Baltimore IMC : http://baltimore.indymedia.org
Baltimore IMC

News :: Miscellaneous

Philip Berrigan, Anti-War Activist, Dies At Home In Baltimore

Longtime peace activist Phil Berrigan died Dec. 6 at Jonah House. Final statement, brief bio, press release, links to tributes, and other materials.
Baltimore, MD - Phil Berrigan died December 6, 2002 at about 9:30 PM, at Jonah House, a community he co-founded in 1973, surrounded by family and friends. He died two months after being diagnosed with liver and kidney cancer, and one month after deciding to discontinue chemotherapy. Approximately thirty close friends and fellow peace activists gathered for the ceremony of last rites on November 30, to celebrate his life and anoint him for the next part of his journey. Berrigan's brother and co-felon, Jesuit priest Daniel Berrigan officiated.

#file_1#
During his nearly 40 years of resistance to war and violence, Berrigan focused on living and working in community as a way to model the nonviolent, sustainable world he was working to create. Jonah House members live simply, pray together, share duties, and attempt to expose the violence of militarism and consumerism. The community was born out of resistance to the Vietnam War, including high-profile draft card burning actions; later the focus became ongoing resistance to U.S. nuclear policy, including Plowshares actions that aim to enact Isaiah's biblical prophecy of a disarmed world. Because of these efforts Berrigan spent about 11 years in prison. He wrote, lectured, and taught extensively, publishing six books, including an autobiography, Fighting the Lamb's War.

In his last weeks, Berrigan was surrounded by his family, including his wife Elizabeth McAlister, with whom he founded Jonah House; his children Frida, 28, Jerry, 27, and Kate, 21; community members Susan Crane, Gary Ashbeck, and David Arthur; and extended family and community. Community members Ardeth Platte and Carol Gilbert, Dominican sisters, were unable to be physically present at Jonah House; they are currently in jail in Colorado awaiting trial for a disarmament action at a missile silo, the 79th international Plowshares action. One of Berrigan's last actions was to bless the upcoming marriage of Frida to Ian Marvy.

Berrigan wrote a final statement in the days before his death. His final comments included this: "I die with the conviction, held since 1968 and Catonsville, that nuclear weapons are the scourge of the earth; to mine for them, manufacture them, deploy them, use them, is a curse against God, the human family, and the earth itself."

The wake and funeral will be held at St. Peter Claver Church in West Baltimore, (1546 North Fremont Avenue, Baltimore MD 21217); calling hours: 4-8 PM Sunday December 8 with a circle of sharing about Phil's life at 6 PM; funeral: Monday, December 9, 12 PM. All are invited to process with the coffin from the intersection of Bentalou and Laurens streets to St. Peter Claver Church at 10 AM (please drop off marchers and park at the church). A public reception at the St. Peter Claver hall will follow the funeral mass; internment is private. In place of flowers and gifts for the offertory, attendees may bring pictures or other keepsakes. Mourners may make donations in Berrigan's name to Citizens for Peace in Space, Global Network Against Nuclear Weapons, Nukewatch, Voices in the Wilderness, the Nuclear Resister, or any Catholic Worker house.


PHIL'S STATEMENT 12/05/02 (via Elizabeth McAlister)

Philip began dictating this statement the weekend before Thanksgiving. It was all clear - he had it written in his head. Word for word I wrote...
WHEN I LAY DYING...of cancer

Philip Berrigan

I die in a community including my family, my beloved wife Elizabeth, three great Dominican nuns - Ardeth Platte, Carol Gilbert, and Jackie Hudson (emeritus) jailed in Western Colorado - Susan Crane, friends local, national and even international. They have always been a life-line to me. I die with the conviction, held since 1968 and Catonsville, that nuclear weapons are the scourge of the earth; to mine for them, manufacture them, deploy them, use them, is a curse against God, the human family, and the earth itself. We have already exploded such weapons in Japan in 1945 and the equivalent of them in Iraq in 1991, in Yugoslavia in 1999, and in Afghanistan in 2001. We left a legacy for other people of deadly radioactive isotopes - a prime counterinsurgency measure. For example, the people of Iraq, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Pakistan will be battling cancer, mostly from depleted uranium, for decades. In addition, our nuclear adventurism over 57 years has saturated the planet with nuclear garbage from testing, from explosions in high altitudes (four of these), from 103 nuclear power plants, from nuclear weapons factories that can't be cleaned up - and so on. Because of myopic leadership, of greed for possessions, a public chained to corporate media, there has been virtually no response to these realities...

At this point in dictation, Phil's lungs filled; he began to cough uncontrollably; he was tired. We had to stop - with promises to finish later. But later never came - another moment in an illness that depleted Phil so rapidly it was all we could do to keep pace with it... And then he couldn't talk at all. And then - gradually - he left us.

