With Jon Sobrino at the SOA Protest
Thousands of us gathered this weekend for the annual funeral procession at Fort Benning in Columbus, Georgia, there to call for the close of the notorious "School of Assassins," where the U.S. trains the Latin American death squads that, over the past few decades, have killed hundreds of thousands. We gather there each year around November 16th -- it's the anniversary of the massacre of the Jesuits in El Salvador. This year, the sole Jesuit to have survived the attack, liberation theologian Jon Sobrino, was our guest of honor.
Born and raised in Spain, Jon moved to El Salvador in 1958 and has lived there ever since, teaching theology at the UCA, the Jesuit university.
He directs the Oscar Romero Pastoral Center, located on the site where the six Jesuits were assassinated. His many books include Christology at the Crossroads, Companions of Jesus, Jesus the Liberator, Christ the Liberator, Spirituality of Liberation, The True Church and the Poor, and Archbishop Romero. Reprimanded by the Vatican, he carries on urging us through his books to side with the poor, to defend and advocate for them, and in the process, to understand that God places them at the heart of reality.
On Friday night, in the packed ballroom of the Howard Johnson Hotel, Pax Christi awarded him with its annual book award for his latest, No Salvation Outside the Poor: Prophetic-Utopian Essays (Orbis Books).
The book speaks poignantly about our Jesuit brother Ignacio Ellacuria, the theologian and university president killed in 1989.
"When Ellacuria 'took hold of the reality' of the Third World, he grasped it in an important way as a 'crucified people'... Ellacuria said that the crucified people are one of the main features of our time, not merely something factual that we may consider, but something central that must be considered, without which we do not have a full grasp of reality."
Sobrino made several addresses in Columbus.
"I feel joy being here with you all. We have to say No to the SOA, but that is not my last word. We also have to say Yes to the love of great people -- the six Jesuit martyrs, their co-workers Julia Elba and Celina, the four churchwomen, Archbishop Romero and all the martyrs.
. . .
"They were always on the side of the oppressed, even when it was dangerous. To have known that great love is to say Yes. Behind the hatred on this planet, there is great love, which makes people work for justice. So the last word is not No but Yes.
. . .
"There is a way out of this mess, a way which is way beyond elections. There have been thousands of elections but the world is still worse. Let's not look for salvation outside the poor.
. . .
"What happens to us when we exclude millions of poor people from existence? The most forgotten crisis in the world is the Congo. Four million people have been killed there in the last few years. This is a failure of humanity. Hunger can be eliminated, but we don't want to do it. Every few seconds a child dies. We should say instead, every few seconds a child is assassinated.
. . .
"We need to remember the martyrs. The martyrs were people of great love and love is a rare commodity in the world. They practiced compassion to the end. We need to thank them, because they are saving us from our total inhumanity."
Hearing his words took me back some twenty-three years, 1985, to El Salvador, where I lived one long summer. We were a small group of U.S. Jesuit scholastics, full of ideals, a little wet behind the ears. The day before we were assigned work at refugee camps in war zones, we sat awestruck before Sobrino as he admonished us. "You will be overwhelmed with sorrow," he said, "but you will learn joy, because the poor will teach you how to be human."
He's been saying it all his life, teaching that the poor can redeem our humanity. If only we defend them, walk with them, share our lives with them, become one with them. They will convert us.
Jon survived the attack those many years ago -- he happened on that day to be in Bangkok. In my own book, A Persistent Peace, my autobiography, I relate our welcoming him in the San Francisco, just a few days after the others had died.
We organized and got out the word, and the Monday after the massacre, a thousand gathered around San Francisco's Federal Building and there demanded an end to military aid to the death squads of El Salvador. Arrests were made -- 128 all told, including eighteen other Jesuit priests. A matter to me of some satisfaction.
Similarly, this past Sunday morning, thousands gathered at the gates of Fort Benning. As Fr. Roy Bourgeois, founder of the SOA Watch movement, addressed the crowd, six people walked onto the base, a matter of trespass in the eyes of officials. The six were arrested.
