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Revolutionary Haitian Priest, Gerard Jean-Juste, Presente! by Bill Quigley

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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-31-09 01:42 PM
Original message
Revolutionary Haitian Priest, Gerard Jean-Juste, Presente! by Bill Quigley
The author of this article,in addition to being a good friend of Father Gerry and the people of Haiti, is a valiant lawyer in New Orleans fighting for human rights. When Hurricane Katrina hit,Quigley went down to the hospital where his wife was an oncology nurse in order to help out. After a few harrowing days, he and his wife were finally rescued. His account of those first days of the storm are gripping. Quigley continued to help by becoming legal counsel on behalf of the poor, black population that was "disappeared" in New Orleans. If you google his name, you will find fascinating accounts about Haiti and the legal struggle for justice in New Orleans.
magbana

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/05/31

Published on Sunday, May 31, 2009 by CommonDreams.org
Revolutionary Haitian Priest, Gerard Jean-Juste, Presente!
by Bill Quigley
Though Haitian priest Father Gerard Jean-Juste died May 27, 2009, at age 62, in Miami from a stroke and breathing problems, he remains present to millions. Justice-loving people world-wide mourn his death and celebrate his life. Pere Jean-Juste worked uncompromisingly for justice for Haitians and the poor, both in Haiti and in the U.S.

Pere Jean-Juste was a Jesus-like revolutionary. In jail and out, he preached liberation of the poor, release of prisoners, human rights for all, and a fair distribution of wealth. A big muscular man with a booming voice and a frequent deep laugh, he wore a brightly colored plastic rosary around his neck and carried another in his pocket. Jailed for nearly a year in Haiti by the U.S. supported coup government which was trying to silence him, Amnesty International called him a Prisoner of Conscience.

Jean-Juste was a scourge to the unelected coup governments of Haiti, who served at the pleasure, and usually the direction, of the U.S. government. He constantly challenged both the powers of Haiti and the U.S. to stop killing and starving and imprisoning the poor. In the U.S. he fought against government actions which deported black Haitians while welcoming Cubans and Nicaraguans and others. In Haiti he called for democracy and respect and human rights for the poor.

Pere Jean-Juste was sometimes called the most dangerous man in Haiti. That was because he was not afraid to die. His computer screen saver was a big blue picture of Mary, the mother of Jesus. "Every day I am ready to meet her." He once told me, when death threats came again. "I will not stop working for justice because of their threats. I am looking forward to heaven."

Jean-Juste was a literally a holy terror to the unelected powers of Haiti and the elected but unaccountable powers of the U.S. Every single day, in jail or out, he said Mass, read the psalms and jubilantly prayed the rosary. In Port au Prince he slept on the floor of his church, St. Claire, which provided meals to thousands of starving children and adults every week. In prison, he organized local nuns to bring him hundreds of plastic rosaries which he gave to fellow prisoners and then lead them in daily prayer.

When Pere Jean-Juste began to speak, to preach really, about justice for the poor and the wrongfully imprisoned, restless crowds drew silent. Listening to him preach was like feeling the air change before a thunderstorm sweeps in. He slowly raised his arms. He spread his powerful hands to punctuate his intensifying words. Minutes passed as the Bible and the Declaration of Human Rights and today's news were interspersed. Justice for the poor. Freedom for those in prison. Comfort for those who mourn. The thunder was rolling now. Crowds were cheering now. Human rights for everyone. Justice for Haiti. Justice for Haiti. Justice for Haiti.

To the rich, Jean-Juste preached that the man with two coats should give one to the woman with none. But, unlike most preachers, he did not stop there. Because there were many people with no coats, Pere Jean-Juste said, no one could justly claim ownership of a second coat. In fact, those who held onto second coats were actually thieves who stole from those who had no coats. In Haiti and the U.S., where there is such a huge gap between the haves and the have-nots, there was much stealing by the rich from the poor. This was revolutionary preaching.

During the day, people streamed to his church to ask for help. Mothers walked miles from Cite de Soleil to his parish to beg him to help them bury their children. Widows sought help. Families with sons in prison asked for a private word. Small packets of money and food were quietly given away. Visitors from rural Haiti, people seeking jobs, many looking for food, police officers who warned of new threats, political organizers with ideas how to challenge the unelected government, reporters and people seeking special prayers - all came all the time.

