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Tom Lewis, One of 'Catonsville Nine,' Dies After Life of Activism
Forty years ago next month, Tom Lewis and eight other Vietnam War protesters strode into the offices of U.S. Selective Service Board 33 in Catonsville and left a mark on history.
The "Catonsville Nine" emptied file cabinets, hauled 600 draft records into the parking lot and burned them with homemade napalm. Then they prayed and waited to be arrested.
That act of civil disobedience on May 17, 1968, inspired headlines - and more than 200 protests at draft board offices across the country. The tone of Vietnam War protests changed, becoming angrier and more intense as the war dragged on for seven more years.
Mr. Lewis' activism on behalf of peace continued through the rest of his life, ending only Friday, when he died in his sleep at his home in Worcester, Mass., at the age of 68. He might have suffered heart failure, said his brother, Don Lewis, although the medical examiner's office has not declared a cause of death.
"It was a calling for him to take a stand about what he saw wrong in the world," said Don Lewis, 72, a retired science teacher who lives in Hampstead. "It was a way of life - there were things going wrong, and he had to make a statement about it."
Tom Lewis was part of a famed group of Catholic anti-war activists led by Philip and Daniel Berrigan, both priests. The trial of the Catonsville Nine would land Mr. Lewis in prison for more than three years - and become the subject of a play and a movie.
Five of the Catonsville Nine are still living - Daniel Berrigan, Thomas and Marjorie Melville, John Hogan and George Mische.
Tom Lewis had been scheduled to appear in Baltimore on May 8 at a 40th-anniversary commemoration that is to feature a movie titled Investigation of a Flame by Lynne Sachs at the Creative Alliance at the Patterson in Highlandtown.
Despite Mr. Lewis' death, the event will go on, said Megan Hamilton, an organizer of the Creative Alliance.
"The Catonsville Nine took everything one step further, and they radicalized the anti-war movement in America. It went from a peaceful, wholly nonviolent movement to actually destroying the machinery of the war machine," she said.
Mr. Lewis was also a member of the "Baltimore Four," a group that poured blood on draft records at a city Selective Service office in October 1967.
He continued his activism for four decades, even after he moved to Massachusetts in the 1970s. He picketed the White House recently to express opposition to the Iraq war, and he was arrested in 2005 outside the Sudanese Embassy in Washington in a protest against genocide in Darfur.
"His commitment to justice and peace flowed out of his love and art, and began with civil rights, continued with opposition to the Vietnam War, and the nuclear arms race, and the current U.S. war in Iraq," said a longtime friend, Scott Schaeffer-Duffy.
Tom Lewis was also a painter whose art portrayed his belief in peace and justice. "There are a lot of good artists, but there aren't a lot of truthful artists - and he was one of them," said Brendan Walsh, a lifelong friend and founder of the Viva House soup kitchen in Baltimore. "He combined his power as an artist and his power as a human against the forces of death."
In one of Mr. Lewis' black and white etchings, called Ghetto, a Christ figure hangs between fire escapes. In another work, Crucifixion Triptych, a cross appears to double as a black nuclear explosion crucifying mankind, according to a story in The Sun about Mr. Lewis' work.
His fellow Catonsville Nine protester, Daniel Berrigan, who was also imprisoned in the incident, wrote poetry about Tom Lewis' paintings. One poem about Crucifixion Triptych included the words "image of hell/image of our landscape/the hell we hammer/on the face of fair creation."
Elizabeth McAlister, Philip Berrigan's widow and a friend of Mr. Lewis for 40 years, said he thought it was tragic that the United States launched the Iraq war after all the errors of Vietnam. "It's more of the same," Ms. McAlister said of the two wars. "He was strongly opposed to [the invasion of Iraq], he grieved over it, like we had learned nothing from all the death and destruction in Vietnam."
Mr. Lewis was born on St. Patrick's Day in 1940, one of four children of a manager with the National Biscuit Co. (later Nabisco). The family moved several times as the father switched positions within the firm, going from Uniontown, Pa., to Cambridge, Mass., to Philadelphia, Louisville and then Baltimore.
Tom Lewis arrived here at about age 17 and graduated from Mount St. Joseph High School in 1958. He worked on a Greek freighter and went to Europe for almost a year to study drawing.
He was attracted to the protest movement in 1965 when he went to the Gwynn Oak amusement park in Baltimore to sketch civil rights demonstrators and found himself standing in a crowd that began stoning them. "He joined the protesters and never looked back," according to a profile of him in The Sun.
