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Daniel Berrigan: Forty Years After Catonsville
Forty years ago this month, Father Daniel Berrigan walked into a draft board in Catonsville, Maryland, with eight other activists, including his brother, Father Philip Berrigan, and removed draft files of young men who were about to be sent to Vietnam. The group carted the files outside and burned them in two garbage cans with homemade napalm. Father Berrigan was tried, found guilty, spent four months as a fugitive from the FBI, was apprehended and sent to prison for eighteen months.
Father Berrigan, unbowed at 87, sat primly in a straight-backed wooden chair as the afternoon light slanted in from the windows, illuminating the collection of watercolors and religious icons on the walls of his small apartment in upper Manhattan. Time and age have not blunted this Jesuit priest's fierce critique of the American empire or his radical interpretation of the Gospels. There would be many more "actions" and jail time after his release from prison, including a sentence for his illegal entry into a General Electric nuclear missile plant in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, on September 9, 1980, with seven other activists, where they poured blood and hammered on Mark 12A warheads.
"This is the worst time of my long life," he said with a sigh. "I have never had such meager expectations of the system. I find those expectations verified in the paucity and shallowness every day I live."
The trial of the Catonsville Nine altered resistance to the Vietnam War, moving activists from street protests to repeated acts of civil disobedience, including the burning of draft cards. It also signaled a seismic shift within the Catholic Church, propelling radical priests and nuns led by the Berrigans, Thomas Merton and Dorothy Day to the center of a religiously inspired social movement that challenged not only church and state authority but the myths Americans used to define themselves.
"Dorothy Day taught me more than all the theologians," he says of the founder of the pacifist Catholic Worker Movement. "She awakened me to connections I had not thought of or been instructed in, the equation of human misery and poverty and warmaking. She had a basic hope that God created the world with enough for everyone, but there was not enough for everyone and warmaking."
Berrigan's relationship with Day led to a close friendship with the writer and Trappist monk Thomas Merton. Merton's "great contribution to the religious left," he says, "was to gather us for days of prayer and discussion of the sacramental life. He told us, 'Stay with these, stay with these, these are your tools and discipline and these are your strengths.'"
"He could be very tough," Berrigan says of Merton. "He said you are not going to survive America unless you are faithful to your discipline and tradition."
Merton's death at 53 a few weeks after the trial left Berrigan "deaf and dumb." "I could not talk or write about him for ten years," he says. "He was with me when I was shipped out of the country, and he was with me in jail. He was with his friend."
The distractions of the world are for him just that -- distractions. The current election campaign does not preoccupy him, and he quotes his brother, Philip, who said that "if voting made any difference it would be illegal." He is critical off the Catholic Church, saying that Pope John Paul II, who marginalized and silenced radical priests and nuns like the Berrigans, "introduced Soviet methods into the Catholic Church," including "anonymous delations, removals, scrutiny and secrecy and the placing of company men into positions of great power." He estimates that "it is going to take at least a generation to undo appointments of John Paul II." He despairs of universities, especially Boston College's decision last year to give an honorary degree to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and this year to invite the new Attorney General, Michael Mukasey, to address the law school. "It is a portrayal of shabby lives as exemplary and to be honored," he says. And he has little time for secular radicals who stood with him forty years ago but who have now "disappeared into the matrix of money and regular jobs or gave up on their initial discipline."
"The short fuse of the American left is typical of the highs and lows of American emotional life," he says. "It is very rare to sustain a movement in recognizable form without a spiritual base."
All empires, Berrigan cautions, rise and fall. It is the religious and moral values of compassion, simplicity and justice that endure and alone demand fealty. The current decline of American power is part of the cycle of human existence, although he says ruefully, "the tragedy across the globe is that we are pulling down so many others. We are not falling gracefully. Many, many people are paying with their lives for this."
"The fall of the towers [on 9/11] was symbolic as well as actual," he adds. "We are bringing ourselves down by a willful blindness that is astonishing."
Berrigan argues that those who seek a just society, who seek to defy war and violence, who decry the assault of globalization and degradation of the environment, who care about the plight of the poor, should stop worrying about the practical, short-term effects of their resistance.