What did Phil intend to say? What is the message of his life? What message was he leaving us in his dying? Is it different for each of us, now that we are left to imagine how he would frame it?

During one of our prayers in Phil's room, Brendan Walsh remembered a banner Phil had asked Willa Bickham to make years ago for St. Peter Claver. It read: "The sting of death is all around us. O Christ, where is your victory?"

The sting of death is all around us. The death Phil was asking us to attend to is not his death (though the sting of that is on us and will not be denied). The sting Phil would have us know is the sting of institutionalized death and killing. He never wearied of articulating it. He never ceased being astonished by the length and breadth and depth of it. And he never accepted it.

O Christ, where is your victory? It was back in the mid 1960's that Phil was asking that question of God and her Christ. He kept asking it. And, over the years, he learned

that it is right and good to question our God, to plead for justice for all that inhabit the earth

that it is urgent to feel this; injustice done to any is injustice done to all

that we must never weary of exposing and resisting such injustice

that what victories we see are smaller than the mustard seeds Jesus praised, and they need such tender nurture

that it is vital to celebrate each victory - especially the victory of sisterhood and brotherhood embodied in loving, nonviolent community.

Over the months of Phil's illness we have been blessed a hundred-fold by small and large victories over an anti-human, anti-life, anti-love culture, by friendships - in and out of prison - and by the love that has permeated Phil's life. Living these years and months with Phil free us to revert to the original liturgical question: "O death, where is your sting?"


Philip Berrigan, 1923-2002

Born: October 5, 1923, Minnesota Iron Range, near Bemidji to Frieda Fromhart and Thomas Berrigan
1943-1945: Served in WWII, artillery officer, Europe.
1949: Graduated from Holy Cross College.
1955: Ordained a Catholic Priest in the Josephite Order, specializing in inner city ministry.
1956-1963: Taught at St. Augustine's high school, New Orleans, a segregated all black school.
1962 (or 3?): First priest to ride in a Civil Rights movement Freedom Ride.
1963-1965: Taught at a Josephite seminary, Newburgh, NY.
1966: Published first book, No More Strangers.
1966: Served at St. Peter Claver parish, Baltimore, MD.
October 27, 1967: Poured blood on draft files in Baltimore with 3 others. Known as the "Baltimore Four."
May 17, 1968: Burned draft files in Catonsville, MD with 8 others, including his brother, Fr. Daniel Berrigan. Action known as the "Catonsville Nine." Convicted of destruction of US property, destruction of Selective Service records, and interference with the Selective Service Act of 1967. Sentenced to prison.
1970: Married Elizabeth McAlister, an activist nun, Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary.
1970: Became a fugitive when appeals failed. Captured and returned to prison.
1971: Named co-conspirator by J. Edgar Hoover and Harrisburg grand jury while in prison. Charged with plotting to kidnap Henry Kissinger and blow up the utility tunnels of US Capitol buildings. Convicted only of violating prison rules for smuggling out letters.
1973: Co-founded Jonah House community of war resisters in Baltimore, MD.
April 1, 1974: Birth of Frida Berrigan at Jonah House.
April 17, 1975: Birth of Jerry Berrigan at Jonah House.
1975: End of Vietnam War and beginning of focus on weapons of mass destruction and changing U.S. nuclear policy. Actions included pouring of blood and digging of graves at the White House and Pentagon resulted in several jail terms ranging up to six months.
1975: Atlantic Life Community conceptualized as East Coast counterpart to Pacific Life Community.
1976: First of summer community building sessions; led to triannual Faith & Resistance Retreats in DC.
September 9, 1980: Poured blood and hammered with 7 others on Mark 12A warheads at a GE nuclear missile plant, King of Prussia, PA. Charged with conspiracy, burglary, and criminal mischief; convicted and imprisoned. Action known as the "Plowshares Eight;" began the international Plowshares movement.
1980-1999: Participated in 5 more Plowshares actions, resulting in ~7 years of imprisonment.
November 5, 1981: Birth of Kate Berrigan at Jonah House.
1989: Published The Times' Discipline, on the Jonah House experience, with Elizabeth McAlister.
1996: Published autobiography, Fighting the Lamb's War.
December 14, 2001: Released from Elkton, OH prison after nearly a year of imprisonment for his final Plowshares action.
July 12, 2002: Underwent hip replacement surgery at Good Samaritan Hospital, Baltimore, MD.
October 8, 2002: Diagnosed with adenocarcinoma, cancer in the liver and kidney.
December 6, 2002: Died at home in Baltimore, surrounded by family and community.
--------------------------------------------------

REMARKS OF BRENDAN WALSH OF VIVA HOUSE AT PHILIP BERRIGAN'S FUNERAL

"Philip Berrigan is a friend to all the poor of Baltimore City. Philip Berrigan is a friend to all the people of the world who are bombed and scattered, who are starved, trampled upon, imprisoned, tortured, humiliated, scoffed at, dismissed as nobodies. He was that rare combination where word and deed were one. Always. Everywhere. Steadfast. Rock solid. Hopeful. One in a million. He was that tree standing by the water that would not be moved. Yes, Phil, Deo gratias! Thanks be to God! For your life. For your spirit that is still with us. Now, with you gone to another place, all of us will have to do more. Couragio to you, Phil!"

