Tag Archives: September 11

STATEMENT: On the tenth anniversary of 9-11, The Things That Make for Peace

As Jesus came near and saw the city, he wept over it, saying,
“If this day you only knew the things that make for peace!” (Luke 19:41-42)

Ten years ago, just scant hours after our nation witnessed the tragic events of September 11th, Pax Christi USA released a statement which said, in part:

We recognize that as the reality of the magnitude of loss becomes clear, our nation’s grief will soon move toward rage. As people of faith and disciples of the nonviolent Jesus, we must be willing, even now in this darkest moment, to commit ourselves and urge our sisters and brothers, to resist the impulse to vengeance. We must resist the urge to demonize and dehumanize any ethnic group as ‘enemy.’ We must find the courage to break the spiral of violence that so many in our nation, we fear, will be quick to embrace. (Pax Christi USA’s Official Statement on 9-11, published on September 12, 2001)

On Sunday, September 11, 2011, the tenth anniversary of 9-11, as we gather to celebrate the Eucharist together, a question will be put to us:

Could anyone nourish anger against another and expect healing from the Lord?
Can anyone refuse mercy to another, yet expect pardon for one’s own sins? (Sirach 28:3-4)

These past ten years, we have witnessed the failure of policies built on vengeance. Our elected leaders manipulated our grief and fear to justify foreign policy decisions which had little to nothing to do with the tragedy of 9-11. Our nation was ensconced in a culture of fear, where the scapegoating of peoples, the fanning of religious intolerance, and the curtailing of civil rights served the needs of political expedience.

We have been witnesses to the dark places where our government’s response to 9-11 led our nation—the justification of torture, the moral bankruptcy of pre-emptive war, the daily reports of innocent civilians killed as collateral damage, the deaths of thousands of U.S. service personnel, and the stealing of our national wealth to pay for wars abroad as our children, our elderly, and the most vulnerable are left to suffer at home.

Today, as we acknowledge the ten year anniversary of 9-11, there can be no doubt that responding with war and violence can neither console us in our grief nor achieve the security for which we long.

In the weeks following 9-11, Pax Christi USA proclaimed that very message, and challenged our political leaders to seize this moment for peace by establishing justice for all peoples throughout the world. Until we commit our own nation to the pursuit of peace and justice for the entire human family, we should not be surprised when the violence suffered by those living on the other side of the world—as well as those living on the wrong side of town—eventually engulfs us all.

Ten years have passed, but we believe that the opportunity is still with us. Let us start, now, today, in Washington, D.C. and in every city and town across this land, in our schools and our places of worship and within our own homes. Let us write a new chapter and create a new legacy for all those whose lives were shattered on 9-11. Let each one of us decide what it is that we can do to create a legacy which heals instead of harms. Let us begin with the assurance that such healing will come if we make economic, political and social justice for all our top priority.

On Sunday, September 11, 2011, at the responsorial, Catholics will sing in churches throughout our nation:

Our God is kind and merciful, slow to anger, and rich in compassion.
God pardons all our iniquities, heals all our ills, redeems our lives from destruction, and crowns us with kindness and compassion. (Psalm 103)

This anniversary offers us an opportunity to reflect the values of the God to whom we have given our allegiance. Let us remember those who were lost and memorialize this day by committing our lives to “the things that make for peace”—drawing closer to those who suffer, cultivating understanding in the midst of suspicion, finding truth in the arguments of those with whom we disagree, embracing some measure of personal sacrifice today to make a better world for our children and grandchildren tomorrow.

Let us gather one decade from now—not amidst the ruins of all that has been torn down—but in the midst of that new world of peace and security for all which we have built up together.

PRESS RELEASE: PCUSA honors Colleen Kelly of Peaceful Tomorrows as 2011 Teacher of Peace

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Kelly to receive honor the week of the tenth anniversary of 9-11 at the Catholic University of America

Colleen Kelly, 2011 Teacher of Peace

Washington, D.C.—Pax Christi USA, the national Catholic peace movement, has recognized the life and witness of Colleen Kelly, naming her the 2011 recipient of the Pax Christi USA Teacher of Peace Award.  Pax Christi USA first gave the award to Dorothy Day, co-founder of the Catholic Worker movement, in 1978 and has since recognized some of the most significant U.S. Catholic activists for peace and justice of the past 3 decades, including actor Martin Sheen; poet and priest Daniel Berrigan, S.J.; and Dead Man Walking author Sr. Helen Prejean, C.S.J.  Kelly is one of the founding members of September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows.

Kelly’s brother Bill was at a breakfast conference at Windows on the World and was killed during the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Inspired by decades of non-violent response to deadly conflict, Kelly met several other like-minded family members in December 2001. This group of people who experienced first-hand the tragedy and loss of 9-11 eventually formed September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, which took its name from the Martin Luther King quote, “Wars make poor chisels for carving out peaceful tomorrows.” The group has over 200 family members and has twice been nominated for the Nobel Peace prize.

“At a time when our nation needed models for how to deal with our grief and anger, Colleen and the members of September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows showed us how to do so—seeking our own healing by committing ourselves to the work of making a more peaceful and just world for all,” stated Ronaldo Cruz, Acting Executive Director of Pax Christi USA.

