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Philip Berrigan, Peace Advocate in the Vietnam War Era, Dies at 79

December 8, 2002
By DANIEL LEWIS






Philip F. Berrigan, the former Roman Catholic priest who
led the draft board raids that galvanized opposition to the
Vietnam War in the late 1960's, died on Friday in Baltimore
after a lifetime of battling "the American Empire," as he
called it, over the morality of its military and social
policies. He was 79.

His family said the cause was cancer.

An Army combat
veteran sickened by the killing in World War II, Mr.
Berrigan came to be one of the most radical pacifists of
the 20th century - and, for a time in the Vietnam period, a
larger-than-life figure in the convulsive struggle over the
country's direction.

In the late 60's he was a Catholic priest serving a poor
black parish in Baltimore and seeing nothing that would
change his conviction that war, racism and poverty were
inseparable strands of a corrupt economic system. His
Josephite superiors had hustled him out of Newburgh, N.Y.,
for aggressive civil rights and antiwar activity there; the
"fatal blow," he said, had been a talk to a community
affairs council in which he asked, "Is it possible for us
to be vicious, brutal, immoral and violent at home and be
fair, judicious, beneficent and idealistic abroad?"

He hardly missed a beat after his transfer to Baltimore,
founding an antiwar group, Peace Mission, whose operations
included picketing the homes of Defense Secretary Robert S.
McNamara and Secretary of State Dean Rusk in December 1966.
By the fall of 1967 Father Berrigan and three friends were
ready to try a new tactic. On Oct. 17, they walked into the
Baltimore Customs House, distracted the draft board clerks
and methodically spattered Selective Service records with a
red liquid made partly from their own blood.

Three decades later, Mr. Berrigan remembered feeling
"exalted" as the judge sentenced him to six years in
prison. From then on, he would be in and out of jail for
repeated efforts to interfere with government operations
and deface military hardware.

Even before his sentencing for the Customs House raid,
Father Berrigan instigated a second invasion, against the
local draft board office in Catonsville, Md. Among those
persuaded to join was his older brother, the Rev. Daniel J.
Berrigan, a Jesuit priest and poet, who had been one of the
first prominent clergymen to preach and organize against
the war.

The "Catonsville Nine" struck on May 17, 1968, taking
hundreds of files from the draft board office. They piled
the documents in the parking lot and set them burning with
a mixture of gasoline and soap chips - homemade napalm.

Reporters were given a statement that read, "We destroy
these draft records not only because they exploit our young
men but also because they represent misplaced power
concentrated in the ruling class of America." It continued,
"We confront the Catholic Church, other Christian bodies,
and the synagogues of America with their silence and
cowardice in the face of our country's crimes."

When the police arrived, the trespassers were praying in
the parking lot. The cameras loved the Berrigans. The
definitive photograph of the event is the striking image of
two priests in clerical dress, one big and craggy, the
other slight and puckish, serenely accepting their imminent
incarceration.

The Catonsville raid inspired others around the country,
the tactic becoming a sort of calling card of the
"ultra-resistance." It also elevated the Berrigan brothers
to the status of superstars. "Father Phil" and "Father Dan"
were on the cover of Time magazine and illuminated in
profiles by the smartest writers.

But many Americans saw them as communists and traitors, or
at best naïve dupes of the Vietcong. And among their own
allies, grumbling grew about a cult of personality and a
certain disdain for anyone unwilling to make the same
sacrifices the Berrigans demanded of themselves.

Philip Francis Berrigan was born Oct. 5, 1923, in Two
Harbors, Minn., the youngest of six sons of Thomas W.
Berrigan and Frida Fromhart Berrigan, a German immigrant.
Thomas Berrigan was a frustrated poet and a political
radical whose labor organizing activities led to his
dismissal as a railroad engineer, after which he moved to
Syracuse.

After high school, Philip played semiprofessional baseball
before enrolling in St. Michael's College in Toronto. In
January 1943, after one semester, he was drafted.