After spending three years at a federal penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pa., for burning draft records, Mr. Lewis moved to Massachusetts in the mid-1970s. There he devoted himself to painting, and his work was exhibited in New York, Baltimore and Boston.
He was married for more than a decade to Andrea Borbely. They divorced about five years ago.
Funeral arrangements are incomplete. The commemoration of the Catonsville Nine will be held at 7:30 p.m. May 8 at the Creative Alliance at The Patterson, 3134 Eastern Ave. in Baltimore.
Besides his brother, Mr. Lewis is survived by a 16-year-old daughter, Nora Lewis-Borbely of Springfield, Mo.; his mother, Pauline Lewis of Baltimore County; another brother, John Lewis of Livermore, Calif., and a sister, Paula Scheye of Baltimore County.
Copyright © 2008, The Baltimore Sun

19 Comments so far
Show AllIt will have to be the similiarly sublime courage exhibited by these true patriots...on a grand scale.. to put a dent in the horrific morass we are sinking into today!
How unfortunate for the war hero,Tom Lewis ( yes, I said war hero! ) to pass away when we desperately need him.
Looking at the photograph of "the Catonsville Nine," wouldn't it be a godsend for the United States ( and the world ) if these nine brave, courageous men and women sat on the Supreme Court instead of the reactionary fascists ( even the so-called "liberal ones ) ?
May Tom rest in peace. I send my silent condolence to his Family and close Friends.
WernerS, I agree with you.
I watched the film "Trial of the Catonsville Nine" two or three years ago and have my own copy. Based on the play, with the same name, written by Daniel Berrigan it is one of the most powerful and provocative works on the anti-war/pro-peace sentiments I have ever come across. Understanding the American war in Vietnam became far more clear and concrete to me after watching the nine explain how and why they had to speak out and take actions to bring the madness into public view.
We need more acts of courage like that today! Bring back the draft!!!! That will inspire courage I am certain!
We will always remember!
Peace!
And when they call his name the response will be:
PRESENT!
Tomorrow I will be attending a meeting in Buffalo featuring a talk by George Mische. I will be looking forward to it and I am sad to hear of this death.
The Catonsville action was effective because the news media, sympathetic or not, noted the newsworthiness of this action and spread the news of the action all over the US and the world.
But today, the media has gotten smarter - simple newsworthiness has been replaced with whether covering the event serves elite interests or not. Publicity of such actions clearly do NOT help elite interests. The activists get arrested, tried and sentenced to long prison terms, and down the memory hole they go.
Rest in PEACE, Tom Lewis.
freethinker68 April 6th, 2008 2:39 pm
"Bring back the draft!!!! That will inspire courage I am certain!"
freethinker,
The draft will bring people back to "reality". Once faced with reality, they will find the courage to question the "alleged" authorities in this country and finally demand the truth!
Tom Lewis was a quiet hero. While he was a key member of the original nonviolent draft board raiders of the 60s, he was also a member of the Prince of Peace Plowshares:
http://underground.musenet.org:8080/~bkort/plowshares/Ezekiel.html
Tom's artwork and his nonviolent resistance are part of his legacy that will long survive his body.
Bringing back the draft is an easy answer but an incorrect one. A draft is involuntary servitude. Wishing for a draft in order to activate the moribund morality of U.S. citizenry is like wishing for more dead Iraqi babies in order to activate more insurgency there. Wishing for more catastrophe and bad behavior because we don't have the ethical IQ to act now is not a helpful fantasy.
Part of the reason the Catonsville Nine were so effective is that they were clearly and completely nonviolent and careful to not risk anyone else as they did the necessary property damage. Moreover, they were accountable. They paid the price with dignity and nonviolence. They didn't smash and dash and proclaim themselves the vanguard. America looked up to them so sincerely that a sentencing judge called Phil B the "conscience of a generation." Tom Lewis was too.
Journey well, Tom. We here at Whitefeather Catholic Worker lit a novena for you as soon as we heard of your crossing from Jonah House.
We now have the Holy Name Six in Chicago carrying on the Catonsville Nine's legacy. Support them and hopefully we'll hear of dropped charges. Different circumstances, same cause. Celebrate their commitment and petition for their release.