"The good is to be done because it is good, not because it goes somewhere," he says. "I believe if it is done in that spirit it will go somewhere, but I don't know where. I don't think the Bible grants us to know where goodness goes, what direction, what force. I have never been seriously interested in the outcome. I was interested in trying to do it humanly and carefully and nonviolently and let it go."
"We have not lost everything because we lost today," he adds.
A resistance movement, Berrigan says, cannot survive without the spiritual core pounded into him by Merton. He is sustained, he said, by the Eucharist, his faith and his religious community.
"The reason we are celebrating forty years of Catonsville and we are still at it, those of us who are still living -- the reason people went through all this and came out on their feet -- was due to a spiritual discipline that went on for months before these actions took place," he says. "We went into situations in court and in prison and in the underground that could easily have destroyed us and that did destroy others who did not have our preparation."
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22 Comments so far
Show AllFr. Daniel Berrigan is a man and a priest who knows where the Catholic Church should be in the 21st Century. So few others do.
Berrigan quote: "It is the religious and moral values of compassion, simplicity and justice that endure and alone demand fealty". I think Mahatma Ghandi and Martin Luther King Jr. among others; have proved this to be true.
1) "The trial of the Catonsville Nine altered resistance to the Vietnam War, moving activists from street protests to repeated acts of civil disobedience, including the burning of draft cards."
This is incorrect. Massive street protests continued well after 1968 and were an effective tactic in helping to eventually end the worst of the US violence in Southeast Asia.
In addition to street protests and acts of civil disobedience, the resistance within the military grew over time through fraggings, refusals to obey orders and outright mutinies in some small units. Eventually, many parts of US society and people around the world were contributing to the resistance in numerous ways.
Most importantly, it was the resistance of the Vietnamese and other Southeast Asians themselves, who had no choice but to violently defend themselves, that stopped the occupations at tremendous and horrible costs.
2) "He is critical of the Catholic Church, saying that Pope John Paul II, who marginalized and silenced radical priests and nuns like the Berrigans, 'introduced Soviet methods into the Catholic Church,' including "anonymous delations, removals, scrutiny and secrecy and the placing of company men into positions of great power." YES.
3) "It is the religious and moral values of compassion, simplicity and justice that endure and alone demand fealty." Compassion, simplicity and justice are human values and potentials within all of us and have nothing to do with religion.
4) "Berrigan argues that those who seek a just society, who seek to defy war and violence, who decry the assault of globalization and degradation of the environment, who care about the plight of the poor, should stop worrying about the practical, short-term effects of their resistance."
Those who disregard the practical short-term effects of their resistance choose to ignore a whole lot of suffering in front of their faces. I don't think that Berrigan and the Worker Movement actually do that. They are by no means dilletantes. They are often noted for their effective work in really tough communities.
I don't think that Hedges supports such a statement. He often takes courageous short-term stances in his published work. I can't understand the statement.
"...should stop worrying about the practical, short-term effects of their resistance" - not 'disregard'.
It is centering in a way of being that sustains life. The mimetic violence of domination arises out of a chosen way of being.
Violence and the perpetuation of poverty start first in a spiritual perspective informing the way one thinks and subsequently acts according to that way thinking.
A long time ago, when it became hard to justify the faith in the church I knew, there were two brothers, we called them radical priests, who spoke truth to power and stood for the truth of their faith.
Their Jesus was the Jesus of the poor and the peacemakers, come what may. Such courage shown for others sake came from their faith and the sincerity of their good souls.
They were our priests. Ours. They were on freedom marches, against an obscene war and the liberation of the poor.
Our priests.
sigh...correction
...against an obscene war and for the liberation of the poor.
tj I think you have some misunderstandings about the article. I think Hedges and Berrigan would agree with this quote from Pema Chodron:
"Pema Chödrön: Personally, I work with aspiration. The classic aspiration is "Sentient beings are numberless. I vow to save them." That means that I aspire to end suffering for all creatures, but at the same time I stay with the immediacy of the situation I'm in. I give up both the hope that something is going to change and the fear that it isn't. We may long to end suffering but somehow it paralyzes us if we're too goal-oriented. Do you see the balance there? It's like the teaching that Don Juan gave to Carlos Castenada, where he says that you do everything with your whole heart, as if nothing else matters. You do it impeccably and with your whole heart, but all the while knowing that it actually doesn't matter at all."