TRIBUTES FROM THE INDEPENDENT PRESS & PROGRESSIVE WRITERS

Thank You, Philip Berrigan
by James Carroll (12/10/02)
www.commondreams.org/views02/1210-01.htm

Berrigan: America's Greatest Arms Inspector Dies
by Alexander Cockburn (12/7/02)
www.counterpunch.org/cockburn1207.html

Berrigan's Final Warning: "The Times are Ominous"
by William Hughes (12/9/02)
www.counterpunch.org/hughes1209.html

Philip Berrigan: Blessed are the Peacemakers
by Ron Jacobs (12/7/02)
www.counterpunch.org/jacobs1207.html

Philip Berrigan -- Presente!
by Joyce Katzberg (12/30/02)
www.commondreams.org/views02/1230-05.htm

Philip Berrigan, 1923-2--2: Reinventing Resistance, One Break-in at a Time
by Judith Mahoney Pasternak (Jan. 2003)
www.warresisters.org/nva0103-5.htm

Peace Activist, Author Philip Berrigan Dies
by Colman McCarthy (12/08/02)
www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A24780-2002Dec7.html

Philip Berrigan--An Unyielding Force for Justice
by Max Obuszewski (11/27/02)
baltimore.indymedia.org/newswire/display_any/2232

A Holy Outlaw
by Howard Zinn (February 2003)
www.progressive.org/feb03/zinn0203.html

INTERVIEWS

Interview with Philip Berrigan, January 18, 2002
by Mark Gunnery
baltimore.indymedia.org/newswire/display/2330/index.php

An Interview with Philip Berrigan: "I Was a Good Young Killer and Only Woke Up Later"
by Matthew Rothschild (1996)
www.progressive.org/webex/wxdb121202.html

FROM THE BALTIMORE SUN

Philip Berrigan, Apostle of Peace, Dies at 79
by Jacques Kelly & Carl Schoettler (12/7/02)
www.sunspot.net/news/local/bal-te.ob.berrigan07dec07,0,2318029.story

Berrigan Honored as "Prophet of Peace": Hundreds March in Funeral Procession for Activist
by Foster Klug (AP; 12/9/02)
www.sunspot.net/news/local/bal-berrigan1209,0,2375335.story

Berrigan Remembered as Friend, Protester of War & Injustice: Mourners Fill Church for Farewell to Fighter in the Peace Movement
by Kimberly Wilson (12/10/02)
www.sunspot.net/news/local/bal-md.berrigan10dec10,0,7758590.story

Trivial Charge Rattled Cage of Vietnam War Protester
by Michael Olesker (12/10/02)
www.sunspot.net/news/local/bal-md.olesker10dec10,0,3772368.column

FROM DEMOCRACY NOW!

Archived Philip Berrigan Coverage
see below in comments ....
 
 

This content is now locked, and no comments may be added.

Comments

Re: Philip Berrigan, Anti-War Activist, Dies At Home In Baltimore

If there's one thing I learned best from Phil Berrigan it's the need to keep on keepin' on. Far too many of our fellow non-violent warriors over the years seem to have faded into careers, family life, or other personal wants. Phil Berrigan was all about persistence, all about relentless struggle against the forces of greed and selfishness. What a powerful legacy he has left us! Let us hope that legacy will reach those who have wandered from our ranks, as well as those who fill them today in this, the belly of the beast.
 

Re: Philip Berrigan, Anti-War Activist, Dies At Home In Baltimore

Philip Berrigan's Legacy Goes On
Philip Berrigan's Legacy Goes On:
A Force Of Habits: Nuns Raid Silo Site Trio Tweaks Nose of Military, Refuses to Renounce Activism RMN, Dec 4, 2002
"Catholic nuns Ardeth Platte, Carol Gilbert and Jackie Hudson were arrested at gunpoint Oct. 6 after they used bolt cutters to enter a fenced Minuteman missile site in Weld County. They poured some of their own blood in the shape of crosses on the lid of the missile silo..."
www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/state/article/0,1299,DRMN_21_1586158,00.html
rockymountain.indymedia.org/front.php3
 

Democracy Now! Archived Philip Berrigan Coverage

The national listener sponsored radio/tv show Democracy Now! has been following the activism of Phil Berrigan as well as the militant religious peace movement for years.

