From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Twenty-five years on, martyred women remembered
From
"NCC News" <pjenks@ncccusa.org>
Date
Fri, 02 Dec 2005 10:48:53 -0500
Twenty-five years after their martyrdom,
Four American women are remembered
New York, December 2, 2005 -- Twenty-five years after four U.S. churchwomen
in El Salvador were abducted, raped and shot in by national guardsmen,
ecumenical groups around the world are assembling at the site of their deaths
to honor their memory.
The four women -- Sister Maura Clarke, M.M, Sister Dorothy Kazel, O.S.U.,
Sister Ita Ford, M.M., and lay missioner Jean Donovan -- were killed in El
Salvador on Dec. 2, 1980. The murders were part of a brutal pattern of
attacks by death squads and members of the Salvadoran Armed Forces against
persons working with El Salvador's poor and war refugees.
The women were killed nine months after the assassination in March 1980 of El
Salvador Bishop Oscar Romero, who also defended the poor against the
right-wing Salvadoran government.
The anniversary observance is co-sponsored by the SHARE Foundation, the
Leadership Council of Women Religious (LCWR), the Conference of Major
Superiors of Men (CMSM) and Pax Christi USA.
Among the attendees are the Rev. Dr. Bob Edgar, general secretary of the
National Council of Churches USA.
In January 1981, as a young congressman from southeastern Pennsylvania, Edgar
was part of a congressional team that visited El Salvador "to investigate the
deaths of our fellow Americans." Other members of the team were Maryland
Congresswoman Barbara Mikulski, now a U.S. Senator, and Massachusetts
Congressman Gerry Studds, among others.
"Our prevailing emotion then was anger and despair brought on by the
unacceptable reality that these young lives, so full of hope and promise,
were so brutally snuffed out," Edgar said. "These four women were drum majors
for justice in a land where their lives were threatened every day."
The team brought the women's story back to the U.S., where their deaths
influenced popular opinion about the U.S. government's financial support of
the Salvadoran military. "I don't believe the people of the United States
want to see their money being spent to help the military kill and rape
women," Mikulski said bluntly on a 1981 broadcast of 20/20.
"Today," Edgar said in remarks prepared for the Dec. 2 commemoration, "it is
possible to think of Jean and Ita and Maura and Dorothy with a smile and a
celebration of the gifts they gave us. Their lives and their deaths are a
reminder, so badly needed in our turbulent times, that a witness for truth
and justice cannot be crushed, that Jesus will not desert us when our
confrontation with evil must result in death, and that men and women united
in faith by a common Lord are indomitable."
Edgar said: "These four women, by the way they lived and the way they died,
are models for us all. Another martyr, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., said,
'Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.'"
The full text of Edgar's statement follows:
Armed with the seed of faith that brings us together, no power on earth can
pull us apart.
I am deeply moved today to see who has been drawn together to honor the
memory of these four courageous women. I stand here as a Protestant minister,
bolstered by the presence of Roman Catholic sisters, laity, and priests (and
persons from a wide range of faith traditions), reflecting on God?s power to
strengthen the ties that bind us. Here today, we embody the ecumenical vision
of Pope John Paul II and so many of our forebears in faith.
These four women, by the way they lived and the way they died, are models for
us all. Another martyr, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., said, "Our lives begin
to end the day we become silent about things that matter.' These four women
were drum majors for justice in a land where their lives were threatened
every day. They were martyred for the same cause as Archbishop Oscar Romero.
And they knew, as Martin did, that regardless of our skin color, class,
religious tradition or political persuasion, we are all "caught in an
inescapable network of mutuality."
When I was in Central America 25-years ago as a part of a U.S. Congressional
delegation to investigate the murders of our fellow Americans, our prevailing
emotion was anger and despair brought on by the unacceptable reality that
these young lives, so full of joy and hope and promise, were so brutally
snuffed out. Today it is possible to think of Jean and Ita and Maura and
Dorothy with a smile and a celebration of the gifts they gave us. Their lives
and their deaths are a reminder, so badly needed in our turbulent times, that
a witness for truth and justice cannot be crushed, that Jesus will not desert
us when our confrontation with evil must result in death, and that men and
women united in faith by a common Lord are indomitable.
The National Council of Churches USA -- 35 communions representing 45 million
persons of faith in 100,000 local congregations -- remembers Jean and Ita and
Maura and Dorothy with affection and celebrates their lives. We will never
forget them. They were God's great gift to all of us.
Contact NCC News: Philip E. Jenks, 212-870-2252, pjenks@ncccusa.org; or
Leslie Tune, 202-544-2350, ltune@ncccusa.org
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