This quote is from a great discussion between Chodron and Bell Hooks. You can read it here:
http://www.shambhalasun.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2043&Itemid=244
Reading the article and the quote from Pema reminds me of something my sister told me years ago. We had gone to hear the Berrigan brothers speak in Minneapolis where we lived and worked as nurses at the VA hospital. A few days later she was at work and trying to be a good nurse for her patients, and when she entered a six bed ward she suddenly had one of those mystical moments that we have from time to time. The room was transformed and the patients were like lumps on the beds and she suddenly knew that it didn't matter what she did...it just didn't matter...everything was exactly as it was meant to be and it just didn't matter... Then after the moment had passed she went back to being the very best nurse she could, because it really does matter...
Thank You, gandydancer, for the multiple insights...they really do matter.
FYI, my mom was a nurse. A white, working-class woman, the first of her immigrant family to get beyond a high school education, she became an activist in the ant-war and civil rights movements in the Chicago area. She was fired from more than one job for her activism and had her car windshield smashed in the infamous Marquette Park (Chicago Lawn) race riots. She was a believing Catholic, a self-proclaimed socialist and a hard-working nurse who did informal hospice for a number of our neighbors and her own father. Whatever I got from her, and there are alot of things good and bad that come with the mother/child package, is that it really does matter...
Why thank you tj! Sounds like you were blessed with a very, very special mother.
I quit the church back in the Vietnam protest years when I began to feel that it was no different than any other corporation. My sister stayed with it for awhile in one of the groups interested in trying to bring change, but she eventually quit in disgust as well.
I searched for spirituality, reading the words of Jesus, but my understanding was limited to the idea that I should just try very hard to be a better person. I think it was only a few years later when I learned about Buddhism that I could really better understand the teachings of Jesus.
These days, at the age I am now, I'd say that the search for spirituality is the search for self. You go inward to find all the angels and demons, and "God".
While I have tremendous respect for what Father Berrigan has done this:
"And he has little time for secular radicals who stood with him forty years ago but who have now "disappeared into the matrix of money and regular jobs or gave up on their initial discipline."
is just slander. I hope he would have the courage to say that to Noam Chomsky or Amy Goodman to their faces. If we are to win against the oligarchy we need more clear thinking, more empiricism, and to run a tighter ship, not more la,la, la, "spirituality."
As I read this thread about a good and courageous man, Daniel Berrigan, the marching band at the junior high school nearby started practicing for the upcoming Memorial Day parade. And what are they practicing? Military music! - The Marine Corps anthem ("From the halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli...") and the Air Force anthem and the Army anthem and...
What are we teaching our children?
The irony astounds.
A timely article for timeless themes as evidenced by the delightful thread of responses.
We might file them under "Koans for Christians".
I was at the Dan Berrigan Festival in April 1970 in Ithaca NY. Shortly before the festival, Berrigan was ordered to federal prison, and did not show up, choosing to go underground. Everyone, including the FBI of course, wondered if he would appear at the festival, which had an audience approaching 15,000++. Well, he did smuggle himself in, wearing a motorcycle helmet (I photographed him). He went onstage, removed the helmet and was wildly cheered. After he spoke, the Bread and Puppet theater, with it's giant 10 foot puppets (with a person inside each puppet) did a big dance through the audience, onto the stage, and created a spiral circle around the people on stage. Berrigan slipped inside one of the puppets and left the arena, dancing out with the rest of the troupe. The FBI which was all through the audience, completely missed the escape. Berrigan remained on the 10 Most Wanted list for months afterward.
It was an amazing event.
Both brothers built their life around their beliefs and acted on them even though they are/were anathema in the religion that ordained them. That said, IF either of them had ever posed ANY threat either to the RC or the American government, they would have been executed. They didn't, they weren't. Others did and were. Or falsely imprisoned, or ritually defamed and destroyed.