On Wednesday Democracy Now! reported that Berrigan, 79, was quietly dying of cancer at Jonah House in Baltimore, the non-violent resistance community he helped found in the early 1970s. Over the past few days, his family and community have been gathering by his bedside. We spoke with Phil Berrigan's son and daughter, Gerry and Frida, and re-ran a 1998 interview conducted inside a federal prison between Democracy Now! and Phil Berrigan. Listen to the Dec. 4 Philip Berrigan special.

Below are some related Democracy Now! highlights:

April 22, 2002: PHILIP BERRIGAN SPEAKS AT MAJOR ANTI-WAR RALLY IN WASHINGTON, D.C. [Read] || [Listen] || [watch]

Jan. 3, 2002: PHILIP BERRIGAN RELEASED FROM PRISON, CONFRONTS BUSH AT CHURCH [Read] || [Listen]

March 28, 2000: PHILIP BERRIGAN & PLOWSHARES ACTIVISTS IMPRISONED [Read] || [Listen]

March 17, 2000: PHILIP BERRIGAN & OTHER ACTIVISTS FROM PLOWSHARES VS. DEPLETED URANIUM GO TO COURT [Read]
|| [Listen]

December 20, 1999: ACTIVISTS HAMMER ON FIGHTER PLANES FIRING DEPLETED URANIUM [Read] || [Listen]

March 17, 1998: DEMOCRACY NOW! GOES TO THE PETERSBURG FEDERAL PENITENTIARY TO TALK WITH BERRIGAN IN JAIL [Read] || [Listen]

 

Re: Philip Berrigan, Anti-War Activist, Dies At Home In Baltimore

In 1997 Phil Berrigan, Susan Crane and 4 others disarmed an Aegis Destroyer at Bath Iron Works Maine. Over 8 years of jail time were served by the Prince of Peace Plowshares. Fay and I were honored to be part of the Maine Plowshares Support Group. Maine's peace & justice community will remember Phil at a vigil and witness, December 21st, Bath Iron Works, 11:30-2. Some day the swords will be turned into plowshares. In the meantime, let us continue to speak truth to power.
 

Re: Philip Berrigan, Anti-War Activist, Dies At Home In Baltimore

We walked across the country with the Hiroshima Flame. The flame lit from burning embers of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima over 57 years ago. It was brought back to this country to purify the fire that had been misused by humans. All throughout the walk there were prayer ceremonies and it came with us to vigil at many of our nations nuclear sites such as Hanford, Livermore Laboratories, Lockheed, Los Alamos Labs and Oakridge. We carried it to the April 20, 2002 Peace Rallies in Washington, D.C. where over 50,000 people gathered to stand in unison with their messages of peace to the policymakers of war. The flame journeyed to the building that housed the bomber known as the Enola Gay, the bomber that once dropped a rain of death never before seen on this planet.

We also journeyed to a home in Baltimore that held the deep resonance of peace and contemplation. The very walls themselves held the mysteries, the love and the overwhelming convictions of the handful of people who lived there. The flame was brought to rest there for a few days and we shared prayer and meals and stories. When I first arrived, I had never met Phillip, Elizabeth, Ardeth or Carol before. I had heard the name Berrigan before but knew only he was an activist. They all were, yet they were more or perhaps they embodied the full meaning of an activist. They not only fought for the issues that compelled them to action, they also lived their daily lives in harmony with those beliefs. Taking care to consume less, live sustainably and foster community. They paid for their beliefs in prison terms, over and over again.

After spending three months on this pilgrimage with the flame, Jonah House was truly the perfect resting place before continuing on to the World Trade Center. I remember standing in a circle in their living room, all of us in our own form of prayer and united for our desire for nuclear abolition, for world peace and sanity to return to humanity. I will hold that has a special memory. I intend on learning more of his life, I believe it something worth knowing.

To Elizabeth, his family and loved ones and to all the thousands he has inspired through the years, and to Phillip himself, I bow three times and may we all continue the work that is so necessary.

Namu myo ho renge kyo
Namu myo ho renge kyo
Namu myo ho renge kyo
 

Re: Philip Berrigan, Anti-War Activist, Dies At Home In Baltimore

The world is a richer place for the life of Phillip Berrigan, and is now a poorer place for his loss. Very few people live by their values and ethics; we celebrate his life and morn his death. Our sympathy goes out to his family. Kate Hart & Daniel von Weurth-Walsh
 

Re: Philip Berrigan, Anti-War Activist, Dies At Home In Baltimore

where is our philip berrigan? we need you now...for peace...for everything that is in opposition to greed, hate fear & war. we need you now!!!!!!
 

Views

Account Login

Calendar

No events for this day.

view calendar week
add an event

Donations

Help support us!

RSS Syndication

Media Centers

 

This site made manifest by dadaIMC software