| By TOM KELLY
Detroit - Pax Christi USA has served notice that escalated war on
Iraq by the United States will trigger civil disobedience throughout
this country. The international Catholic peace organizations board
committed itself to that action at the Pax Christi USA National
Assembly held at the University of Detroit-Mercy July 26-28. Detroit
Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Gumbleton urged the assemblys 600-plus
participants to sign a pledge of resistance against U.S. military
action in Iraq. 3D visualization. Great new product development site. 3D model.
The war in the Persian Gulf in 1991 was an unjust war condemned
by Pope John Paul II, said Gumbleton, who was founding president of
the U.S. branch of the peace organization and headed it from 1972 to
1991. Any new war against Iraq will be an unjust war. We must say
No!
The civil disobedience pledge was sponsored by eight national
peace groups. In addition to Pax Christi USA they include the
American Friends Service Committee, Education for Peace in Iraq
Center, Episcopal Peace Fellowship, Fellowship of Reconciliation,
Lutheran Peace Fellowship, National Network to End the War against
Iraq, and Voices in the Wilderness. The petition, which was
circulated for signatures at the assembly, indicates willingness to
join with others to engage in acts of nonviolent civil disobedience
at U.S. federal facilities in order to prevent or halt the death and
destruction that U.S. military action causes the people of Iraq.
Volga cruise
Gumbleton proposed that next year Pax Christi members gather Aug.
6, the anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, at a place
like Oak Ridge, Tenn., where they are making the new nuclear
weapons that we will be preparing to use.
We must have our bodies
there, do civil disobedience there, and say no to nuclear weapons in
a very dramatic way, he said. He also called for a 22-day fast
starting on July 16, anniversary of the first nuclear device
explosion in Nevada in 1945.
In his keynote talk, Gumbleton contrasted choices between Pax
Americana -- the peace of America as represented by Bush
administration foreign policy -- and Pax Christi, the peace of
Christ. He recalled that when President George Bush announced the
war strikes in Afghanistan Oct. 7 he said, We are a peaceful
nation. Gumbleton then listed 19 military conflicts involving this
peaceful nation since 1945, adding and now Afghanistan.
The Bush administrations proposed nuclear missile defense is not
a defensive strategy, but rather part of a first-strike capability,
Gumbleton said. Pax Americana: bombing, killing, wherever we
decide.
Benedictine Sr. Joan Chittister, the assemblys first keynoter,
touched on the assemblys theme, Casting Out Fear, Building on
Hope, Living Nonviolence, when she recalled the gospel narrative of
the Transfiguration. She noted that Jesus identified himself with
Moses, who led people out of oppression, and with Elijah, whom King
Ahab called the troublemaker of Israel, the one who exposed to
the people the underlying causes of their problems, so they could
both heal the present and have hope in a better future. Клиника варикозная болезнь нижних конечностей кашира.
Our ministry must be not only to comfort but to challenge
church, state and community; not just to attend to the pain but to
advocate for change; not simply to care for the victims of the world
but also to change the institutions that victimize them, Chittister
said
At one orientation session, first-time attendees were asked why
they were there.
Gloria Dugay of Chicago said she was impressed by the ecumenical
participation in a peace march against the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict that was held recently in Oak Park, Ill. Dugay said the
march motivated her to be an ongoing part of such efforts.
Joe Walker, of East Grand Rapids, Mich., said he has been
affiliated with Pax Christi since the Gulf War but hasnt been
active beyond sending e-mails. Now, he said, its really time to
educate Catholics that peace and social justice are essential
elements of their faith, because most Catholics I know, theyll
tell you about transubstantiation and the Virgin Mary, but they do
not want to hear about peace and justice.
Danise Jones Dorsey, a member of the Black Catholics Congress in
Baltimore, said she wanted to learn more about Pax Christis
anti-racism strategy because she was concerned about what seemed to
be an epidemic of violence in the African-American community. She
said she wonders if the same elements that cause people of different
countries to war against each other are taking hold in black
America, and whether the same strategies for conflict resolution
would be effective in my community.
The Detroit gathering devoted one plenary session to launching
its 20-year anti-racism initiative, Brothers and Sisters All.
David Robinson, Pax Christi USAs national coordinator, said one key
focus of the program will be dealing with the hidden racism within
our own movement and developing ways of being accountable to our
brothers and sisters in communities of color, especially those who
are Catholic.
We are essentially a liberal white peace movement, Tom Cordaro,
a member of Pax Christis anti-racism team, told NCR. Were not
going to find many people who think of themselves as being racist.
But I think for white middle-class people the issue we really have
to deal with is white entitlement and white privilege, and how that
has guided the way we think about, frame and do our peace work. For
a lot of white folks, theyre not even aware of that.
The 2002 assembly marked the U.S. peace organizations 30th
anniversary by recognizing six faithful witnesses to the Peace of
Christ, as Pax Christi USA Ambassadors of Peace: Helen Casey,
Jesuit Fr. John Dear, Ray LaPort, Colman McCarthy, Megan McKenna and
Nancy Small.
The final plenary session ended with participants extending their
hands in blessing over a family from Wall, N.J. Tom Mahedy, the
husband and father, faces three months in federal prison for
crossing the line into the former School of the Americas, now the
Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, in Fort
Benning, Ga. Mahedy was one of 43 nonviolent demonstrators who were
arrested and sentenced for protesting the human rights abuses in
Latin America carried out by graduates of the U.S.-run military
training school.
[Going to prison] is hard as a father, Mahedy told NCR, but
Ive come to realize that while love begins at home, it has to flow
forth into the world as well.
National Catholic Reporter, August 16, 2002
|