Revolutionary Haitian Priest, Gerard Jean-Juste, Presente!
Though Haitian priest Father Gerard Jean-Juste died May 27, 2009, at age 62, in Miami from a stroke and breathing problems, he remains present to millions. Justice-loving people world-wide mourn his death and celebrate his life. Pere Jean-Juste worked uncompromisingly for justice for Haitians and the poor, both in Haiti and in the U.S.
Pere Jean-Juste was a Jesus-like revolutionary. In jail and out, he preached liberation of the poor, release of prisoners, human rights for all, and a fair distribution of wealth. A big muscular man with a booming voice and a frequent deep laugh, he wore a brightly colored plastic rosary around his neck and carried another in his pocket. Jailed for nearly a year in Haiti by the U.S. supported coup government which was trying to silence him, Amnesty International called him a Prisoner of Conscience.
Jean-Juste was a scourge to the unelected coup governments of Haiti, who served at the pleasure, and usually the direction, of the U.S. government. He constantly challenged both the powers of Haiti and the U.S. to stop killing and starving and imprisoning the poor. In the U.S. he fought against government actions which deported black Haitians while welcoming Cubans and Nicaraguans and others. In Haiti he called for democracy and respect and human rights for the poor.
Pere Jean-Juste was sometimes called the most dangerous man in Haiti. That was because he was not afraid to die. His computer screen saver was a big blue picture of Mary, the mother of Jesus. "Every day I am ready to meet her." He once told me, when death threats came again. "I will not stop working for justice because of their threats. I am looking forward to heaven."
Jean-Juste was a literally a holy terror to the unelected powers of Haiti and the elected but unaccountable powers of the U.S. Every single day, in jail or out, he said Mass, read the psalms and jubilantly prayed the rosary. In Port au Prince he slept on the floor of his church, St. Claire, which provided meals to thousands of starving children and adults every week. In prison, he organized local nuns to bring him hundreds of plastic rosaries which he gave to fellow prisoners and then lead them in daily prayer.
When Pere Jean-Juste began to speak, to preach really, about justice for the poor and the wrongfully imprisoned, restless crowds drew silent. Listening to him preach was like feeling the air change before a thunderstorm sweeps in. He slowly raised his arms. He spread his powerful hands to punctuate his intensifying words. Minutes passed as the Bible and the Declaration of Human Rights and today's news were interspersed. Justice for the poor. Freedom for those in prison. Comfort for those who mourn. The thunder was rolling now. Crowds were cheering now. Human rights for everyone. Justice for Haiti. Justice for Haiti. Justice for Haiti.
To the rich, Jean-Juste preached that the man with two coats should give one to the woman with none. But, unlike most preachers, he did not stop there. Because there were many people with no coats, Pere Jean-Juste said, no one could justly claim ownership of a second coat. In fact, those who held onto second coats were actually thieves who stole from those who had no coats. In Haiti and the U.S., where there is such a huge gap between the haves and the have-nots, there was much stealing by the rich from the poor. This was revolutionary preaching.
During the day, people streamed to his church to ask for help. Mothers walked miles from Cite de Soleil to his parish to beg him to help them bury their children. Widows sought help. Families with sons in prison asked for a private word. Small packets of money and food were quietly given away. Visitors from rural Haiti, people seeking jobs, many looking for food, police officers who warned of new threats, political organizers with ideas how to challenge the unelected government, reporters and people seeking special prayers - all came all the time.
Every single night when he was home at his church in Port au Prince Pere Jean-Juste led a half hour public rosary for anyone who showed up. Most of the crowd was children and older women who came in part because the church was the only place in the neighborhood which had electricity. He walked the length of the church booming out the first part of the Hail Mary while children held his hand or trailed him calling out their part of the rosary. The children and the women came night after night to pray in Kreyol with Mon Pere.
Pere Jean-Juste lived the preferential option for the poor of liberation theology. Because he was always in trouble with the management of the church, who he also freely criticized, he was usually not allowed regular church parish work. In Florida, he lay down in his clerical blacks on the road in front of busses stopping them from taking Haitians to be deported from the U.S. For years he lived on the run in Haiti, moving from house to house. When he was arrested on trumped up charges, he refused to allow people with money to bribe his way out of jail, he would stay with the poor and share their treatment.
