Ohio National Guard News

State Partnership grows spiritual relationships
between Ohio and Serbia

Story and photos by Senior Master Sgt. Elizabeth Holliker, Ohio National Guard Public Affairs
Video by Staff Sgt. George B. Davis, Ohio National Guard Public Affairs

Second Lt. Vedran Kistoc (from left), a chaplain with the Serbian Armed Forces, along with 1st Lt. Goran Sandic, chief Orthodox chaplain for the Serbian Armed Forces, and Lt. Col. James Sizemore, an Ohio National Guard chaplain, conduct the first-ever, multinational Divine Liturgy in field conditions, June 18, 2018, during Exercise Platinum Wolf 18 at Borovac Training Area near Serbia’s South Base. The outdoor sunrise service began at 6 a.m. at the Platinum Wolf tent city, bringing more than 30 soldiers from around the world to worship and take part in Holy Communion together.

Lt. Col. James Sizemore (fifth from left), an Ohio National Guard chaplain, participates in a Serbian Orthodox Divine Liturgy, June 17, 2018, at Holy Trinity Cathedral, in Vranje, Serbia. During the Divine Liturgy service, Sizemore took part in the service by leading a portion of the sermon. The invitation for Sizemore to participate in the Liturgy stems from the strong 12-year partnership between Ohio and Serbia through the Department of Defense State Partnership Program.

Lt. Col. James Sizemore, an Ohio National Guard chaplain, participates in a Serbian Orthodox Divine Liturgy, June 17, 2018, at Holy Trinity Cathedral, in Vranje, Serbia.

Lt. Col. James Sizemore (second from left), an Ohio National Guard chaplain, provides Holy Communion to a parishioner.

Second Lt. Vedran Kistoc (from left), a chaplain with the Serbian Armed Forces, along with Lt. Col. James Sizemore, an Ohio National Guard chaplain, and 1st Lt. Goran Sandic, chief Orthodox chaplain for the Serbian Armed Forces, conduct the first-ever, multinational Divine Liturgy.

First Lt. Goran Sandic (from left), chief Orthodox chaplain for the Serbian Armed Forces, Lt. Col. James Sizemore, an Ohio National Guard chaplain, and 2nd Lt. Vedran Kistoc, a chaplain with the Serbian Armed Forces.


VRANJE, Serbia (06/17/18) — It was an experience of a lifetime for the Rev. James Sizemore, an Ohio Army National Guard chaplain and lieutenant colonel, to participate in a Serbian Orthodox Divine Liturgy June 17 at Holy Trinity Cathedral in Vranje.

Sizemore led a portion of the sermon, translated by the Rev. Goran Sandic, the church deacon and the chief Orthodox chaplain for the Serbian Armed Forces, and provided communion to the church’s many parishioners.

“My experiences have been very good,” Sizemore said. “I’ve learned a lot about the Orthodox church in Serbia.”

According to a 2017 study by the Pew Research Center on religion and public life, less than 1 percent of the American population are Orthodox Christians, compared to the nearly 87 percent of Serbians.

“In the states, I’m a minority as an Orthodox priest because there aren’t many Orthodox in the United States,” Sizemore said. “But here, this country is almost all Orthodox, so it’s a good experience for me to come to a country where most people are of the same religious background that I am.”

The invitation for Sizemore to participate in the Liturgy stems from the strong12-year partnership between Ohio and Serbia.

For more than a decade, Ohio and Serbia have partnered to promote regional stability and develop civil-military relationships as part of the Department of Defense State Partnership Program.

When first established in 2006, the focus was to develop a military partnership that would benefit both nations, but today the partnership has transcended military training into relationships that will last long into the future.

In addition to routine military training events, the Ohio National Guard’s chaplain corps has worked closely with the Serbian Armed Forces since 2013 to reestablish a chaplaincy program that had not existed for more than seven decades. Today, there are chaplains at Serbia’s military bases throughout the country, and the Ohio and Serbia chaplaincy relationship continues to grow.

“The religious services of the Serbian Armed Forces, in the beginning, was helped by the religious services of the Ohio National Guard,” said Col. Saša Milutinović, head of division for religion for the Serbian Armed Forces Chaplaincy program. “Eleven years of our working together, the people of the Ohio National Guard helped us to first organize and make the model for chaplaincy in the Serbian Armed Forces.”Through the continual exchange of experience and ideas, the Serbian Armed Forces Chaplaincy program continues to grow and flourish, enabling a more robust support network throughout the country’s different branches of military services.

“We are really proud of what we have done in the previous five years of working together,” Milutinović said. “We have done a lot of things and have really tried to improve the morale of our soldiers.”

Together, Sandic and Sizemore provided a first-ever, multinational Divine Liturgy in field conditions, June 18, during Exercise Platinum Wolf 2018 at Borovac Training Area near Serbia’s South Base.

The outdoor sunrise service began at 6 a.m. at the Platinum Wolf tent city, bringing more than 30 soldiers from around the world to worship and take part in Holy Communion together.

“It has been a wonderful experience, culturally, in partnering with Serbia, from our vantage point,” said Col. Andrew Aquino, chaplaincy director for the Ohio National Guard. “We have learned from each other, the essence of cooperation and respect for each other, respect for different cultures and respect for all religions. We’ve been able to see how religions can corporate together.”

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