In January 2003, Kelly joined a person-to-person Peaceful Tomorrows delegation to Iraq to learn about the conditions facing civilians in the aftermath of two wars, sanctions, and the threat of new military action there. For the fifth anniversary of 9-11, Peaceful Tomorrows hosted more than thirty family members of victims of political violence from around the world who had consciously chosen to respond nonviolently. Participants included atomic bomb survivors; families affected by violence in Bali; Beslan, Russia; Madrid; Chile; Algeria; Rwanda; South Africa; Uganda; and Israel/Palestine. This new international group committed to support families recently affected by the loss of a loved one, and to channel grief to break cycles of violence.

“As the tenth anniversary of 9-11 approaches, we cannot think of more apt way to remember that day than by honoring the work of Kelly as one of the founding members of Peaceful Tomorrows,” stated Sr. Josie Chrosniak, HM, Chair of Pax Christi USA’s National Council. “Her response to the loss of her brother on 9-11 stood in stark contrast to the response of our elected leaders. She showed all of us, how, faced with the biblical question of choosing life or choosing death, even in the shadow of the terrible evil of that day, we can respond by choosing life and peace.”

Kelly will be honored at the Pax Christi USA-sponsored event, “Peace and Reconciliation: Spiritual Reflections a Decade After 9-11,” featuring best-selling author Jim Wallis, on September 8 at the Catholic University of America.

For media interviews or for more information, please contact Johnny Zokovitch, Pax Christi USA’s Director of Communications, at 352-219-8419 or johnnypcusa@yahoo.com

STATEMENT: Pax Christi USA official statement in the aftermath of September 11, 2001

Originally issued September 26, 2001.

Pax Christi USA reiterates its deep shock and unconditional condemnation of the terrorist attacks in New York City, Washington, D.C. and Pennsylvania. Our broken hearts cry out for the families and friends of the thousands of victims who died in this attack. No one in the world is left untouched by these events. We repeat our call that those responsible must be held accountable under international law. Pax Christi USA believes that, in adherence to the teachings of Jesus, the principles of Catholic social teaching and the best of what it means to be an American, we can end the scourge of terror on this planet.

We at Pax Christi USA bring almost 30 years of experience in resisting terror, violence and war around the world and in this country. From our very beginning we have challenged our nation and its leaders to consider the consequences of economic, political and cultural violence at home and around the world. For nearly 30 years we have pleaded with our fellow Americans to understand that the violence suffered by those living on the other side of the world and those living on the wrong side of town will eventually fall on us unless we make economic, political and social justice for all our top priority.

We Americans Are Not The Same People.
We Americans now share something with most of the people of the world that we did not share before. Our illusion of invulnerability has been shattered. We will never be the same. Hopefully we will never again be able to see ourselves as separate from the pain and suffering of the rest of the world.

Our unspeakable grief and pain has, like a woman in labor, also given birth to a new sense of unity and has given the nation an opportunity to show its true character. We have witnessed countless acts of heroic self-sacrifice, love and compassion for those caught up in this tragedy. A new kind of American hero has been forged in the sweat and blood of countless fire fighters, police officers, emergency workers, doctors, nurses, and volunteers who gave all they had, including their lives, for the sake of others. And in those instances when the ugly face of racism showed itself, countless numbers of people of faith stood in the breach and offered protection for our Arab neighbors. In many respects this has been our finest hour.

The challenge, as we move forward to develop a national response to these horrible events, is to remain true to the best of who we are as people of faith and as Americans. Fear is understandable. What we do with our fears will truly test our faith and character.

A Deeper Understanding
Faced with such incomprehensible horror, it is not difficult to understand the enormously difficult task that fell on President Bush in the first days following the terrorist attack. As the leader of our nation, he no doubt felt a strong need to find some way to respond to these despicable acts of terror. Like any leader, he did not want to project a sense of helplessness or powerlessness in the face of a country looking for leadership.

Unfortunately and predictably, he made a decision early on to couch his response primarily in military terms. Calling this criminal act an act of war has put our country on a course of action that we believe is counter-productive and ultimately doomed to failure. To understand why the president chose a military response to this crime we need to realize that of the total budget the United States allocates for working internationally, 94% of it is for formulating military responses while only 6% is spent for diplomacy, foreign aid, international cooperation and all of our other overseas engagements (see citation at the end of this statement).

This response is just what the terrorists hope to exploit. President Bush’s declaration of a global war on terrorism fits in perfectly with the terrorist’s own understanding of jihad against the godless Americans. Describing our response to this criminal act as a total war against all terrorists and those who support them reinforces a powerful myth in the Arab world that the Great Satan of the West seeks to destroy the Islamic World.

The greatest power that terror has is the ability to regenerate itself in the face of violence. The greatest temptation facing political leaders wanting to end the violence is to believe they can achieve it by getting rid of the perpetrators of the violence. But the lessons from the past 30 years teach us that these terrorist movements have an extraordinary capacity to regenerate themselves and renew their struggle. This is the reality we face. The threat of violence will not stop with the use of military force. In fact, open warfare will create the very soil in which it can feed and grow. Even if we win battle after battle, we still lose because the blood of these martyrs will testify to the myth of why we are evil and will assure yet another generation of recruits.