He dedicated his entire adult life to the revolutionary proposition that every single person is entitled to a life of human dignity. No matter the color of skin. No matter what country they were from. No matter how poor or rich. No matter woman or man.
His last time in court in Haiti, when the judge questioned him about a bogus weapons charge against him, Pere Jean-Juste dug into his pocket, pulled out his plastic prayer beads, thrust them high in the air and bellowed, to the delight of the hundreds in attendance, "My rosary is my only weapon!" The crowd roared and all charges were dropped.
Gerard Jean-Juste lived with and fought for and with widows and orphans and those in jail and those being deported and the hungry and the mourning and the sick and the persecuted. Our world is better for his time among us.
Mon Pere, our brother, your spirit, like those of all who struggle for justice for others, lives on. Presente!
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13 Comments so far
Show All"To the rich, Jean-Juste preached that the man with two coats should give one to the woman with none. But, unlike most preachers, he did not stop there. Because there were many people with no coats, Pere Jean-Juste said, no one could justly claim ownership of a second coat. In fact, those who held onto second coats were actually thieves who stole from those who had no coats. In Haiti and the U.S., where there is such a huge gap between the haves and the have-nots, there was much stealing by the rich from the poor. This was revolutionary preaching."
Hate to be a wet blanket in a tribute to a very good man. But I think we need to take a step back here and ask what happens when a society decides that anyone who does manage to earn a good enough living to afford two coats thinks that one of them should be taken away.
You get corruption, theft, and graft on a huge scale. Africa suffers from this. It is a corruption that suppresses enterprise across Africa.
There has to be a happy medium here.
Someplace where hard work is rewarded over no work at all. Where people who work for others are paid a living wage even if their tasks are menial. Where dignity is available even to those who can find no work or who cannot work without crushing or chasing away those who have ambition and the desire to apply that ambition as a positive force. Where those who seek profits, bonuses and tax relief far in excess of what any reasonable human being needs even for an extremely comfortable life find no haven, but at the same time those who create jobs and wealth through their actions do find rewards.
There must be a third way between Fascist Globalization and brutal enforced Communism.
Despite my caution, I am sure this good Man's words are necessary right now.
Father Gerry had absolutely nothing to do with "brutal enforced communism' and everything to do with achieving basic human rights and genuine democracy for all Haitians.
Here's a link to a project inspired by Father Gerry and Margaret Trost called the What If Foundation!
Scroll down for a picture of Father Gerry.
whatiffoundationdotorg/about/history/
They feed poor kids. It costs 70 cents to feed a child one good meal cooked by church volunteers. The organization pays local farmers for the chicken and vegetables. Check out the photos.
whatiffoundationdotorg/gallery/
Here's an excerpt from a book Margaret wrote about the project.
onthatdayeverybodyatedotcom/sample.php
Father Gerry was in favor of basic humanity, feeding the poor, real democracy and peace. He was well-known for successfully encouraging Haiti's victims not to respond to their attackers with violence.
He was jailed twice under completely outrageously phony charges for speaking out. The last time I heard him speak he said not to forget the political prisoners who remain in horrific conditions under phony charges in Haitian jails to this day. They do not receive medical treatment. Some take turns sleeping it's so crowded. If you want more info about the jail conditions, human rights progress etc, in Haiti check out ijdhdotorg.
In Haiti the 8% rich steal from the 88% poor. Their classist disdain for the poor gives them the rationale to use death squads to rape, behead, shoot, etc whoever dares to politically organize against them. The rich call the poor "cockroaches" among other things. Google Jodel Chamblain, a leader of the "rebels" of the 2004 coup, for a true taste of what the rich do to the poor in Haiti. Chamblain was photographed a lot by our mainstream media during the coup, as though he was a hero. The bloody result of this kind of politics, whatever you want to call it, is what Father Gerry and most of Haiti have been speaking out against for years! It's truly mind boggling this revolting behavior exists an hour plane ride from Miami. What's worse are the "progressives" who parroted the Bush Administration "Aristide must go" mantra and turned a blind eye as thousands were hacked to pieces, beheaded, drowned, raped and otherwise murdered and assaulted 2004-2006. It was a huge betrayal of democracy and human rights.