The life of black sharecroppers in Georgia, where he had
basic training, and the treatment of black soldiers on his
troop ship to Europe made an indelible impression on his
conscience. So did his own role in infantry and artillery
battles that earned him a battlefield commission as second
lieutenant. In so many words, he came to consider himself
as guilty of murder as the Germans and Japanese. Along with
this came the conviction that he had grown up on a diet of
nationalistic propaganda in which the good - "white
Europeans" - always triumphed over evil - "anyone else."

After graduating from the College of the Holy Cross in
Worcester, Mass., in 1950, he committed himself to the
priesthood and was ordained in St. Joseph's Society of the
Sacred Heart in 1955. Later, he earned degrees from Loyola
University and Xavier University, both in New Orleans.

The young priest became passionately involved in civil
rights and antiwar activities, especially after the Cuban
missile crisis in 1962. He was frequently in trouble with
his superiors, whom he openly criticized for supporting the
status quo, and occasionally with the law. He boasted that
he was the first American priest jailed for a political
crime.

In the trial that resulted in his second prison term - the
trial of the Catonsville Nine in 1968 - the defendants were
all found guilty.

In April 1970, after his appeals were denied, he was to
begin serving a three-and-a-half-year term for the
Catonsville incident, to run concurrently with the six-year
sentence from the Baltimore raid.

But the Berrigan brothers and two other Catonsville
defendants reasoned that if they had been right to break
the law in the first place, then it would be wrong to
accept the government's punishment for it. So they went
underground, and for a time two priests were among the
criminals most wanted by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation.

Daniel eluded capture until Aug. 11, but Philip was
arrested on April 21 in St. Gregory's Church in Manhattan
and began serving his sentence in Lewisburg, Pa.

He spent many prison hours praying and filling journals
with his trademark polemical writing, which over the years
condemned everything from deceptive breakfast cereal
advertising (a form of "violence") to the modern church.
"The Gospel the church preaches," he wrote, "is a precise
statement of the life it leads - a degenerate stew of
behavioral psychology, affluent ethics and cultural
mythology, seasoned by nationalist politics."

While at Lewisburg, Father Berrigan unwittingly helped set
in motion a new controversy.

He had fallen in love with a nun, Elizabeth McAlister of
the Religious Order of the Sacred Heart. In a ceremony
without witnesses the two had secretly declared themselves
husband and wife in 1969. They smuggled love letters past
the prison censors through a trusted young inmate, Boyd
Douglas, who was allowed outside to attend college classes.


According to the biographers Murray Polner and Jim O'Grady
in "Disarmed and Dangerous," Father Berrigan's fellow
inmate James R. Hoffa, the Teamsters president, warned that
Mr. Douglas was an F.B.I. informant. But this expert
opinion was ignored, and the exchanges ultimately became a
source of great embarrassment and the basis for fresh
prosecution. The letters talked of kidnapping a government
official - Henry A. Kissinger was mentioned - and of
shutting down government buildings in Washington.

The result was a conspiracy trial in 1972 that ended in
acquittal on all major charges.

Philip Berrigan was paroled in December 1972. He and
Elizabeth McAlister legalized their marriage in 1973. They
issued justifications on personal, scriptural and political
grounds - and were excommunicated. From then on the couple
lived and worked in Jonah House, a small religiously
oriented commune they founded in Baltimore.

Through his antinuclear Plowshares operation, Mr. Berrigan
led a series of raids, among them an attack in 1980 at the
General Electric plant in King of Prussia, Pa. Two decades
later he was still at it, though the world had largely
stopped paying attention.

Thus citizen Berrigan, then 77, missed the 2001 premiere of
a documentary film about Catonsville. He was in an Ohio
prison on charges of interference with a weapons system.

In addition to his wife and brother Daniel, Mr. Berrigan is
survived by three children, Frida, Jerome and Katherine;
and three other brothers, John, James and Jerome.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/08/obituaries/08BERR.html?ex=1040325531&ei=1&en=68c1913d76744640



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