Disturbing
the Peace
The
Story of Father Roy Bourgeois and
the Movement to
Close the School of the Americas
By
James Hodge and Linda Cooper
Chapter
1
THE
VOICE OF THE VOICELESS
"In
the name of God, stop the repression."
-
Archbishop
Oscar Romero
Fort Benning,
Georgia. August 9, 1983. The summer sun was finally setting.
It was time to act. Time to engage the Salvadoran troops.
Roy Bourgeois
was ready, but he was not so sure that Larry Rosebaugh
could penetrate base security. Rosebaugh, a gentle Oblate
priest who had worked with street people in Brazil, reminded
Bourgeois of St. Francis. Even in the battle dress uniform
Bourgeois had purchased for him at the local Army surplus
store, Rosebaugh did not exactly present a military bearing.
It would take a small miracle for the MPs to mistake him
for an Army officer. Linda
Ventimiglia, an Army reserve officer, would not be
a problem.She and Bourgeois, a former Navy lieutenant,
had given Rosebaugh a crash course on military decorum
and worked on his salute.
The three had
also practiced scaling trees in an Alabama pine forest,and
Bourgeois finally decided they were as ready as they were
going to be. He went over the details of their plan one
last time and then double checked the supplies: pepper,
a rope ladder, tree climbers, a high-powered Sony cassette
player with four speakers. And, most important, the tape
recording.
As night fell
the three set out, dressed as high-ranking officers with
insignia also purchased at the Army surplus store. They
loaded their equipment into the Land Rover of a friend
who had agreed to drive them onto the base.
Bourgeois braced
himself as they neared the entrance. The Land Rover had
a Fort Benning sticker, but an MP at the checkpoint seemed
to eye them suspiciously. Then, to their amazement, he
snapped a salute. Theirs were a little shaky. The driver
eased onto the base, passing several warning signs that
said they were entering a restricted area and unauthorized
persons would be prosecuted.
The vehicle stopped
near a tank trail in the woods. There, the three quickly
gathered their equipment and began walking down the trail
that led straight to the quarters of several hundred Salvadoran
soldiers.
Soon the lights
of the barracks became visible, and the three edged closer,
looking around for a suitable tree. After they agreed on
a towering hundred-foot pine, Rosebaugh sprinkled pepper
on the ground to prevent guard dogs from picking up their
scent. Bourgeois, meanwhile,strapped the tree climbers
to his boots and began scaling the pine. After he secured
his footing, he dropped the rope ladder for Ventimiglia
and Rosebaugh. As he did, he broke a branch.
Instantly, German
shepherds started barking at a nearby MP station. Within
seconds the guards rushed out, hopped into a jeep with
two of the attack dogs and sped toward the intruders. The
jeep stopped about thirty yards from the tree. It was around
9:30 p.m. and quite dark.The MPs, armed with assault rifles,
began scanning the woods with bright lights; Bourgeois
froze while Ventimiglia and Rosebaugh ducked behind a tree.
In the tense minutes that followed, beams of light crisscrossed
the grounds, but never found them. The MPs finally drove
off.
Ventimiglia and
Rosebaugh slowly climbed up and then tossed the rope ladder
to the ground. Bourgeois anchored the tape player high
in the tree, aiming it at the barracks. Then there was
a collective sigh of relief; they had gotten into the belly
of the beast. Bourgeois, a Maryknoll priest, silently prayed
that no one would get shot and reminded himself of the
reasons they were taking such risks.
It was not complicated.
The U.S. military was training a brutal foreign army on
U.S. soil. An army that served a small Salvadoran elite
who lived in splendor while the poor lived in squalor.
An army that had butchered thousands of innocent people,
including women and children, priests and nuns. An army
that had raped and murdered two of his friends.
Bourgeois knew
firsthand what the training meant. As a naval officer,he'd
been taught to fire an M-16 and had later encountered hundreds
of Vietnamese children maimed by U.S. weapons. As a missionary
in Bolivia, he'd seen another U.S.-trained army commit
abuses.
For weeks Bourgeois
and his friends had been protesting the training of the
Salvadoran troops, to no avail. Now, if they didn't lose
their courage,they would take a message directly to the
Salvadorans. It was a plan devised to meet the Gospel standard
to be as cunning as serpents but as harmless as doves.
The wait in the
tree felt interminable. The three kept shifting their weight
to get comfortable. Suddenly, the barracks lights went
out. Finally,the moment had come. The three steeled themselves
as Bourgeois reached up and pressed the play button on
the tape player, saying, "Oscar,this is for you."
