Friends and family members of Chaplain Candidate Saleha Jabeen pin on her second lieutenant rank during a commissioning ceremony at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago.
Jabeen is the first female Muslim Chaplain in the U.S Air Force and Department of Defence to be commissioned as first Muslim woman chaplain candidate. This marks the first time the U.S. military will have a female chaplain of the Islamic faith. Saleha Jabeen became a second lieutenant in a ceremony at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago.
“The fact is America is a place where the Constitution guarantees your freedom to embrace or abstain from religious ideals, and the Chaplain Corps, which Jabeen just entered, exists to ensure every Airman has a religious freedom advocate.
“This is a big day not just for Muslims, but for persons of all faiths,” said Maj. Gen. Steven Schaick, Air Force chief of chaplains, in a statement published on the Air Force’s website.
Jabeen’s path to the chaplaincy has included graduating from North Park University, an evangelical Christian school in Chicago, in 2009, and the Catholic theological school, where she was the first Muslim woman chosen by fellow students as valedictorian for their 2014 class, according to a bio she provided to Religion News Service.
She served in the U.S. Army Reserve, acting as a lay representative for the Islamic faith when a Muslim chaplain was not available.
“Serving as a female Muslim Chaplain would give me the opportunity to serve the female service members and families of male service members of the Islamic faith and otherwise as well,” Jabeen told Religion News Service (RNS), via email.