Reflection: "A sign
of hope is the increasing recognition that the dignity of human life
must never be taken away, even in the case of someone who has done
great evil. Modern society has the means of protecting itself,
without definitively denying criminals the chance to reform. I renew
the appeal for a consensus to end the death penalty, which is both
cruel and unnecessary."
(Pope John Paul II, January 27,1999, St. Louis,
Missouri)
Annual
Meeting of the Connecticut Network to Abolish the Death Penalty
Tuesday
September 14,2010 at 6:30p.m.
St.
Patrick-St. Anthony Church, 285 Church Street, Hartford
For More
information:
http://www.cnadp.org
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Corporate
Stance Against the Death Penalty
2005
Six
religious communities of women, serving in Connecticut, representing
over 1,000 Sisters and Associates in their respective communities have
taken a strong corporate stance against the Death Penalty:
In a
combined statement they write:
“We
declare our solidarity with all concerned persons throughout the
world who reverence the value and dignity of human life. Through
this statement we express corporately our opposition to capital
punishment which terminates human life and prohibits a natural
death. Our corporate commitment to non-violence and
our preferential option for the poor are the core upon which we base
our position and which are the values which challenge us to
action.”
1. We
are committed to nonviolence. The entire process around
capital punishment is violent. It brutalizes everyone involved. An
Execution itself is a violent action and we believe that no method
of execution can be considered humane.
2. We
are concerned about the poor. We are concerned about the poor
because the death penalty is disproportionately imposed
upon the poor.
3.
The death penalty is not a deterrent. Research on the issue of
the death penalty confirms that the death penalty does not deter
individuals from violent action. Rather, studies have shown that
following an execution, the rate of homicides in a state frequently
rises.
4. We
are followers of Jesus Christ. As followers of Christ we
identify with Jesus, who when asked to rule on a death penalty case,
responded, “Let the one without sin cast the first stone.”
5. We
are members of a Church that opposes capital punishment. We
fully endorse the January 9, 2005 pastoral letter from Archbishop
Henry J. Mansell which states: “Specifically in regard to capital
punishment, we note increasing reliance on the death penalty, which
diminishes each of us. The death penalty offers the tragic illusion
that we can defend life only by taking life”, and concludes: “we,
the Roman Catholic Bishops of Connecticut express our considered
opposition to the death penalty in the state of Connecticut.”
We take
very seriously the warning of the U.S. Bishops in their pastoral,
The Challenge of Peace, which states: “The possibility of
taking even one human life is a prospect we should consider in fear
and trembling.” In an even stronger and more directional statement
of Pope John Paul II in Evangelium
Vitae, 2, he exhorts, “ A sign of hope is the
increasing recognition that the dignity of human life must never be
taken away, even in the case of someone who has done great evil.
Modern society has the means of protecting itself, without
definitively denying criminals a chance to reform. I renew the
appeal for a consensus to end the death penalty, which is both cruel
and unnecessary.”
6.
Capital Punishment makes no sense. We are apalled by the killing
of murderers to demonstrate that killing is wrong and that our state
would perpetuate violence through the use of capital punishment. We
are the only super power democracy that still uses capital
punishment. We are grieved by the fact that there have been persons
executed in our country who were later proven innocent.
We
reverence the dignity of each person and we uphold the right of each
person to have the opportunity for conversion and redemption. It is
not a question of who the offender is, or what has been done, but
rather, who we are as people of God.
We
challenge our State to use its power appropriately, not to kill but
to safeguard the lives of all its people. We call upon our State
leaders to pursue authentic solutions to violence and to reconsider
what it sees as a just retribution in our society. The death
penalty is neither a solution to violence nor just retribution.
The
six communities of Women Religious are:
Sisters of St. Joseph of Chambery Daughters of the Holy
Spirit
Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur Sisters of Mercy of
Connecticut
Daughters of Mary of the Immaculate Conception
Congregation of Notre Dame
Be a persistent
prophetic voice for justice.
Collaborative Center for Justice
Celebrating Ten Years of Social
Justice Advocacy
“Not just advocating for change,
but activating change”