THE PATH YOU WANT TO TREAD, THE FOOTSTEPS YOU WANT TO FOLLOW.
Daniel Berrigan was
many things – Jesuit priest, poet, teacher, fine cook, good listener,
radical thinker, antiwar activist, pacifist but he is MOST KNOWN for his
opposition to the Vietnam war, and for that, he was considered an enemy of both state and church.
Of everything he wrote, including more than forty books, these words
stand out as the most memorable and most emblematic of his life: “Our
apologies, good friends, for the fracture of good order, the burning of
paper (draft cards) instead of children, the angering of the orderlies
in the front of the charnel house. (cops/military, Pols) We could not,
so help us God, do otherwise . . . How many must die before our voices
are heard, how many must be tortured, dislocated, starved, maddened . . .
When, at what point, will you say no to this war?”
That is what Berrigan said in May, 1968 as he and his brother, the late
Philip Berrigan, and seven other activists, most of them nuns and
priests, burned draft files they had just removed from the draft board in Catonsville, Maryland, as they waited for police to arrive to arrest them. (He was imprisoned for two years.) The above words appear in Berrigan’s most famous writing, The Trial of the Catonsville Nine, a play based on the transcript of the trial. It has been staged throughout the world. ^ (text)
When Berrigan’s sister-in-law, Elizabeth McAllister, read those words at
his funeral mass today, the more than 1,000 people in attendance at St.
Francis Xavier Catholic Church in New York City responded with a
thunderous and sustained standing ovation. They had come from near and
far to say farewell. For many of them, these words he spoke at
Catonsville had moved them into civil disobedience and resistance many
years ago.
By the time Berrigan went to Catonsville, he had become the most visible embodiment of something that had not been seen before: Catholic priests who publicly opposed a war in which the United States was engaged.
In response to his calls for an end to the war, top church officials
sent him away from the U.S., and a top government official lied about
him in congressional testimony that was designed to paint him as a
bomber and kidnapper. Ultimately these extraordinary efforts, by church
and state, failed to silence Berrigan. After exile abroad and
imprisonment at home, he remained a strong voice against war and other
violence, official and unofficial, until his death last week at age 94.
MORE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catonsville_Nine
The actions that publicly defined Berrigan — non-violent resistance to the Vietnam war and to the use of nuclear weapons — were born in the aftermath of the Second Vatican Council, the historic international gathering of bishops convened in 1962 by Pope John XXIII,
who was influence by LIBERATION THEOLOGY which had sprung up in the
50's and was very strong in the 60's, (so he was Liberal, genuinely a
populist, a holy one, and anti-war. UNLIKE current POPE FRANCIS who back
then never denounced the GENOCIDE going on both in LATIN AMERICA and
elsewhere.) The Vatican Council’s actions, which included a strong
condemnation of anti-Semitism, (Jews were called PERFIDIOUS ONES in all
prayers since ROMAN TIMES! JOHN XXIII took that word PERFIDIOUS out of
all prayers.) That was considered radical in the post-World War II
Catholic Church in SPITE of a Christian nation gassing 6 million JEWS.)
One of the Council’s reforms urged Catholics to work for peace,
including with people outside the church. The church hierarchy in
America refused to accept that mandate at first. Berrigan, however, was
eager to work for peace.
With his brother Philip and others, Daniel Berrigan helped establish the
Catholic peace movement, a very large and amorphous group located
primarily throughout the northeast and northern midwest. Officials in
both the church and the government saw the movement as dangerous.
Francis Cardinal Spellman — the archbishop of New York, the most
powerful Catholic official in the United States, and the most visible
symbol of the U.S. Catholic Church’s strong official support for the
Vietnam war — staunchly opposed the peace movement, especially the
participation of Catholics in it. In the earliest days of American
involvement in Vietnam, in fact, Spellman was one of the leading voices
outside government who urged the U.S. to go to war there.
Deeply angered by Berrigan’s public calls for peace, Spellman in 1965
ordered Berrigan’s Jesuit superiors to exile him to Latin America and
ordered him to stop engaging in peace work. The Jesuits did so and kept
the priest’s whereabouts a secret. When Berrigan was permitted to return
to the U.S. several months later, he and his supporters defiantly
marched for peace in New York City, stopping to pray in front of
churches and synagogues, including St. Patrick’s Cathedral, where
Cardinal Spellman presided.
In 1970, Spellman’s friend and ally inside the government in matters of
protest and war, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, took the extraordinary
step of publicly and falsely accusing Daniel and Philip Berrigan of
conspiring to blow up tunnels under federal buildings in Washington,
D.C. and to kidnap President Nixon’s national security adviser, Henry
Kissinger. Hoover did this despite knowing that FBI investigators and
Department of Justice officials had officially concluded there was no
such conspiracy. But to save Hoover’s reputation after his public
comments, Justice officials convinced a grand jury to bring charges
against Philip Berrigan and others; Daniel Berrigan was named an
unindicted co-conspirator. The 1972 trial ended in a hung jury.