Father Gerry was a loyal friend to the Haitian poor and to President Jean-Betrand Aristide.
Google Lancet Journal Haiti Study (efforts to discredit this report failed).
Google University of Miami Haiti Human Rights report, November 2004.
Read "Damming the Flood: Haiti, Aristide and the Politics of Containment."
Watch the DVD: Aristide and the Endless Revolution.
For more about Father Gerry
haitiactiondotnet/News/about/FrJJ.html
Many times during his life Padre Pio would cry out to his fellow brothers,'Bring me my Weapon...Bring me my Weapon", which of course was his rosary. To be Catholic and ascribe to the seven principles of Catholic Social Teaching is to be very anti-secular,pro-life,pro-human dignity, and a witness to justice. Others will take your place, but for now, Jean- Juste rest in...
Peace
Latin America has given us liberation theology. The United States, on the other hand, has given us the “prosperity gospel,” which proclaims that if you praise the Lord’s name and put enough money into the collection plate, He will reward you with great wealth. Pastors from the United States have now spread this “gospel” all over the world, especially to Africa, where it has become immensely popular amongst the very poor.
Both theologies sell a form of salvation for the poor. Liberation theology teaches us to stand up to the thieves. The prosperity gospel teaches us to model ourselves after the thieves.
Which one, I wonder, more resembles the teachings of Jesus?
An astute observation. Thanks for sharing it.
From the dust of the earth he came and to the dust he returned with a heart that soared to the heavens much as his voice and his presence did.
with no fear of the other door that he knew would be his rest from a world that mirriored not in the words and deeds of his mentor and savior and the road that he tread.
How many souls did he touch;how many did he turn to a road that was his path in life and thus pass a torch to the future?Yea,for his life would be worthy of any goals to be amid.Tony
Here was a man who truly practiced what the Catholic Church teaches. Who told Spanish prelates that they should burn "non-believers" at the stake? Who told the Spanish Church hierarchy that they should support Franco, Hitler, and the Spanish fascist government?
Here was a man who truly practiced what the Bible teaches, not like those who spend all day Sundays in church condemning people who fight for justice.
Vive Pere Gerard Jean-Juste! Viva Monsegnor Oscar Romero!
I think what we are seeing here is the effectiveness of religion as a weapon.
A weapon that can be either a force for good or a force for evil.
We can all list the religious zealots who use this ultimate weapon for evil.
Biblical Joshua
crusades
Divine right of Kings
Inquisition
St. Bartholomew's (sp) day massacre
30 years war
Persecution of the Jews for centuries
Oppression of native peoples across the globe
Zionists
Christian fundamentalists
Muslim fundamentalists
The modern crusaders in Iraq and Afghanistan
Here we see an example of that weapon used as a force for good.
This is a nice man practicing social activism. Religion (in particular a religion that has condemned people like myself to an eternity of suffering in Hell) is not a necessary component for pursuing social justice. Nonetheless, I applaud his activism and sentiments.
At best religion is a useful tool in that it already has vast numbers of indoctrinated followers ready to listen to if you throw in a few lines about Jesus. But if these same followers would ONLY listen to a religious leader then clearly this method has drawbacks.
Here was a man who truly practiced what the Catholic Church should be teaching.
The Church follows the money to the corporations and rich landholders - every time.
I wonder if he is swapping jokes with Archbishop Oscar Romero now.
Both Fascist victims.
I must say I have never heard of this great man until this article.
It helps me to undersatnd better how the media controls the message wherein stories like this mans struggle for justice are never told.
Instread we here endless accounts of the latest murder or terroist attack.
Exactly. Me neither.
Yea, no kidding.
All I remember getting are reports of military coup's. No attempt by the MSM to link up who is behind the coup. Oh no...we cannot tell the US people about the actions being taken in your name, that would (perish the thought!) burst the happy bubble of our dull citizenry thinking that the USA are always such good guys!