Moments later
the voice of the dead Salvadoran archbishop, Oscar Romero,
boomed in Spanish from the treetops, shattering the silence below:
"I would like
to make a special appeal to the members of the army and
specifically to the ranks of the National Guard, the
police and the military. Brothers, each one of you is
one of us. We are the same people. The peasants you kill
are your own brothers and sisters. When you hear the
voice of a man commanding you to kill, remember instead
the voice of God: THOU SHALL NOT KILL!"
It was the archbishop's
last Sunday homily, delivered in the San Salvador cathedral
on March 23, 1980. His fateful words had stung the Salvadoran
military and led to his assassination the next day.
Romero's words
again triggered a violent reaction as they echoed through
the barracks at Fort Benning, imploring the startled Salvadorans
to disobey orders to kill. It was as if someone had poked
a beehive.The base was abuzz. Lights beamed. Sirens wailed.
MPs with M-16sswarmed over the grounds. But in the darkness
they had trouble locating the source of the disturbance,
even with the aid of police dogs.
"It was a sacred moment," Bourgeois later recalled. "Those
soldiers coming out of the barracks, looking into the sky,
not being able to see us,hearing the words of this prophet."
Finally, one of
the lights fixed on the rope ladder at the base of the
pine, and then illuminated the trespassers in the tree.
The MPs started cursing and threatening to shoot them down,
but even with weapons trained on him Bourgeois stalled
for time, hoping to play the entire homily.He shouted down
that they no longer had the rope ladder, and as the MPs
scurried about trying to figure out what to do, the tape
played over and over.
"No soldier
is obliged to obey an order contrary to the law of God.
There is still time for you to obey your own conscience,
even in the face of a sinful command to kill. The church,
defender of the rights of God, of the law of God, and
of the dignity of each human being, cannot remain silent
in the presence of such abominations."
"In the name
of God, in the name of our tormented people whose cries
rise up to heaven, I beseech you, I beg you, I command
you, stop the repression!"
As the chaos on
the ground grew, the dogs started to fight among themselves.
A couple of MPs tried to pull them apart, while another
started to climb the pine, grabbing branches of nearby
trees to pull himself up.
Then another went
up with the rope ladder. Rosebaugh, whose perch was lowest
in the tree, was taken down first, then Ventimigila. Rosebaugh
was strip searched and Ventimigila was gagged.
Meanwhile, the
first MP had climbed nearly sixty feet up to get Bourgeois
and to shut off the cassette. After Romero's voice was
silenced, Bourgeois started shouting the bishop's words
in Spanish, angering the MPs on the ground.
When he finally descended the tree, a trainer was waiting
for him.
"He hit me from behind," Bourgeois said later, "then
threw me up against the tree and stripped me. There were
five or six agitated dogs and about ten MPs with M-16s
who were shining lights on us. The trainer got in this
karate pose and wanted me to get up and fight, but his
own men pulled him off."
As he was led
away that night, Bourgeois was largely undaunted: the message
had been delivered, the mission accomplished.
The three activists
carried no identification. When questioned at the provost
marshal's office, Bourgeois gave his name as Oscar Romero;Rosebaugh,
as Rutilio Grande, a Jesuit priest slain by the Salvadoran
military; and Ventimiglia, as Jean Donovan, one of four
U.S. churchwomen raped and murdered by Salvadoran security
forces.
The three were
eventually charged with impersonating officers and criminal
trespassing and taken to the Muscogee County jail. There,
Bourgeois went on a hunger strike, vowing to continue the
fast until the Salvadoran troops left Fort Benning.
The tree-climbing
action was vintage Bourgeois--gutsy, controversial and
provocative. It would also prove prophetic: it had shone
a light on the military base that would soon become the
new home of the U.S.Army's infamous School of the Americas.
The Pentagon was
planning to move the Latin American training facility in
the Panama Canal Zone to the Georgia military base the
following year. Though unknown to U.S. citizens, the school
was well known to Latin Americans, who called it the "School
of Assassins" for having trained so many of the dictators,
torturers and death squad leaders in their countries. And,
as Bourgeois would learn years later, it had trained
the Salvadoran officers who murdered the U.S. churchwomen
and ordered the assassination of Archbishop Romero.
Copyright © 2004
by James Hodge and Linda Cooper
Published by Orbis Books, Maryknoll, NY 10545-0308.
All rights reserved. |