Fr Thomas Anchanikal, SJ - 1951-1997
Had I been there --
Would I have dared --
Dare die in his stead,
As Thomas did, bowing his head
On a night without a star,
In the cruel fields of Bihar ...?
from "Had I Been There,"
a poem in honor of A.T. Thomas,
  
       by Pradip Sen 
Thomas Anchanikal, known as A.T. Thomas, was  back home in  Hazaribag, in Jharkhand State ,  India 
A.T.  and his fellow Jesuits recognized the great need of  the dalits for  education. Even children had to work all day to help support  their  families, so normal schooling was beyond them. A.T. and the others  gradually  developed a network of night schools around Hazaribag.  Gathering for school,  people began to share their other concerns, and  the whole range of social  issues and needs came to the fore. A.T.  became involved in every aspect of the  people's lives. 
After two decades of nonstop labor,  in 1996 A.T. went to Manila India India 
On  October 24,   1997 ,  A.T. went to the village    of  Sirka 
"There was never any doubt as to where A.T.'s   sympathies lay," writes his fellow Jesuit Kevin Cronin. "As he had   perceived Jesus to have been, A.T. felt himself called to be on the side  of the  poor, the victims of injustice in whatever form." A.T. became  the latest  victim of violent injustice. For two days, as authorities  waited for the expected  ransom demand, rumors began to circulate that  A.T. had been beaten and killed.  On October 27, his battered and  decapitated body was found in a river bed. That  evening, the body was  brought to St. Xavier's in Hazaribag and placed into a  coffin. The next  day friends and relatives, religious sisters to whom he had   ministered, and crowds of his beloved untouchables gathered for the  Church's  liturgy to honor A.T.'s memory and draw strength from his 
"This father just  cannot abide injustice  anywhere," people had said of him. "If he sees  injustice anywhere, he  will fight." Injustice led A.T. to his violent  death. But in facing this  injustice, A.T. Thomas had already found  life.
Fr Richard Fernando, SJ - 1970 –1996
In 1996 Richie Fernando SJ was killed aged 26  years by a hand grenade  released by a student in the Jesuit Refugee  Service technical school  for the handicapped near Phnom Penh.  
On January 3, 1996   Richie wrote in his diary: 
"I   wish, when I die, people remember not how great, powerful, or talented  I  was, but that I served and spoke for the truth, I gave witness to  what  is right, I was sincere in all my works and actions, in other  words, I  loved and I followed Christ." 
 Richie  Fernando was a long way from home. He  was a Filipino Jesuit in Buddhist  Cambodia. He was educated and full of  promise in a camp where refugees  maimed by bullets and land mines and  scarred by hunger and disease  fought for hope. He loved life in a land  where life was hard and death  nearby.
Richie  Fernando was a long way from home. He  was a Filipino Jesuit in Buddhist  Cambodia. He was educated and full of  promise in a camp where refugees  maimed by bullets and land mines and  scarred by hunger and disease  fought for hope. He loved life in a land  where life was hard and death  nearby. Richie went to Cambodia Phnom    Penh 
When Richie   arrived, his devotion to the students quickly won their trust. He began   learning their Khmer language and came to appreciate their religious   traditions. And he loved to share their stories, stories of survival   during Pol Pot's genocidal regime, stories of the devastation of their   society through poverty, displacement, and the nine million landmines   that still plague their land. 
One  of these survivors is Sarom. Already an  orphan, at 16 Sarom became a  soldier; two years later he was maimed by a  landmine. Sarom finished  his courses at Banteay Prieb and wanted to  stay on there, but school  authorities found him disruptive and asked  him to leave. Richie  Fernando mentioned Sarom in a letter to his  friends in the Philippines 
On October 17,   1996 ,  Sarom  came to the school for a meeting. Angered, he suddenly reached  into a  bag he was carrying, pulled out a grenade, and began to move  towards a  classroom full of students; the windows of the room were  barred,  leaving the students no escape. Richie Fernando came up behind  Sarom  and grabbed him. "Let me go, teacher; I do not want to kill you,"  Sarom  pleaded. But he dropped his grenade, and it fell behind him and   Richie. In a flash Richie Fernando was dead, falling over with Sarom   still grasped in his arms, protecting him from the violence he had   made. 
Only four  days before his death Richie had written a long  letter to his Jesuit  friend Totet Banaynal .  "I know where  my heart is," he wrote; "It is with Jesus Christ, who  gave his all for  the poor, the sick, the orphan ...I am confident that  God never forgets  his people: our disabled brothers and sisters. And I  am glad that God  has been using me to make sure that our brothers and  sisters know this  fact. I am convinced that this is my vocation." 
Three days  after Richie's death, his shocked family and  friends in the Philippines 
Shocked by what he had caused, Sarom sat in  his jail cell  and mourned too. 
In March 1997, Mr. and Mrs. Fernando wrote to Source  
http://www.jesuitmission.org.au/index.php?page=60 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



 



1 comment:
Wow , so inspiring.
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