The courage of the six filled us with hope, their arrests made us grieve, as we grieved all those killed by the SOA. It was, alas, a compounded grief. For news had come down from the Vatican that Fr. Roy, after 36 years with the Maryknoll Order, has been excommunicated. A consequence of his support for the ordination of women.
The pain converged -- on one hand, for SOA victims, on the other, for Father Roy. But our spirits did not go under. The purpose of our gathering did not fall to the confusion. Said Roy: Keep pushing the government to close the SOA. Do what you can in the months ahead. Shut down the school and next year we can stay home-or have a party.
The weekend over finally, Jon Sobrino took my arm and pulled me aside. The weekend amazed him, he said. He had no idea there were so many North Americans siding with the crucified people of Central and South America. "This is such a good thing!" he said with joy and wonder. "I'm so glad I came."
We're glad he came, too. And we're grateful for his faithful work to lift up the memory of the martyrs, to speak out on behalf of the suffering billions, to call us again to the conversion of the Gospel of peace and justice, to show us what it means to be human.
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11 Comments so far
Show AllJohn's article was about Jon Sobrino, S.J. who attended the "funeral" at the S.O.A.
Killing should be a non partisan issue. What is unconscionable, is that people were told that we do not support terrorists. We being the United States and as "we" say this we support training people to act like robotic death squads and do what we say we don't support.
This is the hypocrisy, of America, and Christianity. Why can't we not train people to kill, and not kill those who kill because killing is wrong? Didn't Jesus give us a parable about not killing the crop to kill the weeds? Wasn't this an analogy of evil coexisting with Good.
I'm not by any means saying that we should not close SOA and all torture institutions. I don't believe that torture should belong in any institution, or country, pray for our persecutors and praise those who suffer, as Jesus did, to keep from endorsing more violence.
Peace!
I guess this was an article for democrats to read........
The Article was about the School of the Americas, a training ground for terrorists and how one survivor of the "Evil" of that school came to talk.
In case you need a history lesson, "CIA Black Ops" will explain some of the "Evil" we have done. We are protecting many of our terrorists in Florida.
Thank you John Dear for the information and let´s all work together to stop training terrorists, funding terrorists and arming terrorists.
Thank you Jon Sobrino for your courage.
"The good thing about democrats is their diversity. The Bad thing about democrats is their diversity." Focus on the issue the SOA and training terrorists.
What about the one holy Roman Catholic Church recently 'pardoning' John Lennon for telling THE TRUTH?
All Lennon really did was point out the obvious!
What Lennon said after fundamentalist Christians in USA began burning Beatles LP's and memorabilia in 1968:
"I was pointing out that fact, in reference to England, that we meant more to kids than Jesus did or religion at that time. I wasn't knocking it or putting it down, I was just saying it for the fact."
When Lennon made the comment to a reporter that the Beatles were more popular with my generation than Jesus was, I knew he was right on.
My friends and I knew every lyric to every Beatles song, but nobody ever quoted Christ!
The rest:
http://www.wearewideawake.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1111&Itemid=212
Eileen Fleming, Author, Citizen Journalist and Founder WAWA:
http://www.wearewideawake.org/
Producer "30 Minutes With Vanunu" and "13 Minutes with Vanunu"
There are thousands of Catholics/Jesuits and others who are putting their lives on the line every day in every way with communities in Latin America being terrorized by the effects of the 'developemnt' paradigm.
This isn't just about a denomination - it is about LIVING with LEARNING to love within a paradigm that values power over life itself. Unmitigated globalized power depends on convincing people to throw the baby out with the bathwater in rejection of 'names' without learning what is behind the names.
What you soon discover is that people who are being sacrificed by the system SEE and know how the system works and are the most dedicated proponents of democracy and the sacred balances of the human journey. Socialism is not incommensurate with democracy and there are as many variables as there are situations - just no human sacrifice for profits. The point is for people to have the freedom to say no to the imposition of a failed paradigm. These are our teachers. Are we educable?
A great source for learning about what is happening to Amazonian and other peoples. Their voices are measured, peaceful, firm, and will inform you if you let them:
http://www.cimi.org.br/?system=news&eid=275
English files go back to 2004 - give yourself and others a chistmas present early and often of information.
