Church leads campaign
to drive US Navy
off Vieques
By Paul Jeffrey
Special to the
National Catholic Reporter
Vieques Island, Puerto Rico - Serving the new parish on Vieques is much
like working in any other parish for Father Juan Luis Negron. He gets up
in the morning, sweeps out the parsonage, reads a bit, eats breakfast with
some nuns, and then watches the neighborhood arrive for mass. As the celebration
finishes, Negron and the faithful pass the peace, their closing hymn drowned
out by the noise of a U.S. Navy helicopter that hovers low overhead videotaping
the scene.
That's church life today on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques, for almost
six decades a playground for Navy and Marine pilots practicing the bomb
runs they would carry out elsewhere in the world. Yet instead of the sounds
of war, today the bombing range is filled with people singing and hammers
pounding. A protest camp is becoming a small, bustling town, and the church
is in the middle of it.
Shortly after a civilian security guard was killed by a wayward bomb last
April, Puerto Ricans from all over the U.S. colony came to the bombing
range and set up “resistance encampments,” determined to use their physical
presence to prevent the renewal of bombing. The Navy held off removing
them from the off-limits zone, perhaps believing that with time that they
would tire and go away. Yet the number of people risking arrest by trespassing
on Navy territory has grown steadily. By late February, 14 distinct civil
disobedience camps had been set up, including a Protestant camp established
in November, and one camp sponsored by the Catholic diocese of Caguas which
was built in early February.
“I came here as part of my commitment as a man of faith,” said Negron,
rector of the Catholic seminary in Caguas. “We in the diocese have made
an option for peace in Vieques, and we have to act out that option in concrete
forms. So we've come here to work for peace, and to defend life, both the
life of the environment and of the human beings who are threatened here.”
Negron said he wasn't worried about trespassing on the Navy bombing range.
“When there is an unjust law that violates the laws of the reign of God,
then we Christians can disobey that law,” Negron said.
The Catholic camp includes several tents, including one sporting a sign
reading “Parsonage.” A two-room wooden structure contains the kitchen and
storage area. The complex is staffed round the clock by volunteers chosen
and trained by the diocese of Caguas, whose bishop, Alvaro Corrada del
Rio, has become a leading proponent of civil disobedience. The island of
Vieques is part of the Caguas diocese.
According to Feliciano Rodriguez, a priest in Caguas who coordinates the
Catholic presence, participants are given at least six hours of training
in nonviolence and are fully briefed on relevant church teachings. “Civil
disobedience for us means discipline and training, or else it becomes simple
protest,” Rodriguez said. “People know we're there to pray and work for
peace.”
To date the diocese has received requests to participate from over 300
people, but has accepted only a third of those. According to Lavinia Ortiz,
a sister of the Carmelitas of Vedruna who trains lay people in biblical
studies for the diocese of Caguas, anyone with a background in political
parties is automatically disqualified from participating in the church
camp. “We want people who are peaceful and not conflictive,” she told NCR.
Ortiz, who took her turn at civil disobedience in mid February, said the
presence of so many protestors on the bombing range, especially from the
church, had given the people of Vieques “a space to breathe. They feel
understood and supported. As a result, they feel more interior peace in
the middle of so much struggle. When you feel accompanied, although you
have many problems, you experience new strength and peace.”
Both Corrada del Rio and San Juan Archbishop Roberto Gonzalez have visited
the restricted zone, lending their support to the protest. Should arrests
occur, both will try to make their way to the camps to join the ranks of
those drug off to jail. Protestant leaders will be doing the same. Puerto
Rican Methodists have a plan to fly Bishop Juan Vera onto Vieques should
the Navy block sea transit.
Such commitment by church leaders is helping to turn the tide against the
Navy. Ismael Guadalupe, president of the Committee for the Rescue and Development
of Vieques, claimed the “participation of new sectors of the population,
especially the churches, has allowed us to break down the wall of lies.
Now the people are hearing what we've been saying for a long time, and
realizing it's true, no matter how many times they called us communists
or crazy people. Sooner or later the truth has to triumph, and today on
Vieques the truth is winning.”
According to Robert Rabin, director of a museum housed in an old Spanish
fort on Vieques, “the participation of the churches in this struggle has
been fundamental in making clear that this is not just a political issue,
but rather a violation of human rights, an abuse of the people and environment
of Vieques by the Navy.”
Rabin said that islanders have for years “received important manifestations
of solidarity from church organizations in Puerto Rico, the United States,
and elsewhere. We have a drawerful of resolutions from different ecumenical
and religious organizations, dating from the seventies until now. But this
is a very different moment. It's no longer just resolutions, but people
from the churches coming to Vieques willing to work at ground level, to
stay in the resistance camps.”
The two church-sponsored camps on the bombing range “are right now the
most important weapon that the people of Vieques have against the military
plans to resume bombing. If it had not been for those two camps being set
up, the Navy might have already come in and arrested the small number of
other people,” Rabin said. “Yet there are now Catholic priests and Methodist
and Baptist ministers, men and women, out there on the bombing range. That
has created a very difficult situation for the U.S. government and Navy.
It's going to be very difficult for [U.S. Attorney General] Janet Reno
to sign an order for the arrest of a bishop or archbishop.”