Every single night when he was home at his church in Port au Prince Pere Jean-Juste led a half hour public rosary for anyone who showed up. Most of the crowd was children and older women who came in part because the church was the only place in the neighborhood which had electricity. He walked the length of the church booming out the first part of the Hail Mary while children held his hand or trailed him calling out their part of the rosary. The children and the women came night after night to pray in Kreyol with Mon Pere.

Pere Jean-Juste lived the preferential option for the poor of liberation theology. Because he was always in trouble with the management of the church, who he also freely criticized, he was usually not allowed regular church parish work. In Florida, he lay down in his clerical blacks on the road in front of busses stopping them from taking Haitians to be deported from the U.S. For years he lived on the run in Haiti, moving from house to house. When he was arrested on trumped up charges, he refused to allow people with money to bribe his way out of jail, he would stay with the poor and share their treatment.

He dedicated his entire adult life to the revolutionary proposition that every single person is entitled to a life of human dignity. No matter the color of skin. No matter what country they were from. No matter how poor or rich. No matter woman or man.

His last time in court in Haiti, when the judge questioned him about a bogus weapons charge against him, Pere Jean-Juste dug into his pocket, pulled out his plastic prayer beads, thrust them high in the air and bellowed, to the delight of the hundreds in attendance, "My rosary is my only weapon!" The crowd roared and all charges were dropped.

Gerard Jean-Juste lived with and fought for and with widows and orphans and those in jail and those being deported and the hungry and the mourning and the sick and the persecuted. Our world is better for his time among us.

Mon Pere, our brother, your spirit, like those of all who struggle for justice for others, lives on. Presente!
By Bill Quigley. Bill represented Pere Jean-Juste many times in Haiti along with the Bureau des Avocats Internationaux in Port au Prince and the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti. Bill is on leave from Loyola University College of Law in New Orleans serving as Legal Director of the Center for Constitutional Rights. He can be contacted at quigley77@gmail.com
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-31-09 03:03 PM
Response to Original message
1. So sad an irreplaceable man is gone. Thanks for this tribute.
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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-31-09 04:20 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. What a terrific pic, Judi Lynn. Thanks for posting it n/t
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Billy Burnett Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-31-09 05:10 PM
Response to Original message
3. Thank you for posting this, magbana.
If there are angels in the afterlife, I know that Gerard Jean-Juste is one. :cry:




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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-31-09 06:09 PM
Response to Original message
4. Father Jean-Juste and the Lying Haitian Ambassador to the US
I think I am sufficiently calmed down to tell this story. Last Wednesday evening I attended an African Liberation Day celebration at the Cuban Interests Section. There were a variety of ambassadors there from Latin America, Africa, and the Caribbean.

Everything was going well until I spotted Haiti's ambassador to the US, Raymond Joseph. Joseph is the ambassador sent to the US by the illegal coup regime of Latortue but was "held over" to serve under Preval's administration. Rumor has it that Preval was told by the US that Joseph should remain as ambassador. I have had run-ins in the past with Joseph,by my own initiation, but it was not the occasion to scrap with him. Unbekownst to me, I ended up right behind him as he was chatting with a man. Joseph was telling him that if Aristide tries to return to Haiti, he will be arrested at the airport. I got as far away from him as I could, but could not prevent the memory of the last run-in I had with him for surfacing.

It was January 2008 at American University and after a presentation he made, I inquired about my dear friend Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine who was "disappeared" in Haiti in August of 2007. Joseph got smart right off the bat and suggested that I might know more about Lovinsky's whereabouts than he suggesting his five month (at that time)disappearance was being faked. Then he suggested we look for him on one of the many Caribbean beaches because he probably gone on vacation. More happened later, but I wanted to share this part with you so you know what a son of a bitch he is.

I left the Interests Section early in the evening and came home to find on my computer that Father Jean-Juste had passed away. Then I got really pissed because when Father Gerry was in prison,Joseph was the one who pushed the propaganda in the US that Father Gerry was a dangerous, liberation theologian and that he should remain in prison. No doubt, the lengthy campaign in the US to get Father Gerry released was hampered by Joseph. After all, he's the ambassador and he had carte blanche access to influential people who we could never touch.

