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Dover-Sherborn Press
Peace Abbey provides sanctuary for soldiers
going AWOL
By David Halperin/ Correspondent
Thursday, March 23, 2006
SHERBORN - One day into the Peace Abbey's first
Sanctuary Week, the retreat center's founding director weighed the
various reasons why a soldier in the United States military might
leave the service without permission, but he didn't have to think
about it for long.
"There's hardly a bad reason for not
wanting to shoot people," said Lewis Randa, who spoke those
words in reference to the more than 5,000 soldiers - according to
several media outlets quoting Pentagon officials - who have gone
AWOL from the U.S. military since the start of the war in Iraq three
years ago.
Randa and others at the Peace Abbey said
their Sanctuary Week is meant to provide support for those soldiers,
whether they consider themselves conscientious objectors or not.
The event began on Sunday, March 19, and runs through this Saturday.
"When a soldier arrives who's with
the underground, there's a great deal of uncertainty as to what
tomorrow will bring," said Randa, "so [in the event of
a soldier arriving] we try to look at the options."
If an AWOL soldier wants to turn himself
in to the federal government, said Randa, the Peace Abbey will provide
the soldier with various types of support, either directly or indirectly,
including legal and spiritual support, as the process usually leads
to jail time.
Randa said the pain of jail time can be
eased if deserters understand their own actions - that is, why they
left the military without permission - while the length of jail
time can be decreased if "conscientious objector" status
is obtained from the military.
"We help them develop a strategy for
communicating with family, community and religious congregations
as to why they did what they did," Randa said. "And it
will help them, I'm certain, to deal with incarceration that is
less injurious to their spirit or their soul."
According to Randa and others at the Peace
Abbey, the organization doesn't push anyone into seeking conscientious
objector status.
"Maybe they want to go back to the
military [instead of filing for conscientious objector status],"
said Peace Abbey volunteer Dan Dick who, like Randa, was a conscientious
objector during the Vietnam War era. "We're not making decisions
for them."
"We don't know why they [deserted],"
Dick said. "They may be conscientious objectors, and we want
to help them understand that there is this tradition of conscientious
objectors. [And] they may decide that they're doing that, they may
decide they're not."
If any soldiers come forward this week -
and none had as of press time on Tuesday - they won't be the first
to use the Peace Abbey as a support system.
In March 2004, after hiding out for a period
of five months, former Army Sergeant Camilo Mejia of Florida turned
himself in at a Massachusetts National Guard base with the aid of
the Peace Abbey. Also, during his time in hiding, he periodically
spent time at the Peace Abbey.
After an 11-month imprisonment, Mejia was
released in February 2005 and granted conscientious objector status.
While Sanctuary Week may not see any additional
military deserters coming forward, Dick said the event is meant
to raise awareness of former soldiers living in hiding as much as
to provide those former soldiers with direct help.
"We want it to be known in the larger
community that people can get support here," he said.
Abbey remembers Archbishop
Romero
On Friday, March 24, at 7:30 p.m., on the
anniversary of the assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero of El
Salvador, the Peace Abbey, 2 North Main St., Sherborn, will remember
this man of peace with his words to the military and the people
of El Salvador.
After the reading of his words, the film
"Operation Dreamland" will be shown, which is a documentary
made in Iraq with military currently serving there.
This event is co-sponsored by the Natick
Peace Council and Pax Christi. The public is invited, as well as
military personnel who are conscientious objectors.
For information, call Lewis Randa or Dot
Walsh at 508-655-2143.
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