"I don't think the Bible grants us to know where goodness goes, what direction, what force.I have never been seriously interested in the outcome."
And here we are. Goodness and the Bible. Flat-earth genocidal tribe of patriarchal killer nomads, their blood god, combined with the fanciful and saccharine RC theology. Three days with whips and Roman thugs were NOTHING, NOTHING. We do worse to men women and children every single day, here and around the globe. In six months the Nazarene would have been shitting himself and gibbering in the corner of his torture cell. We've got bent shrinks and bent Drs. and brain drugs. He wouldn't recognize his own mother after we got through with him. America.
No interest in the outcome. He did it to do it, so he can go to Heaven and be with his baby Jesus. Priests. Very much like rolling prayer beads through your hands for 40 years. No outcome, no effect, nice discipline. Is that why you made a family? Just "to do it" didn't care how it turned out? Is that how you feel about your life? So it doesn't matter if you starve, you're just doing it? No outcomes?
But he'll pray for you on your way to the camps and I'm SURE Jesus will be there AFTER the monsters sodomize and do the vivesection on your children. That's how religion doesn't work. Sorry.
You do what you do, you get what you get, but most of us at least try to make some difference to SOMETHING. Berrigan don't care. Doesn't matter if it NEVER makes any difference at all (in fact his actions didn't). Then why do it? 'Cause you want to? If so, head on, just be sure and let anybody with you know, that you DON'T care if anything you do has any positive impact. They need to know that. No outcomes, just goodness and light, flowers and sunshine. I'll have mine in garlic sauce with a delicate claret.
Pieces of 9.
iammyself May 22nd, 2008 8:37 am -- "The irony astounds."
CD readers get the irony. 99% of the population will not. It is such a cliche to ask, but, how do we raise consciousness?
Kent Shaw
It troubles me that now, in his twilight years, is the worst time in this righteous man's life. I mean, he is wiser, braver, and smarter than I'll ever be, but if his days are lived "in paucity and shallowness", what hope does this give to me? I'm having a hard time in doing good because it is good, and letting go of the outcome. I want some reward for it in this life. I may have a lot in common with the secular radicals who disappeared because of their lack of faith in anything other than measurable outcomes. This article and thread is giving me a lot to chew on. A lot of great posts above. A really important discussion happening here.
"The Trouble With Our State"
By Daniel Berrigan
The trouble with our state
was not civil disobedience
which in any case was hesitant and rare.
Civil disobedience was rare as kidney stone
No, rarer; it was disappearing like immigrant's disease.
You've heard of a war on cancer?
There is no war like the plague of media
There is no war like routine
There is no war like 3 square meals
There is no war like a prevailing wind.
It flows softly; whispers
don't rock the boat!
The sails obey, the ship of state rolls on.
The trouble with our state
–we learned only afterward
when the dead resembled the living who resembled the dead
and civil virtue shone like paint on tin
and tin citizens and tin soldiers marched to the common whip
–our trouble
the trouble with our state
with our state of soul
our state of siege–
was
Civil
Obedience.
This poem represents what all the status quo Dems will never get. And why I will be voting for Nader again.
In response to mrraven's interesting post..
In this article Berrigan slams sixties radicals who became rank and file corporate dems.
Berrigan's implication here is that faith is able to sustain hope even in the absence of measurable progress.
Why did sixties radicals take so quickly to the things they hated? I would say that in many ways it was a rational decision based on their own best interests. The revolution wasn't going anywhere...so what do you do?
Folks like Chomsky and Goodman uphold strong left-wing values and are beacons of empiricism, reason and clear thinking (whatever that means) but underneath the strength of their intellects and rhetorical abilities these folks have strong convictions that cannot be reduced to reason. Like Berrigan they yearn for justice in a time when they have to confront a relatively week radical/progressive tide and some truly frightening times.
The left is better off not drawing distinctions between "la la la spirituality" and rationality. We've got to see that rationality is tied to power and authority in much the same way as religion is.
We must critique power and leave behind the ruse that we must choose between rationality and spirituality or enlightenment and counter-enlightenment.
I think the real question of this article is the question of how we go about REALLY changing the world when progress seems so slow and our goals so far away?