The morning after Father Gerry died, I found an article about him that included quotes from Raymond Joseph. Here is the article. If you scrutinize it closely, Joseph is trying to sound "diplomatic" but is backpedaling. Especially, when he emphasizes that he collaborated with Father Gerry in the early '80's. He is trying to show that his work with Father Gerry ended before Aristide's rise and the formation of Fanmi Lavalas.

Thanks for listening, folks.


" Popular Haitian Priest Dead At 62


Father Jean-Juste in an undated image (Haiti Action Committe Image)


CaribWorldNews, MIAMI, FL, Thurs. May 28, 2009: Haitian rights advocate, Catholic Priest, Father Gerard Jean-Juste, is dead.

Father Jean-Juste died Wednesday at Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami Herald reports indicate. He was 62.

He suffered a stroke recently, Ira Kurzban, the Miami attorney who represented Jean-Juste's Haitian Refugee Center in several lawsuits against the U.S. government, was quoted as saying. Last night, Haiti Ambassador to the U.S., Ray Joseph, remembered the priest as `a dedicated fighter for Haitians.`

`I’m sure he will be sorely missed,` Joseph told CWNN when reached with the news. `Although this was expected it really hit me very hard.`

Ambassador Joseph also reminisced on the first time he worked together with Father Jean-Juste and won their first case against the U.S. government on behalf of Haitian refugees with Kurzban leading the legal fight.

`He was more radical but we found ways of working together in early 80’s,` said Ambassador Joseph.

Jean-Juste was a liberation theologian and a supporter of the Fanmi Lavalas political party, the largest in Haiti. In 1978, he founded the Haitian Refugee Center in Miami, Florida where he was a popular figure in the Haitian community. He gained popularity throughout Haïti and the Haitian diaspora as a determined opponent of the interim government of Prime Minister Gérard Latortue, which came about after the violent overthrow of the government of Jean-Bertrand Aristide by anti-government rebels.

He was jailed for seven weeks in 2004 but released in November 2004 following outcries oopposition to his incarceration. On July 21, 2005, he was arrested by police following his return from a trip to Miami, Florida in connection with the abduction and subsequent murder of journalist Jacques Roche. On January 26, 2006, a judge dropped charges against Jean-Juste in regards to the death of Roche. However, Jean-Juste was indicted on two lesser counts of weapons possession and conspiracy, according to Jean-Juste's lawyer, Mario Joseph.

On January 29, 2006, Jean-Juste, after having been granted temporary release by the interim Haitian government, arrived in Miami to receive proper medical treatment for his leukemia. On September 11, 2006, the University of San Francisco conferred an Honorary Doctorate Degree on Fr. Jean-Juste, in recognition of his human rights and social justice work on behalf of Haiti's poor.

On November 26, 2007, the Court of Appeals of Port-au-Prince heard Fr. Jean-Juste's challenges to the remaining charges against him- weapons possession and criminal conspiracy. Fr. Jean-Juste declared that "my rosary is my only weapon", and the prosecution could produce no evidence to contradict him. The prosecutor even conceded that there was no evidence in the file against Jean-Juste, and asked that the charges be dismissed.

The Appeals Court judges declined to dismiss the case, on the grounds that they needed more time to consider it.

In June 2008, in an interview with HaitiAnalysis, Father Jean-Juste confirmed that all charges had been dropped against him. - By CWNN Staffer

"
http://www.caribbeanworldnews.com/middle_top_news_detail.php?mid=2087
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-01-09 02:54 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. What a self-serving dipstick. Yeah, you can easily see he and Fr. Jean-Juste
were very tight. Who would question that?

That snide suggestion about a politically removed friend would be seen as sadistic.

He hopes people will remember that and think fondly of him, too, as it's what his friend would want.

Looks as if he's found his true calling in life: serving as a US puppet, while pretending to serve Haiti's interests.

http://www.washingtondiplomat.com.nyud.net:8090/October-05/October%2005%20Cover.jpg http://www.thisdiplomats.org.nyud.net:8090/images_usr/AmbRaymondJosephLolaPoissonandLexiatFestival_000.JPG

Great little American flag lapel pin, jerk!
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magbana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-01-09 08:39 AM
Response to Reply #5
6. Thanks for the asinine pic of 'King" Joseph and his wife. The Washington Diplomat
article was a disgusting puff piece that focused heavily on his fundamentalist Christian background.
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