Pope Francis prayed for the victims of wars past and present, asking that God welcome those who have died in conflict and help those who are suffering due to war today, particularly the poor, the elderly, women and children, "who are always the first victims of these tragedies."