 My name is Herbert Miller, and the first time I saw Father Capen was when I was laying in a ditch wounded. Well, Herbert Miller was a man that was in Father Capen's unit, and he and other men were trying to escape, were trying to make it back to safety. This soldier come down through and he stood over, he'd go to shoot me, had the gun pointed at my head, and he said he just closed his eyes and he said he knew the next thing that he was gonna feel was a bullet going into his head. I looked and this American come across the road, and he said he saw an American soldier pushing this North Korean out of the way. It was Father Capen, he pushed the man aside, why that soldier never shot him, I'll never know. Army chaplain A.M.L. Capen will posthumously receive the Medal of Honor for his acts of valor during the Korean War. I think if he were asked whether or not he wanted this award he would have probably said heck no, that he didn't deserve the award. He'd be humbled, he'd tell you point blank I don't deserve it, but that's the kind of person he was. But the men that were in the prison camp have been working for this Father Capen to receive this award literally from the time they got out of the prison camp. I wonder why it took so long, the man should have got it right off the bat for the things he did. From the stories shared by his fellow soldiers, to the memorials at the church where his sermons began, Chaplain Capen's selfless service is eternal. He was there in the prison camp for about six or seven months before he passed away. Two and a half years later, when the rest of the men were freed from the prison camp, they were still speaking of Father Capen and how he had touched their lives. How could you forget somebody that saved your life? I was looking right up the barrel at gun. He was known as a soldier's chaplain. He wasn't a boss. He was one of us. We found out later that he died and we knew they'd killed him.