We need to work like we have never worked bfore both here and wherever we can to support those suffering for hundreds of years what we are told are "cycles" - damn straight they are cycles - of the most hellish kind. These people see the marginalization by the profit margin at its inception.
Thank you old goat for your beautifully expressed post.
Of course, Fr. Dear says nothing about Roy Bourgeois being excommunicated for standing on the side of women and standing against the 'sin of sexism' in the churdh.
For a priest to speak, as Fr. Dear does, about the oppressed, and be, as Roy Bourgeois calls the priesthood "card carrying old boys network" who are not going to give up their own power out of the goodness of their hearts...Well, it is just hypocracy as far as I can see.
Sorry, Fr. Dear. Roy Bourgeois called for priests to stand with him and speak out against the unhealthy and hegemenous sexism of the patriarchy, and you say nothing. You are actually part of the problem. All oppression starts with the oppression of the feminine. Why not stand with a man who is doing something *truly* courageous, by standing up to your own empire of the soul? All I read here is your usual and same old story.
I am tired of those who will stand up when it doesn't threaten their own personal domain. Nothing you have done has threatened your standing within your own world of the Roman Church.
I take a back seat to no one in my criticism of the Catholic Church's myopic opposition to the ordination of women and their full inclusion in the life of the church--which is easy as a Protestant whose favourite pastors over the years have been women. But Fr. Dear clearly states, commenting on Roy Bourgeois' excommunication: "A consequence of his support for the ordination of women." Was this not enough of a statement for you?
Fr. Dear's essay focused on Jon Sobrino, a man I have been privileged to know for almost 30 years. Your criticism reminds me of a member of my dissertation committee over 3 decades ago; he spent considerable time grilling me on what I had NOT included. I had to patiently explain that his points were good, but they had nothing to do with my thesis. They would have been another dissertation. Similarly, your criticism demands another essay, which Fr. Dear may or may not want to write, but that is a separate issue.
tsmadaincanada, your points are very well taken. And I believe I am saying the same regarding John Dear, a person whose work I do respect. And I am also aware of Jon Sobrino and his censure from the vatican last year.
I do think that Fr. Dear's simply stating the fact of the excommunication is not taking a real stand in support of Fr. Bourgeois. And the silence on the sexism has been deafening from many of the liberal and 'progressive' Catholic clergy. All of the good work that they do is still coming from their own patriarchal culture and their obvious acceptance of same.
It seems that Fr. Roy has decided he can do his work without being a member of an institution that reinforces the dominance/submission paradigm that is the underpinning of the Church itself and of patriarchal societies. It really does begin with this issue. And it seems to me that one can't serve empire and justice at the same time. There is a definite dissonance going on here.
Thank you for a lucid response.
Peace.
readytotransform
Shame on you. You speak out about a subject you know nothing about. Fr John Dear is among many others who are the driving force for a changing church. You should apologise to Fr. Dear.
readytotransform - seems you didn't read the whole article before gorging yourself on the urge to criticize. The fourth paragraph from the end reads:
"The courage of the six filled us with hope, their arrests made us grieve, as we grieved all those killed by the SOA. It was, alas, a compounded grief. For news had come down from the Vatican that Fr. Roy, after 36 years with the Maryknoll Order, has been excommunicated. A consequence of his support for the ordination of women."
--------
By the way readytotransform, taking part in demonstrations DOES threaten ones own personal domain. From giving up income earning activities, risk of arrest, scorn of the masses, being blacklisted, physically attacked, etc.
Furthermore your prescription is ridiculous. Poverty and homelessness don't threaten my own personal domain. Does that mean if i act to eliminate them and take part in demonstrations related to those issues, that i am a hypocrite? Of course not.
Just get your ass out there and work to change things. Any of the billion things that need changing. Act as the opportunity arises, regardless of direct and immediate personal relevance. Act on as many issues as you have energy for... or more. So few do that the burden is huge and we often crash and burn in our personal lives - all the while being sniped at by the likes of you who microscopically examine for some small particle of our lives or words or acts or thinking that you can put down to assuage your own guilty conscience.
Now that was Classic! Nice comments