Category Archives: War and Peace

In Defense of JPII, Peacemaker

In 2005 Justin Raimando wrote this incredible defense of Pope John Paul II. Can’t believe I missed it. He writes “John Paul II is a unique figure, a giant of a man who towers so high above his critics that to focus on the latter is, in a sense, an injustice. But somebody ought to remind pope-john-paul-IIthe world of the sins of his detractors (even as today, they praise him, or hold their tongues), and it might as well be me, a sinful unbeliever. I may be ‘exuberantly pagan,’ as neocon enforcer David ‘Axis of Evil’ Frum put it, but I recognize a real saint when I see one…” Here’s more.

“’A defeat for humanity’ is how John Paul II characterized the Iraq conflict. The Vatican rejected the arguments of neoconservatives, who sought to replace the “just war” theory that had ruled the Church since the time of St. Augustine with their own preemptive war doctrine, a throwback to the pagan era. As Bush and his British poodle prepared to go to war over nonexistent ‘weapons of mass destruction,’ the Pope sent a message to Roman Catholic military chaplains attending a Vatican-sponsored course on humanitarian law expressing the great ‘comfort’ given to him by the antiwar movement, which was taking to the streets in massive numbers: ‘It should be clear’ at this point in human history, he declared, that a ‘large part of humanity’ has rejected war as a means of resolving conflicts between nations. (Self-defense, he averred, is another matter). Hailing the ‘vast contemporary movement in favor of peace,’ the Holy Father backed up his rhetoric with action, calling on Catholics to fast in protest against the coming war and sending a diplomatic mission to Baghdad.”

 

A “Crime Against Peace” at BC then, at Rutgers now

Congratulations to the Rutgers and Minnesota students who clearly understand that “those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

In 2006, I attended a protest against Condoleezza Rice’s appearance as a commencement speaker at Boston College at the height of the Iraq War. BC, allegedly a Catholic college, honored her even though Pope John Paul II (now Saint John Paul II) and the Vatican he headed had explicitly condemned the invasion and war she helped to plan. Vatican foreign minister Archbishop Jean-Louis Tauran said it would be a “crime against peace.”

Vatican Strongly Opposes Iraq War

“This crime against the peace was a brand new charge, never before seen in international law. American prosecutors, led by Justice Jackson, had a more sweeping view of justice in mind. They saw the supreme crime at Nuremberg not in any specific act of Nazi mass killing, nor in the construction of the death camps like Auschwitz. For American prosecutors, the supreme crime was a completely new criminal charge: waging aggressive war, or the crime against peace.”

— from “The Ghosts of Nuremberg” by Michael Gaddy

Lenten Reflection 2: Self Deception

 

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This ten-minute video talk is the second part in a series of Lenten reflections by Rev. Emmanuel Charles McCarthy.

“It is all but impossible to get a person to see a truth if his or her livelihood or status, or even just comfort, depends on him or her not seeing that truth.” — Rev. Emmanuel Charles McCarthy

“Oh, what a tangled web we weave / When first we practise to deceive!” Marmion, Walter Scott

Paradox of Peacemaking

“Prayer is the basis of all peacemaking precisely because in prayer we come to the realization that we do not belong to the world in which conflicts and wars take place, but to Jesus who offers us his peace. The paradox of peacemaking is indeed that we can only speak of peace in the world when our sense of who we are is not anchored in the world. We can only say ‘we are for peace’ when those we are fighting have no power over us.” — Henri Nouwen

Sister Klaryta Antoszewska, R.I.P.

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Sr. Klaryta tries coaxing one of the Sheriff’s deputies across the line at the Nevada Test Site, April 2007. (WNV/Mario P. Intino, Jr.)

“Sr. Klaryta — born Ida Antoszewska — experienced the terror of war and institutionalized hatred as a girl in Poland during the Second World War. From what Klaryta indicated to those of us who knew her, her parents were part of the resistance to the Nazis who, among other things, smuggled food into the Jewish ghetto during the Holocaust. In the end, her mother was killed and her father was deported to Siberia. At 12 years old, as the oldest of three children, she became the head of the household…

After the war she became a member of the Sisters of St. Francis of Penance and Christian Charity in Orlik, Poland, taking the name Klaryta…

Sr. Klaryta studied theology, languages and philology. One of her teachers, Karol Józef Wojtyła, would later become Pope John Paul II. In the 1960s, she was sent to Rome, where she worked at the Vatican in the Office of Peace and Justice. In 1976 she accompanied Sister Rosemary Lynch, of the same religious community, to Las Vegas, where they established the Sisters of Saint Francis Social and Refugee Program. It was here that Sister Rosemary would wander out to the desert adjoining the 1,350 square mile nuclear test site to pray for an end to the nuclear blasts that, on average, took place every 18 days there. Eventually Sr. Klaryta joined her there as a new anti-nuclear movement took shape…”

Read the full story, “A Nonviolent Lion for Justice,” written by Ken Butigan at Waging Nonviolence.

 

War and Families: The Uncounted

Suicides are increasing among parents, spouses, children, and siblings of veterans.

“I was pretty afraid of my dad when he came back from Iraq. I didn’t know who this man…You can’t forget being terrified of your parent and terrified for your life.”

“I am married to a Marine who has been through five deployments…I think that I had just been lonely for so long that it felt like maybe I didn’t matter.”

“I lost my daughter two years later. She took her life over the death of her brother. She couldn’t handle the pain of her brother’s death.”

“I hadn’t even begun to comprehend Freddie’s death. He was killed in action. How could my brother take his life? I had lost my whole family, and all I could think about would it would be better if I was gone too.”