Army
Chaplain, Recruiter Leads Flock To Their Own Paths Of Successes
by U.S. Army Derrick Crawford, 5th
Medical Recruiting Battalion June 10, 2018
When Chaplain (Maj.) Sharon Browne, of 5th Medical Recruiting
Battalion, pinned on those golden oak leaf major’s rank in a recent
promotion ceremony, her flock surrounded her.
Browne’s four
children took turns placing the new rank insignias on her uniform
during the February 9, 2018 ceremony, held in the Robert P. Taylor
Memorial Chapel on Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base-Fort Worth,
Texas. Their involvement is a testament to how Browne’s journey to
answer “a calling” has also led her family flock to their own
successes – with three following her into Army green as active duty
Soldiers and another following her pursuit of higher-education as a
recent college graduate.
(Center left) Brig. Gen. Kevin Vereen, U.S. Army Recruiting Command
Operations deputy commanding general, presents a promotion
certificate to Chaplain (Maj.) Sharon Browne, a recruiter with the
Southcentral Army Chaplain Recruiting Center, 5th Medical Recruiting
Battalion, after making her promotion to major official in a
ceremony February 9, 2018 at the Robert P. Taylor Memorial Chapel on
Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base-Fort Worth, Texas. They are
joined by Browne’s family: (l. to r.) Staff Sgt. Amanda Travis, 32,
an information technology specialist with the Information and
Educational Technology Division at the U.S. Military Academy, West
Point, Pa.; Sgt. James Travis III, 30, a satellite communication
systems operator/maintainer stationed at Fort Stewart, Ga.; Sgt.
Joshua Travis, 29, a signal support systems specialist and newly
assigned instructor at the U.S. Army Signal School, Fort Gordon,
Ga.; and Ashley Travis, 26, who recently completed undergraduate
studies at the University of Illinois. (U.S. Army photo by 5th
Medical Recruiting Battalion)
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“I wanted them to be part of my ceremony because I think everything
I’ve ever done in life was and remains focused around them,” said
Browne, a recruiter with the Southcentral Army Chaplain Recruiting
Center, Grand Prairie, Texas. “Even what I do now as a chaplain
recruiter is about them, because I am looking for chaplains who will
take care of Soldiers and take care of my children how I take care
of other people’s children.”
Her way of considering others
and being genuinely interested in their welfare is much-admired by
her children – Staff Sgt. Amanda Travis, 32, an information
technology specialist and former Army recruiter who now works in the
Information and Educational Technology Division at the U.S. Military
Academy, West Point, Pa.; Sgt. James Travis III, 30, a satellite
communication systems operator/maintainer stationed at Fort Stewart,
Ga.; Sgt. Joshua Travis, 29, a signal support systems specialist,
recently selected for an assignment as an instructor at the U.S.
Army Signal School, Fort Gordon, Ga.; and Ashley Travis, 26, who
recently completed undergraduate studies at the University of
Illinois and will walk across the stage with her diploma in May.
“My mother started her military career as a Non-Commissioned
Officer,” relayed Amanda, when contacted by email. “As an NCO my
mother has always been an advocate at preserving the whole Soldier.
Despite how trivial you may think someone's pain is, it is a
mountain to them.
“Ensuring that we show empathy for them
can make the difference in the quality of work they produce, the
morale of a person and organization and most importantly the quality
of leader they will grow to become. She has taken that mantra over
with her to the Chaplain Corp a place where empathy, grace, mercy,
and understanding is expected.”
For all of her warmth and
understanding, Browne’s sense of humor is also a force to be
reckoned with, according to an email response from Brig. Gen. Kevin
Vereen, U.S. Army Recruiting Command Operations deputy commanding
general, who officiated her promotion ceremony. During a previous
assignment years ago at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., he and his family
attended chapel services led by Browne, whom he wrote, “possesses a
sense of humor that is unmatched by any that I have seen.”
“That humor takes her ministry to another level and is an invaluable
characteristic that captivates both young and old,” explained Vereen,
“especially our young generation of Soldiers who make up a large
part of our Army.”
In many ways, Browne’s promotion is
emblematic of just how far she and her family have come and, above
all, how much they’ve overcome to get there. Their journey was far
from a straight shot, and considering the odds, more like a long
shot.
“My mom is not one to wear her hardships,” Amanda said.
She went on to reveal, how her mother “has endured a lot of
rejection, heartbreak, disappointment, and struggle. Her
vulnerability and humanity enable her to hear a heart cry for help,
where a physical sob is non-existent.”
Browne enlisted in
1982 and served for a total of 17 years, both active duty and
Reserves, as a unit supply specialist and armorer – an experience
she now calls “cosmic irony” considering she handled and repaired
small arms ranging from .45 mm pistols to .50-caliber machine guns.
“According to the Geneva Convention, right now I can’t touch a
single one,” joked Browne.
Her journey also includes a
nine-year break in service that Browne said was prompted by her
desire to provide a more stable situation for the children,
following her divorce from their father.
“Life happened …”
said Browne about how she came to the decision after her unit was
alerted for a possible deployment. It was a dilemma she says she was
not prepared to face again, so Browne ended her Reserve service and
moved back near family in New York City, eventually earning a
bachelor’s degree in religion and history from the College of New
Rochelle. There, professors pegged her as a great fit for the
seminary. Only, she didn’t share their view.
“I was working
for the Mayor’s Office of Operations at the time … and I was making
moves,” Browne explained. “All I really wanted to do was to be able
to provide for my children, you know. I was in survival mode.”
Then 9/11 happened. She said she found herself standing at
Ground Zero while heading to work two blocks over from the twin
towers. Inspired and understandably changed by the experience,
Browne said she asked herself, “Are you doing what God told you to
do?”
The answer for her was to enter the seminary, attending
Drew Theological School in Madison, New Jersey, on a scholarship
paying 65 percent of tuition. While there, she decided to return to
the Army, intent on becoming a chaplain. Browne re-enlisted into the
Reserves on her 41st birthday, went on to complete the seminary and
ultimately earn an active duty commission into the Chaplain Corps in
2008, and now will complete her doctorate degree in May.
Through it all, Browne has been an example of strength, perseverance
and grace, said Travis. “My mother's career has influenced me to
remember the human that makes the mission happen,” explained Travis.
“She reminds me that the mission should never cost anyone's
humanity.”
She definitely has a witness in General Vereen,
who observed first-hand the compassion, understanding and passion he
said Browne brings to the ministry.
“What is unique about
Chaplain Browne is her ability to relate to Soldiers on a personal
basis,” said Vereen, “sharing her own personal life experiences that
resonate with others and in many ways breaks down barriers that
sometimes exist between Chaplains and Soldiers, especially when our
Chaplains are essential resources necessary in capturing and
assessing the ‘climate’ of our organizations and thoughts, feelings,
and attitudes of those Soldiers within our formations – no one does
this better than Chaplain Browne.”
In her view, Browne is
living the future she imagined when she re-enlisted 14 years ago,
and has continued to defy labels as her career has taken her to
places she could not have predicted.
“It has been one of the
more empowering experiences I’ve had in my life, because I’ve
realized that who the Army has allowed me to be allows other people
to envision possibilities for themselves,” said Browne. “So, just
the fact that I am a black, female clergyperson, allows folks to
say, ‘This is something that I can do.’”
With no small
measure of pride, Browne recounts having been the first female
senior chaplain at base chapels in Japan, Fort Hood, Texas, and Fort
Leonard Wood.
“It’s about allowing people to see and access
the divine with different eyes,” she said.
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