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Methodist pastor to report to prison for protest sentence


From NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG>
Date 18 Aug 2000 14:48:21

Aug. 18, 2000 News media contact: Linda Bloom·(212) 870-3803·New York
10-32-71B{376}

By United Methodist News Service

A retired United Methodist pastor is expected to report to the federal
prison in Waseca, Minn., on Aug. 28 to serve time for his part in a 1999
protest against the U.S. Army School of the Americas.

The Rev. Charles Butler, 73, of Rochester, Minn., had received a three-month
sentence in June after being found guilty last March of violating a ban
barring protesters from entering the school, located at Fort Benning in
Columbus, Ga. Eight other defendants also were found guilty during the trial
and later sentenced.

While not exactly eager to sit in jail, Butler believes the sentence "is
worth it to get the message out" about what he believes to be the negative
influence of the School of the Americas on Latin America.

"If I am open to God's leading while I am there, it can be a means to
strengthening me personally," he added.

The School of the Americas, which trains soldiers from Latin America, has
fallen under heavy criticism because some of its graduates are connected
with major violations of human rights. In 1998, the United Methodist Council
of Bishops concluded the school "is perceived by the marginalized to be a
source of oppression and a symbol of violence" and called for its closing.
The United Methodist General Conference, the denomination's highest
legislative body, echoed that call in May.

Congress did vote in May to close the School of the Americas. At the same
time, however, it approved a Pentagon proposal for an identical school -
with the same purpose and in the same place - to be opened. That school is
called the Defense Institute for Hemispheric Security Cooperation.

Butler has been active in the SOA Watch protest group for several years. He
said he was relieved to finally learn of the date he was to report to prison
because his fellow protesters had been incarcerated since early August.
Apparently, concern over the fact that he had contracted tuberculosis in
Guatemala in 1998 had delayed his assignment by the Bureau of Prisons.

A native of Alabama, Butler was ordained a deacon in the United Methodist
North Alabama Annual (regional) Conference and served for 25 years as a
missionary in Panama. Upon his return, he became a pastor in the
Alabama-West Florida Conference. He also was a member of the Iowa Conference
before transferring to the Minnesota Conference after retirement.

He said he and his wife, Marilyn, have drawn strength and support during the
past year from both ecumenical circles and members of their own congregation
at Christ United Methodist Church. Enough unsolicited donations have been
made to more than cover the $2,500 fine imposed by the court. He also meets
monthly with a spiritual director, Sister Linda Wieser.

Eileen Williams, a member of Christ Church, noted that Butler and others
have kept the congregation informed about their concerns regarding the
School of the Americas. "Early on, there was an attempt to at least have
people understand what he is doing," she explained.

Key support has come from Butler's covenant discipleship group, one of seven
such groups at the church. "It's an ongoing way to develop accountability in
the four areas of devotion, worship, justice and compassion," she said.
"It's a natural to have that group be very concerned because they are
meeting with him every week."

Williams is not surprised the retired pastor has reacted strongly about what
he considers to be the injustices connected with the School of the Americas.
"It's a deep conviction of his, grown out of many years of experience in
Latin America," she added.

Butler expects to continue feeling a sense of solidarity with the other
jailed protesters and outside supporters once he is imprisoned. Prayer
groups will focus on all the protesters, and people both inside and outside
the prison walls will share an hour of stillness from 7 to 8 p.m. on
Thursdays.

The entire experience has demonstrated just how supportive the Christian
community can be, Butler said. "There is a strong sense of doing this
together."

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*************************************
United Methodist News Service
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