Emil Kapaun graduated from Pilson High School in 1930, and in 1936 he graduated from Conception Abbey seminary college in Conception, Missouri, and then from Kenrick Theological Seminary in Saint Louis, in 1940. He was ordained a Catholic priest of the Diocese of Wichita, Kansas, and returned home to Pilsen to celebrate his first Mass. In 1943, he was appointed auxiliary chaplain at the Herington Army Airfield near Herington, Kansas. In 1944 he entered the ArmyÕs Chaplain School at Fort Devens, Massachusetts, and in October he began his military chaplaincy at Camp Wheeler Georgia. In March 1945, he deployed for duty in World War II as a chaplain in the China-Burma-India Theater of Operations. After returning home he was promoted to captain in 1946, but was released from active duty later in the year. Under the G.I. Bill, he earned a Master of Arts degree at Catholic University of America in 1948, and returned to active duty in September at Fort Bliss, Texas. In December 1949, he was deployed to Japan to serve as a chaplain for U.S. troops that were part of the post-war reconstruction of Japan, and made the landing with them in South Korea at the beginning of the Korean War. In 2012 his DSC was upgraded to the Medal of Honor, and in 2021 his remains were identified and returned for burial in his home state.