Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Inspiration and a Future of Hope and Light for All.

On this date, we remember Bishop Juan Gerardi.


The Recovery of Historical Memory. That's the name of the project Bishop Juan Gerardi, auxiliary bishop of Guatemala City, created to investigate the military's human rights abuses that caused the destruction of over 400 Indian villages.

When I lived in River Forest, Illinois in the 1980's, our parish played a small part in the sanctuary movement, providing support, shelter and transportation to a Guatemalan family escaping the horrific military violence in their country. My Spanish was not that good, but I will always remember their eyes.

By 1996, the United Nations brokered an end to thirty-six years of civil war in Guatemala.  The peace agreement called for an investigation of human rights abuses.  Bishop Juan Gerardi, auxiliary bishop of Guatemala City,  headed the archdiocesan office of human rights. His Recovery of Historical Memory (REMHI) project conducted an exhaustive investigation.

Two years later, he presented the findings in a 1,400-page work, Guatemala: Never Again! It outlined four decades of assassination, torture, and massacres, including the death of hundreds of lay catechists. (I've been a catechist a third of my life.) The conclusion of his report pointed to the Guatemalan military being responsible for almost 90 percent of  200,000 noncombatant deaths and disappearances.

"We are collecting the people's memories," Bishop Gerardi reported, "because we want to contribute to the construction of a different country. This path was and continues to be full of risks, but the construction of the Kingdom of God entails risks, and only those who have the strength to confront these risks can be its builders."

Two days later, on April 26, 1998, military assassins ambushed Bishop Gerardi in his home. They smashed in his skull with a slab of cement.

The older I get, the more relevant history becomes to me. The United States of America could use a similar project (there probably already is one) to recover our memories of our own human rights abuses toward Native Americans and those we now call African Americans who had no interest in leaving their native country, homesteads, family, or friends when they were captured, kidnapped, sold, or exiled in our land almost four hundred years ago.

May I have the strength of good Bishop Juan to speak Truth to injustices, intolerances, racial jokes and atrocities. Opportunities, unfortunately, are plentiful.


"Years of terror and death have reduced the majority (of Guatemalans)
to fear and silence. Truth is the primary word that makes it possible
for us to break this cycle of death and violence
and to open ourselves to a future of hope and light for all."
Bishop Juan Gerardi



source: Give Us This Day, Daily Prayer for Today's Catholic, April 2016
#kidnapped #juangerardi #RecoveryOfHistoricalMemory #chrismanion #assasin #Guatemala 

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Lesson from a Pruned Bush

From my Retirement Collection of Poems


Pruned Bush
by Chris Manion

Sometimes, every now and then,
it's helpful to stop, 
cut way back on
activities
words
processed foods
visual input
and simply rest.

The severely pruned bush reminded me of this.
It had been so full and well, bushy.
Now it was angular, mutated,
kind of ugly if truth be told.

It had been allowed to reach out into sidewalk space,
overgrowing its boundaries,
pressing passers-by to the outer edge of the pavement.

We walk around overgrown objects, thoughts, attitudes
for years
sometimes decades
barely aware we allow them to edge us out
of our true self

of a happy life.