As Martin Luther King, Jr. reminds us, “The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral, begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy. Instead of diminishing evil, it multiplies it. … Through violence you murder the hater, but you do not murder hate. In fact, violence merely increases hate…. Returning violence for violence multiples violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”

A Principled Response: Protection Of The Innocent
Right now across the Islamic world, innocent people are living in terror, wondering what President Bush may do to them. The President says, “We shall make no distinctions between the terrorist and countries that harbor them.” Shall a whole country be condemned for the actions of its leaders?

Even before a shot is fired, this declaration of war has produced thousands of refugees fleeing Afghanistan fearing an imminent attack from the US. Already Pakistan is host to two million Afghan refugees most living in squalid camps. Another million refugees are internally displaced within Afghanistan.

We call upon President Bush to immediately pledge that U.S. led forces will not target the civilian infrastructure of Afghanistan, Iraq or any other nation deemed to be harboring terrorists. To destroy the means for civilian life-support by targeting electrical grids, water purification and sewage treatment facilities as was done in the Gulf War is unacceptable and must be rejected outright. More than one million Iraqi civilians, the vast majority children, have died since the Gulf War as a direct result of such targeting. The infliction of such human suffering creates the very source of hatred and dehumanization that leads to the terrorist’s total disregard for human life.

Our response to these heinous crimes will determine whether we feed the hate and continue the cycle of violence, or whether we take a deeper approach at addressing the conditions that breed that hate.

A Call To Our Fellow Americans.
We have a choice to make. We can embrace the best of who we are as people of faith and as Americans in addressing the root causes of terrorism, or we can repeat the mistakes of the last century of death and destruction. As people of many faiths but one God, we need to be sure that our anger does not cloud our reason and that our desire to be patriotic does not cause us to abandon the principles of our faith. We should not have to choose between the two. The real challenge is to seek to understand the root causes that spawn such horrible acts of dehumanization. Without a clear understanding, it will be impossible to hold our commitment to God and country together.<

There will be those who will try to tell us that criticizing our national policies in time of crisis is unpatriotic. But, as William Fulbright, the former Senator from Arkansas reminds us, “Criticism is more than a right; it is an act of patriotism—a higher form of patriotism, I believe, than the familiar ritual of national adulation. All of us have the responsibility to act upon the higher patriotism which is to love our country less for what it is than for what we would like it to be.”

A Call To Our Catholic Religious Leaders.
In the immediate days following the terrorist attack we have been proud of those pastors and bishops who have cautioned restraint and preached against hate. These are difficult times that call for leaders to be both pastoral and prophetic. In the weeks and months ahead, there will be great pressure on bishops and pastors to either be silent or acquiesce as our political and military leaders call for support for this war. In a time of national war fever, the Church stands as one of the few respected institutions in our nation that can offer an alternative point of view. Our hope and prayer is that this important voice does not go mute, nor succumb to political pressures. Pope John Paul II stated on Sept. 12, “In the face of such unspeakable horror we cannot but be deeply disturbed. I add my voice to all the voices raised in these hours to express indignant condemnation, and I strongly reiterate that the ways of violence will never lead to genuine solutions to humanity’s problems.”

Pax Christi USA stands in full support of those leaders with the courage to place the teachings of Jesus and the social teaching of the Church ahead of support for national polices that only call for deepening the cycle of violence. Our members across the country stand ready to follow the call of those leaders who embrace the Gospel of peace with justice.

STATEMENT: Pax Christi USA official statement following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001

Originally issued September 12, 2001.

The tragic and overwhelming events of yesterday are only now becoming comprehensible. Our broken hearts cry out for the families and friends of the countless victims in New York, Washington, DC, Pennsylvania and across our nation. Pax Christi USA condemns this unspeakable act of violence.As America awakes this morning to a newworld the first reality to be confronted is the horrific loss of life. No one in the US is left untouched by these events. The deepest grief imaginable now descends upon our people. We are all thankful for the prayers of our sisters and brothers around the world. Let us also remember that God is present with all of us here in the US. We recognize that as the reality of the magnitude of loss becomes clear, our nation’s grief will soon move toward rage.

As people of faith and disciples of the nonviolent Jesus, we must be willing, even now in this darkest moment, to commit ourselves and urge our sisters and brothers, to resist the impulse to vengeance. We must resist the urge to demonize and dehumanize any ethnic group as “enemy.” We must find the courage to break the spiral of violence that so many in our nation, we fear, will be quick to embrace.

We therefore call for restraint on the part of our nation’s civilian and military leaders. The appropriate response to this despicable act is not a despicable act of violence in kind. Vengeance is not justice. The only kind of justice that will honor the memory of all those who lost their lives is a justice based on international law, not reckless retribution.

To follow the nonviolent Jesus in the midst of unimaginable violence is the call and the challenge to which we remain committed. May God’s love and strength provide us the means to be the Peace of Christ.