Many won't get off their lazy ass to protest against injustices without motivation. And motivation (apart from self-gratification of just doing good for the sake of doing good or not being concerned about the outcome) for many comes from knowing that their actions coupled with thousands of others actually can make a difference.
Some of my friends ask why I bother to be an activist - "why bother, it doesn't make any difference anyway" they say, and I point out that if it wasn't for MLK and the black movement, if it wasn't for the likes of Susan B. Anthony, Betty Friedan, etc. and the women's movement, if it wasn't for the thousands upon thousands protesting againt the Vietnam war, no changes would have happened. Many need this kind of motivation - a goal and a vision - to put forth time and energy in fighting for what is right.
Tell me luckylefty (who is not of the left but pretends to be)... what do you do for those you claim to have such anger about their treatment?
Did you make several peaceful protests which together, landed you in jail for YEARS (the Berrigans went to jail for others sake not their own)? Nah... Rev. Dan didn't care huh? But you do right LL?
The phrase about not caring about the outcome of having done good? Sigh. LL the good do good... for the sake of doing good. Not for the acclaim, nor credit nor for thanks etc... that is what he meant.
People have asked whether some peace action (and the resultant prison time)the Berrigans did was worth it to them. What did it accomplish and WAS IT WORTH IT.
As Rev. Dan explained... he did it to do good without CONCERN as to whether or not it would 'matter'. The point was NOT to do nothing... yeah when people die and suffer to do nothing ...that is indeed what matters.
The Berrigans weren't concerned about whether the good they did and the huge sacrifice they gave of their lives, mattered. Doing good mattered ...not whether it was would come to be 'worth it'.
Luckylefty... they were concerned about how much doing nothing mattered.
So luckylefty ...for all your ever present anger which usually mocks people's concerns for others... when will you stand in nonviolent protest ...waiting for the fbi or police, after a symbolic action (like pouring blood on files or hammering a missle silo), knowing it will result in jail time?
When luckylefty? Or does doing NOTHING ... matter to you?
The Berrigans were unconcerned about whether good mattered...
they were most concerned that doing nothing...mattered.
Ask yourself what the Berrigans thought they'd get anything out of it? As Dan said... he was never concerned about what he got from doing good or where it would lead... for him it was about about what he gave...the doing ...not the getting. I'll say this ...they gave us courage and much respect for their faith.
We all should have such courage to do good whatever it's result because if nothing else LL...
doing nothing certainly matters because the things you hate like suffering and injustice...just keep on going on...
When good souls do nothing. That is what matters.
If you give a starving homeless man something to eat... would you be angry LL if he didn't say thank you?
Or would you say that doesn't matter...only giving him some food mattered.
Not the thanks nor credit nor anything else...does matter. Just the food... and the good that was done.
I wouldn't be surprised if he is still bopping about inspiring people to this day...old coot that he is...Hi Dan!)
Do you know of the Berrigans LL? He was unconcerned whether you would...
did his actions matter?
Do you know of the Berrigans Luckylefty...
I guess then ...matter they did. Huh? LL?
"
is just slander. I hope he would have the courage to say that to Noam Chomsky or Amy Goodman to their faces. If we are to win against the oligarchy we need more clear thinking, more empiricism, and to run a tighter ship, not more la,la, la, "spirituality.""
This is a total straw man argument. He didn't say this about Chomsky or Goodman; I can't speak for Berrigan, but when I read his words I think of people like Jerry Rubin, who essentially sold out in the 80s. But it seems equally obvious to me that Chomsky and Goodman, while perhaps not nominally religious, have core values that keep them going that have nothing to do with "empiricism." In the eyes of many, Chomsky, who has worked with Quaker groups and is very complementary of them, has said many things which transcend mere "empiricism" and "rationality." A "rational" Chomsky might decide, for example, that he could make more money and keep his friends if he didn't criticize the U.S. government. A completely "rational" Amy Goodman would probably not work for less money for a Pacifica station when she could probably make more money toeing the corporate media line. It was "rational" people like Kissinger who saw nothing wrong with bombing Cambodia, and it was "raitonal" people who thought it was wise to drop the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.