To remain in prison for the rest of my life is the greatest honor you could give me: .....
To remain in prison for the rest of my life is the greatest honor you could give me: the story of Sister Megan Rice
Michael Edwards 18 August 2014
Where does moral courage come from - the energy and strength to challenge and transform much larger powers? A prison correspondence provides some answers.
The Y-12 nuclear weapons plant in Oakridge, Tennessee, is supposed to be impregnable. But on July 28th 2012, an 84 year-old nun called Sister Megan Rice broke through a series of high-security fences surrounding the plant and reached a uranium storage bunker at the center of the complex. She was accompanied by Greg Boertje-Obed (57) and Michael Walli (63).
The trio daubed the walls of the bunker with biblical references like the fruit of justice is peace, and scattered small vials of human blood across the ground. Then they sat down for a picnic. When the security guards arrived they offered them some bread, along with a candle, a bible and a bunch of white roses.
Two years later, Rice, Walli and Boertje-Obed were sentenced to federal prison terms of between three and five years, plus restitution in the amount of $53,000 for damage done to the plant - far in excess of the estimates produced at their trial. Rice, who received the shortest sentence of the three, was sent to a detention center in Knoxville, Tennessee, and then transferred to a prison in Ocilla, Georgia. She is now serving the rest of her sentence in the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York.
When questioned about her actions at her trial by Judge Amul Thapar, Rice told him that her actions were intended to draw attention to the US stockpile of nuclear weapons that she and her co-defendants felt was illegal and immoral. They also wanted to expose the ineffectiveness of the security systems that were supposed to protect these weapons from theft or damage. We were acutely mindful of the widespread loss to humanity that nuclear weapons have already caused, wrote Rice afterwards in a letter to her supporters, and we realize that all life on earth could be exterminated through intentional, accidental or technical error. Our action exposed the storage of weapons-making materials deliberately hidden from the general public. The production, refurbishment, threat or use of these weapons of mass destruction violates the fundamental rules and principles by which we all try to live amicably as human beings.
More:
https://www.opendemocracy.net/transformation/michael-edwards/to-remain-in-prison-for-rest-of-my-life-is-greatest-honor-you-could-g
CaliforniaPeggy
(149,699 posts)reorg
(3,317 posts)ZombieHorde
(29,047 posts)defacto7
(13,485 posts)among good people in this world. There is courage among peace makers.
Uncle Joe
(58,417 posts)Thanks for the thread, Judi Lynn.
yowzayowzayowza
(7,018 posts)From the title I suspected that Snowden might have decided to face the music, but, alas, the story reveals a Nun with more balls than he.
brer cat
(24,605 posts)with a boat load of courage. K&R
indepat
(20,899 posts)and/or inexplicable madness.