For a while, Hoover succeeded in recasting the public image of the
Berrigans and the Catholic peace movement into a group of violent
extremists. The effort helped Hoover get the extra $14.5 million he
wanted from Congress that year to hire a thousand new agents he said
were needed because of the crisis created by these activists. But that
effort backfired. Within the bureau, these new agents were known as “the
Berrigan 1,000” because they resisted spying on political dissidents
and asked to be assigned instead to organized crime and other criminal
cases — areas of investigation in which, strangely, Hoover had little
interest.
It was the writings of Daniel Berrigan that inspired William Davidon, a physics professor at Haverford College, to think of breaking into an FBI office in 1971 to search for evidence of whether Hoover’s FBI was suppressing dissent.
That break-in, conducted at great risk by Davidon and seven other
people who called themselves the Citizens Commission to Investigate the
FBI, led to the historic revelations of Hoover’s widespread suppression of dissent. Years
later, Davidon said, “I don’t think I would have even considered such
steps had it not been for Dan Berrigan.” Those steps ultimately led, in
1975, to the first congressional investigations of all intelligence
agencies and to the establishment of the first permanent congressional
oversight of such agencies.
Berrigan was both fierce and gentle. I saw those qualities the first
time I met him–for an interview for the Washington Post while he was
living in the underground. By that time, early August 1970, he had been
moving from place to place for four months, sheltered in friends’ homes
in both rural and urban areas. The day before the interview I drove from
Washington to New York and waited at a friend’s house on Staten Island
for a promised call from an unidentified person. It came the following
afternoon. I was told to take a ferry to Manhattan. As I got off the
ferry, I was met by someone I didn’t know and driven by him to an
address in Manhattan I didn’t know. He drove in circuitous ways so I
would not know where I was. That was unnecessary, for I was completely
unfamiliar with Manhattan then.
< Berrigan
is taken into the Federal Building in Providence on August 11th, after
he was found at a summer home on Block Island. Berrigan, convicted of
burning draft records, went underground in April, to avoid imprisonment
on the draft-burning conviction.
Bettmann Archive- Below, An INTERVIEW WITH BERRIGAN where
he explained why he had chosen to escape to the underground. He was
determined, like his brother Philip and others in the Catonsville Nine,
to refuse, as long as he could, the punishment of the war makers. In
doing so, he also hoped to draw more attention to the tragic mistake of
continuing the war. At one point as we talked, shots rang out in the
street outside the apartment building. He smiled. I did not. Two weeks
later he was arrested at the home of his friend William Stringfellow on
Block Island. This PHOTO is the most iconic photographs of Berrigan
handcuffed but smiling brightly as the two agents are looking grim.
Berrigan’s opposition to all violence, no matter the source, was evident
in a letter he wrote to the Weather Underground in 1970, after three
members of the group were killed when a bomb exploded in a house where
some of them were living in Greenwich Village. He wrote the letter while
living in the underground. The letter demonstrates his consistent
condemnation of violence by both the government and the peace movement.
Like Davidon, he was deeply concerned about the fact that a fragment of
the antiwar movement, out of deep despair that the war had continued for
years, was engaging in violence. The letter began, “Dear Brothers and
Sisters”:
“How shall we speak…to the people? We must never
refuse, in spite of their refusal of us, to call them our brothers. I
must say to you as simply as I know how: if the people are not the main
issue, there simply is no main issue and you and I are fooling ourselves
… No principle is worth the sacrificing of a single human being. That’s
a very hard statement. At various stages of the movement some have
acted as if almost the opposite were true, as people got purer and
purer…
“When madness is the acceptable public state of mind,
we’re all in danger… for madness is an infection in the air. And I
submit that we all breathe the infection and that the movement has at
times been sickened by it too … In or out of the military, in or out of
the movement, it seems to me that we had best call things by their name,
and the name of this thing, it seems to me, is the death game, no
matter where it appears. And as for myself, I would as soon be under the
heel of former masters as under the heel of new ones …
“I feel at your side across the miles, and I hope
that sometime in this mad world… it will be possible for us to … find
that our hopes and our sweat, and the hopes and sweat and death and
tears and blood of our brothers and sisters throughout the world, have
brought to birth that for which we began. Shalom to you.”
Asked in 2008 to reflect on his lifetime of lectures on peace, hundreds
of poems for peace, and a long rap sheet of arrests for participating in
peace protests, Berrigan assessed its meaning with these words: “The
good is to be done because it is good, not because it goes somewhere. I
believe if it is done in that spirit it will go somewhere, but I don’t
know where … I have never been seriously interested in the outcome. I
was interested in trying to do it humanely and carefully and
nonviolently and let it go.”
The Jesuits have come a long way since the days when they obeyed
Cardinal Spellman’s order for Berrigan to be exiled to Latin America.
Jesuit priests presided at his funeral mass today and spoke repeatedly
of justice and peace, and of what they had learned from him. One of his
close friends, Father Steve Kelly, who is based in California, gave the
homily. The audience laughed and applauded when Kelly evoked Hoover’s ghost.
After welcoming friends and family to the service, Kelly also welcomed
the FBI agents who had been “assigned here today to validate that it is Daniel Berrigan’s funeral mass … so they can complete and perhaps close their files.”
Betty Medsger is the author of “The Burglary: The Discovery of J. Edgar Hoover’s Secret FBI.”
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