On 4/10/06 at Cornell University, Father Daniel Berrigan said, "Commanding 'kill your enemies' stands the Bible on its head....once wars are launched, we are urged to become realists. The word of God might apply elsewhere and elsewhen....love and enemies cannot coexist any more than ice and fire; fire melts the ice or ice puts out the fire...The enemy is re-born by the power of love. The enemy becomes a former enemy...Not only the opponent undergoes transformation. It is myself as well. I was the enemy of my enemy...a definition of Hell."
Berrigan spoke at the time in support of the St.Patrick's 4, who poured blood on a flag at a recruiting center. St. Patrick's Day, the date of Tom Lewis' birth.
My professor grandfather was a religious pacifist from WWI to the Vietnam (SE Asian) War.
He had a family of nine children.
During each of our major 20th c. wars, he publically spoke against them. Of course, he and eventually his adult kids were harassed by the FBI. Additionally, he was fired from whatever academic job he was holding.
(After each firing, he would eventually get a professorship at a religious college located in the sticks; of course, his pay plummeted.)
Unfortunately, many of his children either married men employed in, or got jobs themselves in the military-corporate complex.
In fact, my father dropped napalm on the Ho Chi Mihn trail during the late-60s. He was the son-in-law of the above professor. In fact, almost all HIS German-American relatives were "sewer" socialists in St. Louis and strong UAW union men the first half of the 20th c.
Becoming the world's leading "have" nation came/comes at a great price: human and individual underdevelopment.
Although I never knew Tom Lewis, I was impressed with his commitment to peace, justice and civil rights.
When one compares his accomplishments in those areas w/ the famous late actor "Moses" Heston, Lewis, IMHO, was the "real deal."
I mention this because I feel that Heston's involvement in those areas was mostly a product of hyperbole and "writer's license;" Lewis's involvement, on the other hand, WAS authentic and organic.
Another thing, much ado was made of how brave Heston was "for putting himself on the line" Well how brave can it be for an famous actor who took part in splashy media covered protests surrounded by a largre bevy of supporters and admirers?
Compared to Heston's chickensh*t stance, Lewis had "balls!" Unlike Heston, Lewis was a real hombre who went the distance for his beliefs, took his punishment and did his time.
Lewis was, in a sense, a`soldier' for the truth.
Sad to hear of Mr. Lewis's death. The actions of the Berrigans, the Catonsville nine, and others have led to a growing movement. There are Catholic Worker houses across the country and many Plowshares actions have happened and will continue to happen. These actions get coverage and bring people an awareness of the evil of a militarized society where poverty and violence are insuperable from imperialism and greed. The struggle continues.
Dissent is the highest form of patriotism.
Exactly what coverage do plowshares actions get since Catonsville?
I could prabably ask everyone in my home town about King of Prussia, Trident, the Maryland A-10 plowshares, Trident III, Shannon Airport etc. I would probably find only a few dozen people who would even know what 'Plowshares action" means - and one of them (Molly Rush) being a member of the king of Prussia Eight.
I understand how these Catholic Workers' faith compels them to perform such actions, but even if such actions were happening on a daily basis, they whould be ineffective under our current media system.
Maybe we should consider plowshares actions directed at media outlets (especially NPR) rather than military facilities.
How's this possible? We lost a big one. The gaping void left by Tom's passing will never be filled. But in our grief, may we at least try, and deepen our committment to the pursuit of peace.
We need a very active effort to shut down military recruiting for our ongoing occupation of Iraq and possible invasion of Iran. The only way to stop our military adventurism is to deny them the bodies necessary to conduct it. We need to track when and where military recruiters are going to campuses to lie to students about all of the phantom benefits of joining the military, benefits that the majority of recruits will never see. We need to dog these recruiters every day possible and drive them back to their store front offices and then picket those places as often as possible. We need to make volunteering for military service undesirable. This is the ONLY way we will shut down our fascist government and their warmongering.
"STOP THE WAR - DON'T ENLIST!"
Ditto on in the midst of dealing with this loss, trying to deepen our commitment to a world without war, nuclear weapons and oppression.
I am saddened to learn of this courageous man's passing. When I was in graduate school, thirty years ago, I wrote my thesis on the Catholic Anti-War Movement with specific reference to the Catonsville Nine. They were the inspiration for my last thirty year's involvement with the Catholic Worker Movement, the nuclear freeze of the early 80's, peace events in general and more recently Pax Christi and Catholics to End the War in Iraq. How tragic that Daniel Berrigan's reference to Vietnam as "the land of burning children" can be applied to the innocent Iraqis today. What a morally bankrupt country we are.