The church leaders' prominent role in the Vieques struggle became evident
in the first weeks of the new millennium when they had a public showdown
with Puerto Rican Governor Pedro Rossello. The governor, who last year
promised that “not one more bomb” would fall on Vieques, changed his mind
at the beginning of the year and agreed to a Clinton administration proposal
that would allow renewed bombing on Vieques this year, but would offer
residents of the island a plebiscite next year in which they could choose
between indefinite continued bombing or limiting further bombing to three
years. Church leaders were upset by the absence of an option that would
cancel all further bombing, and by the fact that the referendum wouldn't
be held until months after the Navy was allowed to resume bombing.
When religious leaders announced a march for Puerto Ricans to publicly
reject the Clinton-Rossello deal, the governor was furious, calling on
church members to disobey their bishops and stay at home.
“This is a situation where we need religious disobedience because church
leaders have stepped out of their environment, they've exceeded their authority
and are assuming roles in our democratic society that are designated through
popular vote,” Rossello declared. “None of them have been elected by the
people. Therefore, none of the faithful have to follow their orders in
affairs like this which correspond to the entire society and not just to
the church.”
Rossello's comments were “a strategy to destabilize the public consensus
in favor of the human rights of the Viequenses,” Gonzalez responded. “As
a consequence, the Navy gains time in its attempt to retain the island
of Vieques as a zone for military experimentation.”
Undeterred by the public spat, the bishops went ahead with the march, which
brought well over 100,000 people onto the streets of San Juan on February
21, walking in silence while waving white flags. Police Superintendent
Pedro Toledo called it the biggest public demonstration in the country's
history.
Church leaders claimed the message was loud and clear. “The U.S. Navy has
to abandon the island,” said Corrada del Rio. “It was demonstrated today
that the people of Vieques can count on tens of thousands of Puerto Ricans
who are not going to abandon them.”
According to Vera, the massive turnout “sends a clear message to President
Clinton that political decisions are not written in stone and can thus
be changed. We want him to reconsider his decision and not renew bombing
on Vieques, whether with live munitions or inert bombs. We don't want one
more bomb to fall on Vieques.”
Meeting the day after the march, church leaders wrote President Clinton,
asking for a meeting to discuss Vieques “in a conciliatory manner.”
They also invited Gov. Rossello to public repentance for his position on
Vieques. “He will know, in his wisdom and prudence, what he has to say,”
Vera said during a February 23 press conference at Archbishop Gonzalez'
residence.
The turnout for the march, along with the steady growth of resistance camps
on the bombing range, leaves the Navy with no good options. It will lose
the battle if it drags the protestors off, inevitably provoking a long,
drawn out series of arrests as replacements flock to the island. And some
campers, Puerto Rican Vietnam vets, aren't going to go as easily as the
church-sponsored protestors.
It will also obviously lose the battle if it lets the protestors remain.
Every day the Navy doesn't bomb the island belies its claim that the facility
is essential for combat readiness.
In early February, the Navy announced it was moving exercises scheduled
for March on Vieques to the Gulf of Mexico and Florida. And just three
days before the church-sponsored march, it sent Rear Adm. Kevin Green to
Puerto Rico to listen rather than swagger, trying to give the impression
of a new, compassionate Navy interested in the welfare of the Puerto Rican
people.
Many observers believe that if bombing doesn't resume soon, it will be
then be too close to the U.S. elections to start blowing up Vieques anew,
if for no other reason than the Puerto Rican votes that Hillary Clinton
would lose in the New York Senate race.
While Puerto Ricans speculate about what the Navy will do, the aggressive
public witness of Bishop Corrada del Rio and Archbishop Gonzalez has left
some of their colleagues exasperated. Although the Puerto Rican Episcopal
Conference issued a statement in early December declaring “immoral” the
Navy's practices on Vieques and supporting civil disobedience as long as
it was nonviolent and truly a last resort in the struggle against the Navy,
the showdown with Rossello provoked murmurs of discontent from some other
bishops.
The Permanent Commission of the Puerto Rican Episcopal Conference emitted
a February 13 communique claiming “many faithful are confused when confronted
by the diverse and at times contradictory declarations . . .about the problem
of Vieques.” Released by Bishop Ulises Casiano of Mayaguez, president of
the bishops' conference, the declaration said church leaders getting involved
in “temporal matters” should remember the statement about rendering unto
Caesar what is Caesar's.
Corrada del Rio expressed dismay at Casiano's statement. “We lament that
the entire episcopal conference was not consulted ahead of time about this
declaration, above all when it is known that in the Catholic Church the
jurisdiction over an affair of a parish corresponds exclusively to the
bishop of the place,” Corrada stated.
The public role of Methodist Bishop Vera and other Protestant leaders has
also provoked protest from some conservative evangelicals. Gustavo Filpi,
president of the International Council of Independent Christian Churches,
claimed that the role of the churches “is to pray, to cry out to God for
this to be resolved in peace. That's the role of the church, not to walk
around with little white flags nor dress up politicians in church robes.”
Yet the widespread consensus around Vieques has brought even many conservatives
into the movement to end the bombing. According to Angel Luis Gutierrez,
a Baptist pastor, the church in Puerto Rico “has the responsibility of
saving the U.S. Navy because it finds itself in sin. The church has to
say to the Navy what our Lord said to the woman caught in adultery: 'Go
away and sin no more.'” |