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placeholder Parish remembers murder victims

Local Franciscan priest detained on Cairo street while on march to Gaza

Marin teens struggle after parents’ deportation to Guatemala

Danville Knights of Columbus deliver 500 Christmas baskets

Catholic Charities East Bay celebrates 75 years of service

Why I became a priest:
My vocation journey — a long discernment towards ‘yes’

Diocese provides ‘clear speech’ training for foreign-born priests

Dominican Sisters from Mexico observe 25 years in diocese

Sister Michaela O’Connor SHF:
‘It’s great to work for a God who loves to surprise you’

Laywomen reflect on their role as ecclesial ministers

Convocation to explore lay ministry as a fulfillment of the call to holiness

Lay ecclesial ministry one of foremost ministerial shifts of past 2000 years

Continuing education courses for lay Catholics offered on HNU campus

Walnut Creek dentist composes musical about St. John Vianney

Faith groups seek ‘say on pay’ for CEOs

Environmentalism promotes peace, pope says

Books offer tips on going ‘green’

Manhattan Declaration support grows

SF Boys Chorus joins Oakland cathedral as Chorus-in-Residence, auditions Jan. 16

OBITUARY:
Sister Marian Therese Kohles, S.P.

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placeholder January 11, 2010   •   VOL. 48, NO. 1   •   Oakland, CA
Local Franciscan priest detained on
Cairo street while on march to Gaza

Franciscan Father Louis Vitale’s recent travel to the West Bank and Cairo was not a journey for the fainthearted.

He was teargassed outside a Palestinian olive grove and detained on the streets of Cairo by a large police force.

He went without food for a few days in solidarity with Gaza residents who don’t have enough to eat because of Israel’s ongoing blockade and he offered energy bars and water to weary Egyptian cops who surrounded him and some of the 1,362 people from 42 nations who were in the Egyptian capital for a Gaza Freedom March on Dec. 31.

For Father Vitale, the adventures were normal parts of his life.

A long-time pacifist and anti-war activist, he co-founded the Nevada Desert Experience, a movement to end nuclear testing, and Pace e Bene, an Oakland-based organization which sponsors peace trainings.

He has spent time in federal prison for participating in civil disobedience at the School of the Americas in Ft. Benning, Georgia, and for nonviolently protesting torture training at Ft. Huachuca, Arizona.

Last month, the 78-year-old priest, who lives at St. Elizabeth Parish in Oakland, joined fellow pacifist and writer Jesuit Father John Dear on the trip to Cairo, the first leg of a journey through the Sinai Peninsula into Gaza to commemorate the first anniversary of an Israeli attack on the area that left 5,000 men, women and children wounded.

Father Vitale decided to join the march “because our world is a community and when we see people unjustly suffering, we have to support them.”

The two priests went 10 days before the scheduled march so they could visit the West Bank to see for themselves what daily life is like for Palestinians. They met farmers who cannot get into their own fields to care of their crops because of the Israeli security wall and other government efforts to limit Palestinian movement, he said.

The two priests joined a group of farmers who gather each Friday in front of their fenced off farms to peacefully protest the Israeli actions. The group was bombarded with tear gas. “It really hurts,” said Father Vitale.

But the visitors witnessed some positive developments as well. They met Palestinians who are reaching out in peace to their Israeli neighbors. One group began when a grieving Israeli father whose daughter had been killed by a terrorist in a disco bombing met a Palestinian whose brother also had been killed by a terrorist.

“The two realized they had their pain and hurt in common,” said Father Vitale. “So they determined to get other people like themselves talking to one another. They started a hotline where Palestinians and Israelis who had lost loved ones could talk with each other.”

Father Vitale concelebrated Christmas Eve Mass with Latin Patriarch Archbishop Fouad Twal at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem with 200 other clergy.

Archbishop Twal reminded the church goers that the plight of today’s Palestinians is similar to the oppressive situation that Jesus, Mary and Joseph suffered under the Roman occupation 2,000 years ago.

And like the Holy Family’s exodus to Egypt, the next part of Father Vitale’s journey was to Cairo for the Solidarity March.

The march did not happen, however, because the Egyptian government banned the group from making the trek. It also banned them from all public gatherings and meetings in Cairo.

Even groups as small as five were considered public gatherings, said Father Vitale. As a peaceful protest, the two priests decided to join 22 individuals in a fast that included Hedy Epstein, an 85-year-old Holocaust survivor who spoke to the Voice Jan. 5.

When a large group of the protesters gathered in front of a museum, vowing to walk to Gaza, they were immediately surrounded and detained by the police. Father Vitale said he felt some empathy for the lawmen because they are very poorly paid and were on duty for 24 hours straight.

While sitting on the curbs, the protestors began singing and offering the police energy bars and water. Said the priest: When it comes right down to it, in state-sponsored oppressive situations, “we are not the only prisoners in the prison.”

Father Vitale will speak about his Gaza experience at 7 p.m. on Jan. 22 at St. Boniface Church in San Francisco.

 
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