Untitled Document
Saint Patrick’s Four jailed for non-violent protest against the
illegal Anglo-American invasion of Iraq.
The date is March 17, 2003. St. Patrick’s Day and just two days before U.S.
bombs began raining down on Baghdad, 40 year-old Teresa Grady, her older sister
Clare, Daniel Burns and Vietnam veteran Peter De Mott decided to take action against
the impending illegal Anglo-American invasion of Iraq.
The group of Catholic Workers from Ithaca, New York, known as the "St. Patrick’s
Four," entered an Army-Marine Recruiting Center and poured their blood on
the walls, recruiting posters and an American flag in an act of non-violent civil
resistance to what they knew already was to be the first of countless violations
of international law the Bush Administration would commit during their invasion
and occupation of sovereign Iraq.
"We are about caring for the poor, needy and disenfranchised," Teresa
told me two days ago when I asked her to sum up what the Catholic Worker movement
was about, "We do this while confronting the political and economic structures
that cause poverty."
It had already been a long day, as Teresa had earlier sat through her sister’s
sentencing - six months in a federal prison.
The criminalization of dissent in our country is now obvious to anyone paying
attention – Clare and Teresa will spend six months in a federal prison
for a non-violent symbolic action to protest an illegal war; meanwhile someone
guilty of manslaughter will spend less time behind bars, and not in a federal
prison.
"As a mother who knows the preciousness of children, not just mine - but
all children - I want the court to understand that before we walked into the
recruiting station a million people had already died in Iraq from U.S. imposed
sanctions, half of them children," her sister Clare said earlier that day
at her sentencing in Binghamton federal court.
I wanted to show my support for the actions of the St. Patrick’s Four
(SP4). But nearing the end of a short but concentrated tour of presentations
in New York’s capital area, I’d nearly decided not to venture to
Binghamton for the sentencing of the group. After arriving there I quickly realized
it would have been a big mistake not to have come.
"War is bloody. The blood we brought to the recruiting station was a sign
of the blood inherent in the business of the recruiting station," read
the statement the group issued the day of their action, "The young men
and women who join the military, via that recruiting station, are people whose
lives are precious. We are obligated, as citizens of a democracy, to sound an
alarm when we see our young people being sent into harm's way for a cause that
is wholly unjust and criminal."
I’d only met Teresa earlier that afternoon just before I gave a presentation
about the countless violations of international law committed by occupation
forces in Iraq, including the initial invasion itself which UN Secretary General
Kofi Anan even referred to as an illegal act which contravened the UN Charter.
My presentation ended with a showing of the short film "Caught in the Crossfire"
which shows footage of the desolation of Fallujah. The scourge of war is obvious
in the city where 70% of the buildings were destroyed by bombs and between 4-6,000
civilians died while illegal weapons and collective punishment were meted out
by the US military.
I sat watching this movie, one I’d seen dozens of times from previous
presentations I’ve given, as it captured the true plight of the people
of Fallujah better than anything else I’ve seen. But I’d never viewed
it with someone who, in less than 48 hours time, would be sentenced to six months
in a Federal Prison for trying to stop the bloodshed that has been flowing non-stop
since the invasion began-and invasion which began less than 48 hours after her
action at the recruiting office.
I took the stage after the film ended, and fumbled to speak-caught off-guard
by the deep sadness. It hit me that if more people in the US, on a national
scale, had been willing to engage themselves in actions like that modeled by
the SP4, massacres like that of Fallujah could have been averted.
After the presentation we drove through snow filled hills to the Bronx in New
York City. Over a late dinner I asked her a few more questions about topics
we hadn’t covered on the way over. "Saint Patrick is the patron saint
of Ireland," she said, "We are named after him because he represents
all of us as Ireland is our heritage." As for why they chose to pour their
own blood in the military recruiting station, Teresa replied "We poured
it on the posters of those beautiful people-to see the blood on them. It was
perverse…but it was truthful because war is ugly and perverse. People
who join the military, like those in the posters, will be made ugly and perverse
by war. And as far as the flag-some of the blood dripped down on the flag-we
didn’t pour it on the flag to start. But when I saw the blood get on the
flag, I decided to add more-because there really is blood on our flag now."
The night grew late and we were both exhausted. Teresa had much to do before
going to jail for six months.
Before we left the diner where we’d sat, I asked her if she felt it was
worth it: "The action, the upcoming half a year in federal prison, was
it worth it?"
"After seeing that film, this feels right to me," she said while
nodding, "It feels right that I’m gong to jail. It feels like a piece
of cake. Watching the film I thought 'This is criminal.’ We belong in
jail for allowing that kind of atrocity to occur."
Just before we parted ways, Teresa provided me with the final statement she
would make to her judge in less than 48 hours. She would soon leave these thoughts
in the courtroom as she is about to begin serving her six month sentence in
a federal penitentiary:
"No measure of punishment could change the rightness of the act of March
17th 2003 to call people to conversion of heart and mind away from a great national
tragedy. My heart is at peace, in that my actions were in concert with the millions
of people of our nation who protested this war."
"What human being would sit silently by, listening to the screams of a
child who is being bludgeoned to death, and do nothing? The people of Iraq were,
and are being bludgeoned by our policies."