D
Dwyer
Guest
RIO DE JANEIRO (JTA) — Cardinal Paulo Evaristo Arns, who challenged Brazil’s brutal dictatorship to honor a Jewish journalist killed in prison by the military, has died.
Arns, one of the Catholic Church’s most prominent pro-democracy voices in Latin America, became famous for his fight against torture during 1964-1985. He died Wednesday at 95.
forward.com/news/breaking-news/357310/brazilian-cardinal-who-faced-down-dictators-over-murdered-jew-dies-at-95/?attribution=home-article-listing-12-headlineOn Oct. 31, 1975, he organized one of the most open acts of defiance of Brazil’s dictatorship, praying with Rabbi Henry Sobel and a Presbyterian reverend blaming the regime for the murder of Jewish journalist Vladimir Herzog, who had been taken as a political prisoner shortly before.
In 1989, Arns sent a letter to Fidel Castro on the 30th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution. He praised Cuba’s record on social justice and wrote that " Christian faith discovers in the achievements of the revolution signs of the kingdom of God… You are present daily in my prayers, and I ask the Father that he always concede you the grace of guiding the destinies of your country." Political and theological conservatives, including Cardinal Eugenio Sales of Rio de Janeiro, protested what they interpreted as support for Castro’s continued rule. Leonardo Boff, the foremost figure in the liberation theology movement defended Arns saying: “Cuba carried out a revolution against hunger by ending prostitution, illiteracy and misery. Dom Paulo [Arns] is not a socialist, but a man of the poor and the oppressed.” Arns said the letter was part of an ongoing dialogue with Castro and that he opposed dictatorship . . .[5]
Liberation theology
He defended the liberation theologian and former Catholic priest Leonardo Boff, producing letters from the Roman Curia that he believed were evidence that Boff was treated unfairly. Arns had always encouraged a preferential option for the oppressed and the poor, encouraging religious orders in São Paulo to transfer their energies from middle class schools and hospitals in central areas of the city to the millions of marginalised people living on the periphery. with respect to the requirement that Catholics practice abstinence on certain days, that is, refrain from eating meat, Arns told the poor that on such a day “if they can find meat to eat, which is rare, they should eat it, and do some good work to mark the day, because not eating meat is not the point”. He defended his position by saying that “Canon law gives me full power to dispense people from abstinence; there is no problem”. . .[9]
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paulo_Evaristo_ArnsArns himself must be reckoned a significant cause of the military withdrawal and return of civilian government in Brazil. During the dictatorship he visited political prisoners speaking out against the abuses of the military. Prior to governmental change in 1985, Arns had, with the assistance of the Presbyterian minister Jaime Wright (pt), photocopied the military government’s records on torture, and then smuggled the copies out to have them published, the book ‘Brazil Never Again’ which was based on this evidence; it became a bestseller and began the widespread move for change in Brazil.